Figuratively Speaking: Rhetoric and Culture from Quintilian to the Twin Towers

Přední strana obálky
A&C Black, 20. 11. 2013 - Počet stran: 160
Although rhetoric is a term often associated with lies, this book takes a polemical look at rhetoric as a purveyor of truth. Its purpose is to focus on one aspect of rhetoric, figurative speech, and to demonstrate how the treatment of figures of speech provides a common denominator among western cultures from Cicero to the present. The central idea is that, in the western tradition, figurative speech - using language to do more than name - provides the fundamental way for language to articulate concerns central to each cultural moment. In this study, Sarah Spence identifies the embedded tropes for four periods in Western culture: Roman antiquity, the High Middle Ages, the Age of Montaigne, and our present, post-9/11 moment. In so doing, she reasserts the fundamental importance of rhetoric, the art of speaking well.
 

Obsah

Acknowledgements
Repetition versus Replication
Figures of Speech and Thought in the Roman
Rhetoric and Love in the Middle Ages
The Rhetoric of Montaignes Essais
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Autorská práva

Další vydání - Zobrazit všechny

Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví

O autorovi (2013)

Sarah Spence is Professor of Classics at the University of Georgia.

Bibliografické údaje