Criticism in AntiquityDuckworth, 1981 - Počet stran: 219 |
Vyhledávání v knize
Výsledky 1-3 z 30
Strana 10
... philosophical ethos ' , which here means the overall moral tendency of the speech , and ' rhetorical ethos ' , namely the appropriateness of what is said to speaker , audience and sub- ject . Critical judgment has to concern itself with ...
... philosophical ethos ' , which here means the overall moral tendency of the speech , and ' rhetorical ethos ' , namely the appropriateness of what is said to speaker , audience and sub- ject . Critical judgment has to concern itself with ...
Strana 39
... philosophical school even affected his oratorical style . The Stoics were too much concerned with dry logic , Epicureans were quite unsuit- able reading for an orator , the Academy and Lyceum had the advantage of making their members ...
... philosophical school even affected his oratorical style . The Stoics were too much concerned with dry logic , Epicureans were quite unsuit- able reading for an orator , the Academy and Lyceum had the advantage of making their members ...
Strana 65
... philosophical interest in questions of literature and aesthetics . We saw that not only Plato and Aristotle , but the Hellenistic schools also , held theories of the nature and function of poetry . We have also had occasion to notice ...
... philosophical interest in questions of literature and aesthetics . We saw that not only Plato and Aristotle , but the Hellenistic schools also , held theories of the nature and function of poetry . We have also had occasion to notice ...
Obsah
from the Beginnings | 18 |
the Hellenistic | 34 |
the Roman Empire | 52 |
Autorská práva | |
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Aeschylus ancient antiquity appears appropriate argument Aristotle Aristotle's audience called century Chapter character Cicero classical clear clearly comedy comes common concerned course criticism Demosthenes dialogue Dionysius discussion distinction doctrine early effect element emotion epic especially evidence example expression fact figures give Greek hand Hellenistic Homer idea imitation important inspiration interest involves judgment kind knowledge language later Latin less literary literature Longinus means mind moral namely narrative natural orator oratory passage perhaps period persons philosophical Plato play poems poet Poetics poetry practice present principles prose qualities question Quintilian reason regarded relation represented rhetorical Roman seems seen sense sophists speech style takes taste texts theory things thinking thought tion tradition tragedy understanding various Virgil whole writers