The Art of Rhetoric in Alexandria
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About The Book

Goethes great love for the ancient classics once prompted him to write (Gespriiche mit Eckerman April 1 1827) Man studiere nicht die Mitgeborenen und Mitstrebenden sondern grosse Menschen der Vorzeit deren Werke seit Jahrhunderten gleichen Wert und gleiches Ansehen behalten haben . . . Man studiere Moliere man studiere Shakespeare aber vor allen Dingen die alten Griechen und immer die alten Griechen. Anyone examining the history of Western ideas has found this statement to prove eminently true: one must study above all others the ancient Greeks. This book by its study of the Greeks and others seeks to fill in a small way the large gap which has obtained in the history of rhetoric in the Eastern Mediterranean area: the rhetoric (formal spoken discourse) of the courtroom street corner classroom and legislative hall. Scholars have long investigated and with considerable success the figures and movements in Rome and Athens until Con­ stantine or even later but for some reason they have neglected the role and impact of oratory in most Asian and North African centers (Antioch excepted). If this monograph can provide outlines of its activity in Greco-Roman Alexandria to approximately A. D. 400 and encourage further scholarship in Pergamum Tarsus and elsewhere it will have fulfilled its purpose. At the same time it is not intended as a history of the city nor an economic political or religious account of its life.
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