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Roman oratory / by Catherine Steel.

Van Pelt Library PA3038 .S74 2006
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Steel, C. E. W.
Contributor:
Classical Association (Great Britain)
Series:
Greece & Rome. New surveys in the classics ; 36.
Greece & Rome. New surveys in the classics ; 36
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Oratory, Ancient.
Rhetoric, Ancient.
Physical Description:
90 pages ; 24 cm.
Place of Publication:
Cambridge : Published for the Classical Association [by] Cambridge University Press, 2006.
Summary:
When and why did men speak in public at Rome and why did they subsequently write down what they had said? This book offers an introduction to public speaking at Rome from its origins until the second century AD. It looks at how orators were supposed to behave and how they were trained; and what the behaviour and training of orators can tell us about the things which the Roman elite in general considered important, given that being a good speaker was a skill very highly valued in the culture.
Contents:
I The Orator In Roman Society 3
II Channels Of Communication 25
III The Practising Orator 45
IV The Orator's Education 63.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages [81]-87) and index.
ISBN:
0521687225
OCLC:
65468212

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