Breadcrumbs Section. Click here to navigate to respective pages.
Book

Book
Rhetoric in Byzantium
DOI link for Rhetoric in Byzantium
Rhetoric in Byzantium book
Rhetoric in Byzantium
DOI link for Rhetoric in Byzantium
Rhetoric in Byzantium book
Get Citation
ABSTRACT
'Rhetoric in Byzantium' explores the ways in which rhetoric functioned in Byzantine society - as a tool for the effective communication of ideas and ideologies, but at times also a barrier that inhibited the expression of real feelings and everyday realities, and imposed a burden of decoding on outsiders. After an introduction on the practical and textual background to Byzantine rhetoric, the essays are grouped in five sections. The first two deal with the basis of rhetoric in Byzantium and its public uses, principally in imperial and ecclesiastical ceremonial. The next sections look at how rhetoric affects the definition of literature in a Byzantine context and the aesthetic to be used in approaching Byzantine literature, with reference to current critical approaches, and specifically at the role of rhetoric in the writing of history - does it only obscure the facts, or does the rhetorical process itself provide information at other levels? The final essays examine the interaction of the written word and pictorial representation and the question of whether real connections between rhetorical training and artistic production can be demonstrated.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|66 pages
The uses of rhetoric
chapter 3|15 pages
Teachers and students of rhetoric in the late Byzantine period
chapter 4|18 pages
Byzantine imperial panegyric as advice literature (1204-c. 1350)
part II|41 pages
Public uses of rhetoric
chapter 7|13 pages
Dramatic device or didactic tool? The function of dialogue in Byzantine preaching
part III|56 pages
Literature and rhetoric
chapter 9|9 pages
Praise and persuasion: argumentation and audience response in epideictic oratory
chapter 11|20 pages
Rhetoric, theory and the imperative of performance: Byzantium and now
part IV|41 pages
Rhetoric and historiography
chapter 13|13 pages
The rhetorical structures of John Skylitzes’ Synopsis Historion
part V|60 pages
Rhetoric and visual images