State of Speech

Regular price €87.99
A01=Joy Connolly
Antidosis
Aristotle
Auctoritas
Author_Joy Connolly
Autocracy
Category=CFG
Catullus
Cicero
Citizenship
Civility
Criticism
Critique
De Officiis
De Oratore
Declamation
Decorum
Deliberation
Dialectic
Diction
Effeminacy
Eloquence
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eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Ethics
Ethos
Exemplum
Handbook
Hannah Arendt
Hegemony
Hellenistic period
Ideology
Imperialism
Invective
Isocrates
Jacques Derrida
Law court (ancient Athens)
Legislation
Literature
Livy
Masculinity
Modernity
Multitude
Narrative
Obedience (human behavior)
Phenomenon
Philosopher
Philosophy
Political communication
Political culture
Political philosophy
Politician
Politics
Public speaking
Public sphere
Quintilian
Republicanism
Rhetoric
Rhetorica ad Herennium
Roland Barthes
Roman citizenship
Roman Empire
Ruler
Sensibility
Seyla Benhabib
Slavery
Social Practice
Subjectivity
Superiority (short story)
Symptom
Theory
Thomas Hobbes
Thought
Treatise
Writing

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691123646
  • Weight: 595g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Aug 2007
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Rhetorical theory, the core of Roman education, taught rules of public speaking that are still influential today. But Roman rhetoric has long been regarded as having little important to say about political ideas. The State of Speech presents a forceful challenge to this view. The first book to read Roman rhetorical writing as a mode of political thought, it focuses on Rome's greatest practitioner and theorist of public speech, Cicero. Through new readings of his dialogues and treatises, Joy Connolly shows how Cicero's treatment of the Greek rhetorical tradition's central questions is shaped by his ideal of the republic and the citizen. Rhetoric, Connolly argues, sheds new light on Cicero's deepest political preoccupations: the formation of individual and communal identity, the communicative role of the body, and the "unmanly" aspects of politics, especially civility and compromise. Transcending traditional lines between rhetorical and political theory, The State of Speech is a major contribution to the current debate over the role of public speech in Roman politics. Instead of a conventional, top-down model of power, it sketches a dynamic model of authority and consent enacted through oratorical performance and examines how oratory modeled an ethics of citizenship for the masses as well as the elite. It explains how imperial Roman rhetoricians reshaped Cicero's ideal republican citizen to meet the new political conditions of autocracy, and defends Ciceronian thought as a resource for contemporary democracy.
Joy Connolly is assistant professor of classics at New York University. She is the author of "Talk about Virtue" (forthcoming, Duckworth), a book about Roman political theory.