Persuasion, Rhetoric and Roman Poetry
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:22nd Aug '19
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Offers a radical re-appraisal of rhetoric's relation to literature, with fresh insights into rhetorical sources and their reception in Roman poetry.
This pioneering analysis of the relationship between rhetoric and poetry offers both a fresh take on key texts from the Greco-Roman rhetorical tradition (including authors such as Cicero, Seneca the Elder and Quintilian) and a new approach towards theorizing the role of the rhetorical in literature and literary criticism.Previous studies on the relationship between rhetorical theory and Roman poetry have generally taken the form of lists enumerating elements of style and arrangement that poets are said to have 'borrowed' from rhetorical critics. This book examines, and ultimately questions, this entrenched theoretical model and the very notion of rhetorical influence on which this paradigm is built. Tracing key moments in the poetic and the rhetorical traditions, in the context of which the problematic relationship of difference and similarity between rhetorical and poetic discourse is discussed, the book focuses on the cultural relevance of this intellectual divide in Roman literary culture. The study of rhetorical sources, such as Cicero, Seneca the Elder and Quintilian, and of select responses in Roman poetry, sheds light on long-standing scholarly assumptions about classical poetry as artless language and about the role of rhetoric in the construction of the decline of post-classical cultures.
'… this carefully researched and deeply insightful book, lies in its ability to weave a compelling large-scale narrative building upon the detailed examination of a variety of different texts, both in prose and in poetry, each richly contextualised in its intellectual climate: the overall result is an original and exciting view of a fundamental chapter in the history of Roman literature and its reception.' Alessandro Schiesaro, Bryn Mawr Classical Review
ISBN: 9781107104242
Dimensions: 235mm x 157mm x 21mm
Weight: 560g
294 pages