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In a society where public speech was integral to the decision-making process, and where all affairs pertaining to the community were the subject of democratic debate, the communication between the speaker and his audience in the public forum, whether the law-court or the Assembly, cannot be separated from the notion of performance. Attic Oratory and Performance seeks to make modern Performance Studies productive for, and so make a significant contribution to, the understanding of Greek oratory.

Although quite a lot of ink has been spilt over the performance dimension of oratory, the focus of nearly all of the scholarship in this area has been relatively narrow, understanding performance as only encompassing 'delivery' the use of gestures and vocal ploys and the convergences and divergences between oratory and theatre. Serafim seeks to move beyond this relatively narrow focus to offer a holistic perspective on performance and oratory. Using examples from selected forensic speeches, in particular four interconnected speeches by Aeschines (2, 3) and Demosthenes (18, 19), he argues that oratorical performance encompassed subtle communication between the speaker and the audience beyond mere delivery, and that the surviving texts offer numerous glimpses of the performative dimension of these speeches, and their links to contemporary theatre.

Arvustused

"Seraphim has revolutionized the way we read the Attic Orators. For so long works which were composed for oral delivery to a live audience have been read as written text. Seraphim changes all that not only by emphasizing aspects of oral performance such as the delivery or the gestures, but also by paying attention to the relationship between the speaker and his audience, the construction of the audience by the speaker, the cognitive and emotional relations which develop between the audience and the speaker, and the overall communicative effects of techniques such as the ethopoeia and ekphrasis. The holistic approach to the speeches of the Attic orators which Seraphim adopts brings these texts to life, and allows a modern audience to appreciate them in their full complexity."

- Konstantinos Kapparis, Director, Center for Greek Studies, University of Florida, USA

"Particularly for the many students who will never read the stylistic analyses presented in the great warhorses of rhetorical scholarship, such as Goodwins commentary on Demosthenes 18 or a single page of Blasss Attische Beredsamkeit, Serafims book should prove very helpful ... Serafims enthusiasm for rhetorical combat that mimics, or even quotes, theatrical works should encourage many students to look carefully at his target speeches."

- Victor Bers, Yale University, USA, in the Bryn Mawr Classical Review

Acknowledgements ix
Abbreviations xi
Introduction 1(14)
Current perspectives and approaches
1(1)
What this book is about
2(1)
Performance Studies and Attic oratory
3(2)
Audience and speaker in the law-court
5(1)
Four case studies
6(1)
The Embassy Case
7(1)
The Crown Case
8(1)
Outline
9(6)
1 The hermeneutic framework: An analytical approach
15(32)
The notion of performance: Conceptual groundwork
15(2)
Performance in the theatre and the law-court
17(3)
Judicial oratory in/as performance: Aeschines 2, 3 and Demosthenes 18, 19
20(1)
Constructed audience
20(1)
Other strategies to influence the audience
21(2)
Reconsidering ekphrasis through the lens of ancient theory
23(2)
The depiction of litigants, ethopoiia
25(1)
Conceptual groundwork
25(1)
The performative dimension of oratorical portraiture
26(1)
Inter-generic portraiture
26(2)
Hypocrisis --- Delivery
28(4)
Script, revision and extemporisation
32(1)
A Note on the Use of Ancient Sources
33(14)
2 Construction and manipulation
47(34)
Addresses to the audience and civic community
47(8)
Law-court `Big Brother'!
55(5)
Emotional appeals
60(1)
Direct/explicit appeals to emotions
61(3)
Indirect/inexplicit appeals to emotions
64(2)
Defence versus prosecution
66(2)
The language of performance: Imperatives and questions
68(13)
3 Aeschines and Demosthenes in the theatre of justice
81(10)
Political thespians in the law-court
82(1)
The use of quotations
83(1)
`He is proud of his voice': Oral excess in the law-court
84(2)
`Drive him away and hiss him out': Inviting the audience reaction
86(5)
4 Ethopoiia: An inter-generic portrayal of character
91(22)
Comic or laughter-inducing ethopoiia
92(1)
Comic stereotyping
92(4)
Inversion of tragedy into comedy
96(1)
Ridiculing sexuality
97(2)
Character portraiture: Tragedy and epic
99(1)
Identification with tragic and epic characters
99(4)
Cursed or unlucky?
103(10)
5 Hypocrisis! Hypocrisis! Hypocrisis!
113(24)
Hypocrisis of emotions
114(3)
Divine hypocrisis
117(3)
Deixis
120(1)
Figures of speech
121(1)
Embassy speeches
121(3)
Crown speeches
124(4)
Direct speech, narrative and questions
128(5)
Occasional aspects of hypocrisis
133(4)
6 Conclusion
137(4)
Index 141
Andreas Serafim is a Government of Ireland Postdoctoral Fellow at Trinity College Dublin and Adjunct Lecturer at the Open University of Cyprus. He has also been Adjunct Lecturer at the University of Cyprus (20142015) and Honorary Research Fellow (20132015) and Assistant Lecturer in Ancient Greek (20122013) at University College London.