This pioneering analysis of the relationship between rhetoric and poetry offers both a fresh take on key texts from the Greco-Roman rhetorical tradition (including authors such as Cicero, Seneca the Elder and Quintilian) and a new approach towards theorizing the role of the rhetorical in literature and literary criticism.
This pioneering analysis of the relationship between rhetoric and poetry offers both a fresh take on key texts from the Greco-Roman rhetorical tradition (including authors such as Cicero, Seneca the Elder and Quintilian) and a new approach towards theorizing the role of the rhetorical in literature and literary criticism.
Irene Peirano Garrison is Associate Professor of Classics at Yale University, Connecticut. Her book, The Rhetoric of the Roman Fake: Latin Pseudepigrapha in Context (Cambridge, 2012), was awarded the 2015 Alexander McKay Prize for Vergilian Studies by the Vergilian Society.
Inhaltsangabe
Part I. Poetry in Rhetoric: 1. Poetry and rhetoric and poetry in rhetoric 2. Poetry and the poetic in Seneca the Elder's Controuersiae and Suasoriae 3. The orator and the poet in Quintilian's Institutio Oratoria Part II. Oratory in Epic: 4. The orator in the storm 5. Epic demagoguery Part III. 'Rhetoricizing Poetry': 6. Non minus orator quam poeta: Virgil the orator in Late Antiquity.
Part I. Poetry in Rhetoric: 1. Poetry and rhetoric and poetry in rhetoric 2. Poetry and the poetic in Seneca the Elder's Controuersiae and Suasoriae 3. The orator and the poet in Quintilian's Institutio Oratoria Part II. Oratory in Epic: 4. The orator in the storm 5. Epic demagoguery Part III. 'Rhetoricizing Poetry': 6. Non minus orator quam poeta: Virgil the orator in Late Antiquity.
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