Archives: Chapters

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Works Cited

Works Cited Commentaries and Translations with Commentary Aeschines Carey, Christopher. 2000. Aeschines . The Orators of Classical Greece 3. Austin. Fisher, Nick. 2001. Aeschines : Against Timarchos. Oxford. Alcidamas Muir, J. V. 2001. Alcidamas : The Works and […]

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Appendix

Appendix. Instances of Trickery in Herodotus’ Histories Trick Trickster Vocabulary Manipulation of signs? Successful? Sign Type Stage of Signification Process 1.21.1–22.3 Thrasyboulos tricks Alyattes into thinking Miletos has plenty of food μηχανᾶται 1.21.1 no yes     […]

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Chapter 7: Tactics, Amateur and Professional

Chapter 7: Tactics, Amateur and Professional In remarking on the style of classical Greek authors, moderns usually leave denigration to the ancients. [1] Criticisms such as MacDowell’s remarks on Andocides’ stylistic lapses (1962:20–22) are exceptional. [2] And there is an obvious reason for us to be slow to censure: we have very […]

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Chapter 6: Appeals to Pity and Displays of Anger

Chapter 6: Appeals to Pity and Displays of Anger Appealing to Pity Several very well-known descriptions of court speakers and actual passages of court speech have lead many scholars to conclude that litigants wallowed in emotion as they made appeals to the jury’s pity (in older terminology, appeals ad misericordiam). This […]

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Chapter 5: Performance as Evidence

Chapter 5: Performance as Evidence Far from being a small town where everybody kept everybody else under continual surveillance, Attica was a large territory with a large population, and it would be exceptional for a juror to know the people involved in a trial, unless perhaps they lived in the same deme […]

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Chapter 4: Terrors of the Courtroom

Chapter 4: Terrors of the Courtroom In Demosthenes 22.25, a passage made famous by Osborne’s 1985 article on the multiplicity of procedural routes available to prosecutors, we have one of the very few general references within a speech to the possibility that litigation, and specifically speaking in court, might intimidate some idiôtai: […]

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Chapter 1: The Challenge of Court Speech

Chapter 1: The Challenge of Court Speech Few aspects of classical Greek literature are as well preserved as the oratory of the lawcourts of classical Athens. Of the approximately 150 speeches composed by or attributed to the Attic orators who constitute the Canon, about two-thirds were written for real or imaginary forensic […]

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Acknowledgments

For my uncle, Harry Kagan Acknowledgments I have presented parts of this book at the École Normale Supérieure (Paris), Brown, Princeton, Harvard, Bryn Mawr, the 1998 meeting of the American Society of Legal Historians in Toronto, the New York Classical Club, Johns Hopkins, the Whitney Humanities Center at Yale, and the […]