This paper examines similarities and differences between Cicero’s speeches Post reditum in senatu and Pro Marcello. In spite of formal similarities of context (senatorial oratory), genre and style (epideictic) and themes (thanksgiving and praise for the restitutio and practice of beneficium), these two speeches are characterized by deep dissimilarities due to the different historical and political background in which they were delivered. In particular, the analysis focuses on the epideictic aspects and strategies of the two orations and examines the development of praise in the period of the late Republic. Moreover, it highlights how themes and reasonings of the post reditum rhetoric are variously developed in Caesarian speeches
Composed in spring of 46 BC, Cicero’s Brutus emphasizes oratorical silence, in stark contrast with t...
The article being here presented has constituted primarily a part of a master's thesis entitled Cice...
Though some study into the relationship between Cicero and Caesar has occurred, it is relatively lit...
This paper examines similarities and differences between Cicero’s speeches Post reditum in senatu an...
In the oration pronounced for the mercy to the ex-pompeian Marcus Claudius Marcellus (Pro Marcello),...
Cicero, and others in the Roman Republic, were masters of both panegyric and invective, two hugely i...
518 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1984.This dissertation--a comparat...
This volume contributes to the ongoing scholarly debate regarding the reception of Cicero. It focuse...
In this dissertation, I challenge ancient narratives of a decline of oratory at the end of the Repub...
This dissertation focuses upon the role of ancestors and of the dead in the speeches of Cicero, in o...
This thesis examines Marcus Tullius Cicero's rhetorical and political strategy in late Roman republi...
This chapter provides an overview of Marcus Tullius Cicero (106–43 BCE) as orator. It surveys the n...
This dissertation traces the tradition of Orator, Cicero’s late work on oratorical style, through th...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston University PLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Autho...
Cicero’s Caesarian speeches were delivered in 46-45 B.C. to Caesar after his victories in the Civil ...
Composed in spring of 46 BC, Cicero’s Brutus emphasizes oratorical silence, in stark contrast with t...
The article being here presented has constituted primarily a part of a master's thesis entitled Cice...
Though some study into the relationship between Cicero and Caesar has occurred, it is relatively lit...
This paper examines similarities and differences between Cicero’s speeches Post reditum in senatu an...
In the oration pronounced for the mercy to the ex-pompeian Marcus Claudius Marcellus (Pro Marcello),...
Cicero, and others in the Roman Republic, were masters of both panegyric and invective, two hugely i...
518 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1984.This dissertation--a comparat...
This volume contributes to the ongoing scholarly debate regarding the reception of Cicero. It focuse...
In this dissertation, I challenge ancient narratives of a decline of oratory at the end of the Repub...
This dissertation focuses upon the role of ancestors and of the dead in the speeches of Cicero, in o...
This thesis examines Marcus Tullius Cicero's rhetorical and political strategy in late Roman republi...
This chapter provides an overview of Marcus Tullius Cicero (106–43 BCE) as orator. It surveys the n...
This dissertation traces the tradition of Orator, Cicero’s late work on oratorical style, through th...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston University PLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Autho...
Cicero’s Caesarian speeches were delivered in 46-45 B.C. to Caesar after his victories in the Civil ...
Composed in spring of 46 BC, Cicero’s Brutus emphasizes oratorical silence, in stark contrast with t...
The article being here presented has constituted primarily a part of a master's thesis entitled Cice...
Though some study into the relationship between Cicero and Caesar has occurred, it is relatively lit...