Introduction by Michelle Ballif and Michael G. Moran
Alcidamas by Neil O'Sullivan
Anaximenes, Rhetorica ad Alexandrum by Sean Patrick O'Rourke
Antiphon by Michael Gagarin
Anonymous Seguerianus by Parker Luchte
Apsines of Gadara by Sean Patrick O'Rourke
Aristides, Aelius by Jeffrey Walker
Aristotle by Janet Atwill
Aspasia of Miletus by Kathleen Ethel Welch and Karen D. Jobe
Attic Orators: Demosthenes, Aeschines, and Lysias by David
Christopher Ryan
Augustinus, Aurelius (Saint) by Roxanne Mountford
Boethius, Anicius Manlius Severinus by Beth S. Bennett
Chrysostom, John by Justin Killian and David M. Timmerman
Cicero, Marcus Tullius by Richard Leo Enos
Corax and Tisias by Wilfred E. Major
Cornelia by D. Alexis Hart
Demetrius of Phaleron by Lara O'Sullivan
Demetrius, On Style by Scott G. Reed
Dio (Chrysostom) Cocceianus by George Pullman
Diogenes of Sinope by Victor J. Vitanza and D. Diane Davis
Dionysius of Halicarnassus by Jeffrey Walker
Diotima of Mantinea by C. Jan Swearingen
Dissoi Logoi by Edward Schiappa
Favorinus by Victor J. Vitanza
Fronto, M. Cornelius by Gary Hatch
Gorgias by John Poulakos
Gregory of Nazianzus by Roxanne Mountford
Heraclitus by John T. Kirby
Hermagoras of Temnos by Beth S. Bennett
Hermogenes of Tarsus by Janet B. Davis
Herodes Atticus by Angela Mitchell
Himerius by Charles Platter
Hippias of Elis by Jane Sutton
Homer by Patrick O'Sullivan
Hortensia by D. Alexis Hart
Hypatia by Elizabeth Ervin
Socrates by Takis Poulakos
Libanius by George Pullman
"Longinus," On the Sublime by Hans Kellner
Menander of Laodicea by Martin M. Jacobsen
Pericles by David M. Timmerman
Philodemus by Robert N. Gaines
Philostratus by Jerry L. Miller and Raymie McKerrow
Plato by Yun Lee Too
Pliny the Younger by Joy Connolly
Plutarch by Hans Kellner
Polemo, Marcus Antonius by Grant Boswell
Prodicus of Ceos by Neil O'Sullivan
Progymnasmata by Christy Desmet
Protagoras by Edward Schiappa
Pythagorean Women by Ekaterina Haskins
Quintilianus, Fabius by Joy Connolly
Rhetorica ad Herennium by Richard Leo Enos
Sappho by David M. Timmerman
Seneca the Elder by Beth S. Bennett
Seneca the Younger by Michael G. Moran
Sextus Empiricus by Robert N. Gaines
Socrates by Christopher Lyle Johnstone
Tacitus, Cornelius by Eizabeth Ervin
Theophrastus by Christy Desmet
Thrasymachus by Patrick O'Sullivan
Verginius Flavus by Daniel R. Frederick
Bibliographic Essay by Michelle Ballif and Michael G. Moran
Alphabetically arranged entries on roughly 60 leading rhetoricians of antiquity detail their lives and writings and cite works for further reading.
MICHELLE BALLIF is Associate Professor of English and
Director of the Franklin College Writing Intensive Program at the
University of Georgia. Her work has appeared in such journals as
Rhetoric Review, Rhetoric Society Quarterly, and JAC, and she is
the co-editor of Twentieth-Century Rhetoric and Rhetoricians
(Greenwood, 2000).
MICHAEL G. MORAN is Graduate Coordinator and Associate
Professor of English at the University of Georgia. His many books
include Research in Composition and Rhetoric (1984), Research in
Technical Communication (1985), Research in Basic Writing (1990),
Eighteenth-Century British and American Rhetorics and Rhetoricians
(1994), and Twentieth-Century Rhetoric and Rhetoricians (2000), all
available from Greenwood Press.
The current consensus among scholars is that rhetoric and its
histories are culturally constructed rhetorical acts. This
supposition has stimulated research that revises the history of
rhetoric--history established by such venerable scholars as James
Murphy and George Kennedy--into a more inclusive history of
rhetorics. Although this book could not exist without the codified
historical narrative it challenges by deemphasizing the universal
in favor of the particular, clearly its time has come. Ballif and
Moran provide an excellent and succinct introduction that surveys
the current state of historical scholarship and establishes three
goals: to encourage readers to think of rhetoric as including
figures who challenge the established canon (the book includes
nontraditional as well as traditional figures--women, poets,
pre-Socratic philosophers, etc.); to reshuffle the deck of future
influence by spotlighting less traditional figures; and to open
readers' eyes to the contemporary application and significance of
rhetoric….Although this volume will not displace the revised
histories, it will supplement them and cannot be ignored.
Essential. All collections; all levels.
*Choice*
This handsomely bound volume of studies supplies a much-needed
resource for teachers and students of classical rhetoric: concise
stand-alone summaries of ancient Greek and Roman writers who wrote
about the practiced art of rhetoric….[t]his overview is bound to
supply teachers, students, and libraries with one of the most
accessible, useful, and diverse treatments of its subject currently
available.
*The Classical Outlook*
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