Lettres À Brutus Cicéron (0106-0043 Av

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Lettres À Brutus Cicéron (0106-0043 Av 1/4 Data Lettres à Brutus Cicéron (0106-0043 av. J.-C.) Titre principal : Epistularum ad M. Brutum libri duo (latin) Langue : Latin Genre ou forme de l’œuvre : Œuvres textuelles Note : Auteurs : Cicéron et Brutus Correspondance échangée entre Cicéron et Marcus Junius Brutus en 43 , dont on n'a conservé qu'une vingtaine de lettres. Authenticité contestée de certaines lettres Autres formes du titre : Lettres de Brutus et de Cicéron (français) Epistulae ad Brutum (latin) Epistolae ad Brutum (latin) Epistulae ad M. Brutum (latin) Epistles of M. T. Cicero to M. Brutus and of Brutus to Cicero (anglais) Letters to Brutus (anglais) L'epistole di M. Tullio Cicerone scritte a Marco Brutto (italien) Lettere di M. T. Cicerone a M. Bruto, e di Bruto a Cicerone (italien) Détails du contenu (1 ressources dans data.bnf.fr) Contenu dans (1) Correspondance , Cicéron (0106-0043 av. J.- C.) data.bnf.fr 2/4 Data Éditions de Lettres à Brutus (18 ressources dans data.bnf.fr) Livres (18) Marci T. C. Epistolae ad Atticum, Brutum et Quintum. - Epistolarum ad Brutum liber. - [2] [2] (1990) (1990) Epistulae ad M. Brutum. - [1] Epistulae ad Marcum Brutum. - [1] (1988) (1980) Lettere di M. T. Cicerone a , Cicéron (0106-0043 av. J.- The Epistles of M. T. Cicero , Cicéron (0106-0043 av. J.- M. Bruto, e di Bruto a C.), Marcus Junius Brutus to M. Brutus and of Brutus C.), London , 1743 Cicerone, col testo latino a (0085-0042 av. J.-C.), to Cicero... rincontro, con Venezia : G. Caroboli , 1762 (1743) annotazioni... ed una dissertazione... in cui si vendica l'autorità delle medesime lettere e di proposito si considerano e si confutano tutte le obbiezioni del... sig. Tunstall, del signor Conyers Middleton,... Traduzione dalla lingua inglese (1762) The Epistles of M. T. Cicero , Cicéron (0106-0043 av. J.- Lettres de Brutus et de , Cicéron (0106-0043 av. J.- to M. Brutus and of Brutus C.), Marcus Junius Brutus Cicéron... traduites en C.), Paris : T. Jolly , 1663 to Cicero, with the Latin (0085-0042 av. J.-C.), françois, et accompagnées text on the opposite page London : printed for R. d'argumens et de notes and English notes to each Manby , 1743 historiques, par Antoine epistle... by Conyers Soreau,... Middleton,... (1663) (1743) Lettres de Brutus et de , Cicéron (0106-0043 av. J.- M. Tullii Ciceronis Epistolæ , Cicéron (0106-0043 av. J.- Cicéron... traduites en C.), Paris : L. Billaine , 1663 ad Brutum, et Q. fratrem C.), Lugd. Batavorum : ex françois, et accompagnées (1595) officina Plantiniana apud d'argumens et de notes Franciscum Raphelengium historiques, par Antoine , 1595 Soreau,... (1663) data.bnf.fr 3/4 Data M. Tullii Ciceronis Epistolae , Cicéron (0106-0043 av. J.- Marcus Tullii Ciceronis Epistolarum ad Brutum liber [...]. ad Atticum, summa C.), 1547 - Éd. et comment. Paolo Manuzio. - [1] diligentia castigatæ, ut in (1547) iis menda, quæ plurima erant, paucissima jam supersint. Pauli Manutii in easdem epistolas scholia, quibus abditi locorum sensus ostenduntur, cum explicatione castigationum, quæ in his epistolis penè innumerabiles factæ sunt. (1547) M. Tullii Ciceronis Ad M. , Cicéron (0106-0043 av. J.- M. Tullii Ciceronis ad M. , Cicéron (0106-0043 av. J.- Brutum Orator, Jacobi C.), Paris : Michel de Brutum Orator C.), 1540 Lodoici Strebaei Vascosan , 1540 (1540) commentariis ab authore ipso recognitis illustratus (1540) M. T. Ciceronis Epistolarum , Cicéron (0106-0043 av. J.- M. T. Ciceronis Epistolarum , Cicéron (0106-0043 av. J.- ad Brutum Liber C.), Paris : Simon de ad Brutum liber C.), 1540 (1540) Colines , 1540 (1540) Hoc in volumine haec , Cicéron (0106-0043 av. J.- M. T. Ciceronis Epistolae ad , Cicéron (0106-0043 av. J.- continuentur. Epistola ad C.), [Venezia : Filippo Pinzi Brutum, ad Quintum C.), Venezia : Nicolas Augustinum Mapheum per , circa 1494-1495] fratrem, ad Octavium et ad Jenson , 1470 Bartholomeum Salicetum Atticum Bononiensem et (1470) Lodovicum Regium Corneliensem. M. T. C. Epistolarum ad Brutum liber unus. M. T. C. ad Q. C. fratrem libri tres. M. T. C. ad Octavium epistola. M. T. C. Epistolarum ad T. Po. Atticum libri XVI. T. P. Attici vita per Cornelium Nepotem. Pomponii Lacti epigramma ad Augustinum Maffeum. Alia epistola ad Augustinum Maffeum per Lodovicum Regium Corneliensem (1494) data.bnf.fr 4/4 Data Auteurs en relation avec Lettres à Brutus (5 ressources dans data.bnf.fr) Auteur du texte (2) Marcus Junius Brutus (0085-0042 av. J.-C.) Cicéron (0106-0043 av. J.-C.) Imprimeur-libraire (2) Simon de Colines (1480?-1546) Michel de Vascosan (1500?-1577) Auteur du commentaire (1) Jacques-Louis d' Estrebay (1481-1550?) Voir aussi (2 ressources dans data.bnf.fr) À la BnF (1) Notice correspondante dans Catalogue général Sur le Web (1) Notice correspondante dans VIAF data.bnf.fr.
Recommended publications
  • INGO GILDENHARD Cicero, Philippic 2, 44–50, 78–92, 100–119 Latin Text, Study Aids with Vocabulary, and Commentary CICERO, PHILIPPIC 2, 44–50, 78–92, 100–119
    INGO GILDENHARD Cicero, Philippic 2, 44–50, 78–92, 100–119 Latin text, study aids with vocabulary, and commentary CICERO, PHILIPPIC 2, 44–50, 78–92, 100–119 Cicero, Philippic 2, 44–50, 78–92, 100–119 Latin text, study aids with vocabulary, and commentary Ingo Gildenhard https://www.openbookpublishers.com © 2018 Ingo Gildenhard The text of this work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC BY 4.0). This license allows you to share, copy, distribute and transmit the text; to adapt the text and to make commercial use of the text providing attribution is made to the author(s), but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work. Attribution should include the following information: Ingo Gildenhard, Cicero, Philippic 2, 44–50, 78–92, 100–119. Latin Text, Study Aids with Vocabulary, and Commentary. Cambridge, UK: Open Book Publishers, 2018. https://doi. org/10.11647/OBP.0156 Every effort has been made to identify and contact copyright holders and any omission or error will be corrected if notification is made to the publisher. In order to access detailed and updated information on the license, please visit https:// www.openbookpublishers.com/product/845#copyright Further details about CC BY licenses are available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/ by/4.0/ All external links were active at the time of publication unless otherwise stated and have been archived via the Internet Archive Wayback Machine at https://archive.org/web Digital material and resources associated with this volume are available at https://www.
    [Show full text]
  • Performance and Rhetoric in Cicero's Philippics * in Recent Years, the Idea Of
    Performance and Rhetoric in Cicero's Philippics * In recent years, the idea of 'performance' has become a more and more important concept for the analysis of literary texts, even if the notion of 'performance' in literary criticism still does not denote a single agreed theory, but is a collective term referring to a number of different aspects and methods. The performance approach seems obvious for some literary genres, like drama and also oratory, for which performance is an essential char­ acteristic. In the case of orations, in antiquity already a detailed doctrine of the perfect performance was established, both in theory and practice. Building on this knowledge and trying to recover the quintessential context of a speech, people have successfully attempted to explore a Roman orator's potential and to contexrualize Roman orations by reconstructing the delivery of sample speeches.' However, there are further levels of performance to be looked at in a Roman speech if the term 'performance' is understood in a more specific way: there is not only the actio that determines the performance of a complete speech; the texts of transmitted speeches also exhibit passages where the wording shows that the orator bases his argument on the performance situation, particularly by making use of the active participation of the audience. Reactions from the audience are deliberately elicited by the orator, for instance by taking on certain roles; these techniques stem from his rhetorical training (for example, ethopoiia); however, considering and commenting on these reactions subsequently yield a performative dialogue with the audience, mirrored in the text. That opens up the opportunity to reconstruct a performance situation which goes beyond identifying how rhetorical techniques have been realized by the orator.
    [Show full text]
  • Pathos, Logos and Ethos'. Rhetorical Duel Between Brutus and Antony in William Shakespeare’S Julius Caesar
    Michał Choiński Jagiellonian University, Kraków Pathos, Logos and Ethos'. Rhetorical Duel between Brutus and Antony in William Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar According to Brian Vickers, “Shakespeare’s poetic language was nourished by rhetoric” (1970: 163). It is then hardly surprising that the application of rhetoric as an analytical tool for the study of Shakespeare’s works has a long tradition; L. C. Knights observes that “the works of T. W. Baldwin, Sister Miriam Joseph, B. L. Joseph and Brian Vickers - to name no others - have established beyond doubt the importance of rhetoric in Elizabethan poetics” (1980: 2). Taking into account the history of the shaping of poetic verse in England, the rhetorical perspective seems to be one of the most rewarding approaches towards the sixteenth-century literature; as pointed out by C. S. Lewis (1954: 61), “nearly all our older poetry was written and read by men to whom the distinction between poetry and rhetoric, in its modem form, would have been meaningless. ” The art of oratory was the axis of the Renaissance theory of composition and had a profound influence on the way Shakespeare and his contemporaries perceived and employed language. BftJ- The paper is an attempt at describing the functioning of three rhetorical persuasive proofs: logos, pathos and ethos in two speeches of Antony and Brutus from William Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar. The two orationes from the Forum scene (III. ii) are widely ranked among “purple passages, ” the best known passages from the playwright’s oeuvre and offer the most fruitful material for rhetorical and stylistic investigation. The division into three persuasive appeals, pathos, ethos and logos, is one of the basic elements of the traditional theory of rhetoric.
    [Show full text]
  • Cicero on the Philosophy of Religion
    CICERO ON THE PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION: DE NATURA DEORUM AND DE DIVINATIONE. A Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Cornell University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy by John Patrick Frederick Wynne January 2008 CICERO ON THE PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION: DE NATURA DEORUM AND DE DIVINATIONE. John Patrick Frederick Wynne, Ph. D. Cornell University, 2008 Cicero wrote de Natura Deorum (dND), de Divinatione (Div.) and de Fato (Fat.) in succession and describes the latter two as continuations of the first. I argue that the three dialogues form a trilogy, in which Cicero as author indicates a stance on the material he presents (but that too little of the fragmentary Fat. remains to be useful for my purposes). There are much-debated attributions of preferences to Cicero’s propriae personae at the conclusions of dND and Div.; I take these preferences to express Cicero’s authorial stance. I examine relevant parts of the speeches to which they react and, first, make philosophical interpretations of each (often comparing other sources for Hellenistic thought) and, second, pay attention to the interaction of Cicero’s characterization of each speaker with the arguments the speaker gives. I find that Balbus in dND advocates the avoidance of superstition and the reform of religious beliefs in line with Stoic physics and that Cotta has a strong commitment to traditional Roman religious views consistent with his sceptical epistemology. Cotta’s scepticism is elusive in its details but perhaps yields a kind of fideism. I find that Quintus Cicero’s advocacy in Div.
    [Show full text]
  • Cicero's Style
    MNS-245-albrecht.qxd 03/04/2003 12:13 Page i CICERO’S STYLE MNS-245-albrecht.qxd 03/04/2003 12:13 Page ii MNEMOSYNE BIBLIOTHECA CLASSICA BATAVA COLLEGERUNT H. PINKSTER • H. S. VERSNEL D.M. SCHENKEVELD • P. H. SCHRIJVERS S.R. SLINGS BIBLIOTHECAE FASCICULOS EDENDOS CURAVIT H. PINKSTER, KLASSIEK SEMINARIUM, OUDE TURFMARKT 129, AMSTERDAM SUPPLEMENTUM DUCENTESIMUM QUADRAGESIMUM QUINTUM MICHAEL VON ALBRECHT CICERO’S STYLE MNS-245-albrecht.qxd 03/04/2003 12:13 Page iii CICERO’S STYLE A SYNOPSIS FOLLOWED BY SELECTED ANALYTIC STUDIES BY MICHAEL VON ALBRECHT BRILL LEIDEN • BOSTON 2003 MNS-245-albrecht.qxd 03/04/2003 12:13 Page iv This book is printed on acid-free paper. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Albrecht, Michael von. Cicero’s Style: a synopsis / by Michael von Albrecht. p. cm. – (Mnemosyne, bibliotheca classica Batava. Supplementum ; 245) Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index. ISBN 90-04-12961-8 1. Cicero, Marcus Tullius–Literary style. 2. Speeches, addresses, etc., Latin–History and criticism. 3. Latin language–Style. 4. Rhetoric, Ancient. 5. Oratory, Ancient. I. Title. II. Series. PA6357.A54 2003 875’.01–dc21 2003045375 ISSN 0169-8958 ISBN 90 04 12961 8 © Copyright 2003 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission from the publisher. Authorization to photocopy items for internal or personal use is granted by Brill provided that the appropriate fees are paid directly to The Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Suite 910 Danvers, MA 01923, USA.
    [Show full text]
  • Letters to Atticus
    THE LOEB CLASSICAL LIBRARY FOUNDED BY JAMES LOEB, LL.D. EDITED BY fT. E. PAGE, C.H., LITT.D. H. D. ROUSE, litt.d. t E. CAPPS, PH.D., LL.D. t W. f.b.hist.soo. L. A. POST, L.H.D. E. H. WARMINGTON, m.a., LETTERS TO ATTICUS III CICERO LETTERS TO ATTICUS WITH AN ENGLISH TRANSLATION BY E. (). WliNSTEDT, M.A. OF MAGDALEN COLLEGE, OXFORD IN THREE VOLUMES III LONDON WILLIAM HEINEMANN LTD CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS ilCMLSl First printed 1918 Reprinted 1925, 1945, 1953, 1961 I Printed in Qreal Britain CONTENTS Introduction #P«g« vii Letters to Atticus Book XII 1 Letters to Atticus Book XIII 109 Letters to Atticus Book XIV 217 Letters to Atticus Book XV 293 Letters to Atticus Book XVI 369 Chronological Order of the Letters 445 Index of Names 449 INTRODUCTION The lettei's contained in this volume begin with one written just after Caesar's final victory over the remains of the Pompeian party at Thapsus in April, 46 B.C., and cover three of the last four years of Cicero's life. When they open, Cicero was enjoying a restful interval after the troublous times of the Civil War. He had made his peace with Caesar and reconciled himself to a life of retirement and literary activity. In the Senate he never spoke except to deliver a speech pleading for the return from e.xile of his friend Marcellus ; and his only other public appearance was to advocate the cause of another friend, Ligarius. In both he was successful ; and, indeed, so he seems also to have been in private appeals to Caesar on behalf of friends.
    [Show full text]
  • The Life of Julius Caesar Worksheet Answers
    The Life Of Julius Caesar Worksheet Answers Fitzgerald eternized her gynandromorph calamitously, dolichocephalic and unreversed. Nyctitropic and divestible Gere always somnambulated politically and palliate his feaster. Furtive and westwardly Chris hobbyhorses her gormand disharmonised or planed decani. Click lower to reckon it. Disturber of london and create connecting julius and abraham lincoln worksheet answers depending on your classroom; almost a peace? He freely granted everything else that anyone took it into his head to ask, either without opposition or by intimidating anyone who tried to object. Murellus and Flavius, Roman tribunes who are friends of Brutus and Cassius, come upon a group of common people running about the street in their Sunday best when they should be working. Origins of resources for connecting julius caesar and abraham worksheet answers, than that case? Students give their speeches and house the class to analyse their responses. Why was Caesar seen and a hero hiss the minds of the Roman people? Which group echoed more words? Pompey, a camp leader of Rome. Who are interpreted and worksheet answers, and they choose from. You audience to day before personal and juba by an equaliser bonus points and abraham worksheet answers that of life of caesar and personalized coaching to. The life of! Complete your answers neatly on a separate council of paper. Julius Caesar and the Romans. Julius Caesar Achievethecoreorg. New updates for remote learning. But approve of Cicero? Caesar and many of their production they are not received you taking this allows all the answers julius caesar was setting of cicero was connecting julius.
    [Show full text]
  • "Caesar: Slain with Daggers but Stabbed with Words" Or "Cicero As a Failure and Fraud"
    University of Tennessee, Knoxville TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange Supervised Undergraduate Student Research Chancellor’s Honors Program Projects and Creative Work Fall 12-1998 "Caesar: Slain with Daggers but Stabbed with Words" or "Cicero as a Failure and Fraud" Brandtly Neal Jones University of Tennessee - Knoxville Follow this and additional works at: https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_chanhonoproj Recommended Citation Jones, Brandtly Neal, ""Caesar: Slain with Daggers but Stabbed with Words" or "Cicero as a Failure and Fraud"" (1998). Chancellor’s Honors Program Projects. https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_chanhonoproj/259 This is brought to you for free and open access by the Supervised Undergraduate Student Research and Creative Work at TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange. It has been accepted for inclusion in Chancellor’s Honors Program Projects by an authorized administrator of TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange. For more information, please contact [email protected]. UNIVERSITY HONORS PROGRAM SENIOR PROJECT • APPROVAL Name: J3..I:£I3J-I-1-- _l.f!.2.e_~ ----------------: ----------------- College: _11..!YLf.f:!..~:!-=.!'_'L__ Depa rtm en t: ___(!~fJ'..! __ C,[ __________ _ ---------------------------------------------------------- I have reviewed this completed senior honors thesis with this student and certify that it is a project com~urate with honors level undergraduate research in this field. 1-) 7 Signed: -~--~::ift;I.-~,------~-'-------------------, Fa cui ty M en to r Date: ------:-1.Y-1J1-3~---::- I Comments (Optional): Brandtly Jones Senior Honors Thesis Advisor: Dr. Christopher Craig CAESAR: SLAIN WITH DAGGERS BUT STABBED WITH WORDS OR CICERO AS A FAILURE AND FRAUD Of all the figures of the ancient world, none has left to posterity so much of himself in writing as Marcus Tullius Cicero.
    [Show full text]
  • Matthew Fox, Cicero's Philosophy of History. By
    Matthew Fox, Cicero’s Philosophy of History. By: Jonathan P. Zarecki Zarecki, Jonathan P. 2008. Matthew Fox, Cicero’s Philosophy of History. Bryn Mawr Classical Review. 2008.06.32. http://bmcr.brynmawr.edu/2008/2008-06-32.html Reprinted with permission. No further reproduction is authorized without written permission from Bryn Mawr Commentaries. Abstract: The purpose of Matthew Fox's (hereafter F.) latest book is to examine Cicero's use of historical exempla in his philosophical and rhetorical dialogues. These exempla reveal the depth and influence of Cicero's academic skepticism and his belief that Rome did not possess any sort of historical or ideological consistency. F. enjoins us to replace the "unseemly" desire (4) to discover Cicero's own thoughts in his philosophical works (which Cicero's own comments at Nat. Deo. 1.5.10 indicate to be a fruitless exercise) and instead look at them through the very lens that Cicero himself used, that of strict Academic skepticism. History is consistently treated by Cicero with an open-ended skepticism that denies certainty; we should not seek, nor will we find, coherence of thought regarding Rome, her history, or her future. Historical exempla open up the possibility of argument rather than closing it down. Cicero made no attempt to create a sort of dogmatic world view, for to do so would countermand his adherence to the Academy; history provides its own authority, and does not need Cicero's. A book on Cicero's philosophy of history would seem to be an impossible one to write because, as F. notes, "there was no such thing as 'philosophy of history' in the ancient world, and Cicero did not write it" (1).
    [Show full text]
  • The Philippics
    CHAPTER NINE THE PHILIPPICS Jon Hall Composed between September 44 and April 43, the fourteen Philippics are the last of Cicero's extant orations. Although they address a vari­ ety of political situations, they are unified by a central theme: oppo­ sition to Mark Antony's attempts to seize control of the Republic following the assassination of Julius Caesar. The speeches are thus closely tied to the complex political events of the period, and a knowledge of this historical background is essential to an apprecia­ tion of Cicero's rhetorical aims. The study by Frisch provides excel­ lent guidance in this regard, 1 and textual matters are also well served, with a number of useful editions and linguistic commentaries on the various speeches.2 Less work, however, has been done on their rhetor­ ical features. Only Wooten attempts an oratorical analysis of the col­ lection as a whole, and studies of individual literary aspects are relatively few in number. 3 The following discussion presents a brief summary of the background and content of each speech, and then examines four of their most important rhetorical features: (1) Cicero's use of the 'rhetoric of crisis'; (2) his use of wit and ridicule, espe­ cially in Philippics 2 and 13; (3) the rhetorical purpose of praise and honorific decrees; (4) the style of the speeches. 1 H. Frisch, Cicero's Fight far the Republic: The Historical Background ef Cicero's Philippics (Copenhagen: Glyndendal 1946). 2 See especially D. R. Shackleton Bailey, Cicero: Philippics (Chapel Hill and London 1986), whose text and translation (with some minor alterations) are followed in this discussion; and P.
    [Show full text]
  • Reflections on Shakespeare's Julius Caesar Stephen A
    digitalcommons.nyls.edu Faculty Scholarship Articles & Chapters 2004 Rhetoric, Advocacy and Ethics: Reflections on Shakespeare's Julius Caesar Stephen A. Newman New York Law School, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.nyls.edu/fac_articles_chapters Part of the Legal Education Commons, Legal Profession Commons, and the Legal Writing and Research Commons Recommended Citation Newman, Stephen A., "Rhetoric, Advocacy and Ethics: Reflections on Shakespeare's Julius Caesar" (2004). Articles & Chapters. 1160. https://digitalcommons.nyls.edu/fac_articles_chapters/1160 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Faculty Scholarship at DigitalCommons@NYLS. It has been accepted for inclusion in Articles & Chapters by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@NYLS. RHETORIC, ADVOCACY, AND ETHICS: REFLECTIONS ON SHAKESPEARE’S JULIUS CAESAR Stephen A. Newman Professor of Law, New York Law School Professionals generally learn their craft from those who have gone before them. Lawyers are initially trained by law professors, and then apprentice themselves to more experienced attorneys in practice. Critical professional skills are often acquired, improved and polished while on the job. But for some skills, lawyers can benefit considerably from looking outside the confines of the legal profession. The rhetorical skill necessary to speaking and writing persuasively, for example, a skill surely essential to the lawyer’s craft1, may be studied with great profit by exploring realms of knowledge far from the courtroom and the law office. 1 An illuminating discussion of the role of rhetoric in law and legal advocacy appears in Gerald Wetlaufer, “Rhetoric and its Denial in Legal Disocurse,” 76 Va.
    [Show full text]
  • Cicero and Quintilian on the Formation of an Orator. INSTITUTION Southern Connecticut State Coll., New Haven
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 075 872 CS 500 240 AUTHOR Golden, James L. TITLE Cicero and Quintilian on the Formation of an Orator. INSTITUTION Southern Connecticut State Coll., New Haven. Dept. of Speech. PUB DATE 69 NOTE 6p. JOURNAL CIT Speech Journal; n6 p29-34 1969 EDRS PRICE MF-$0.65 HC-$3.29 DESCRIPTORS Communication (Thought Transfer); *Composition Skills (Literary); *Discourse Analysis; Information Theory; Literary Analysis; *Persuasive Discourse; Public Speaking; *Rhetoric; *Rhetorical Criticism; Textual Criticism IDENTIFIERS Cicero; Quintilian ABSTRACT The contributions of Cicero and Quintilian, the two leading Roman rhetoricians, were based on their acceptance of the prior philosophical theories of Isocrates, which emphasized a cultural approach to rhetoric. Cicero and Quintilian, drawing from Isocrates sought prospective orators who had a natural talent for eloquence and who could adopt a cultural approach to rhetoric that emphasized the worth of reading and writing as important to forming the abilities of the model speaker. Their particular contributions were their emphases on the relationships between writing and speaking ability and their construction of systems ofrhetoric which viewed the orator as the prime motivator of a group of listeners on a specific occasion. Their writer-speaker centered rhetoric anticipated the tradition of rhetoric and letters that flourished in later centuries, with special relevance for mid-twentieth century students of communication theory. (Author/RN) Speech Journal, n6, 1969 Published by Dept. of Speech, Southern Connecticut State College. cicero and quintilian on the formation of an orator by James L. Golden The theory of culture approach to rhetoric of scholarship which could serve as a frame- has long been identified with the name of work for producing rhetorical works that Isocrates.
    [Show full text]