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El. knyga: Fearmongering in Greek and Roman Literature and Beyond [Taylor & Francis e-book]

  • Formatas: 400 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-Aug-2025
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781003424833
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
  • Kaina: 161,57 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Standartinė kaina: 230,81 €
  • Sutaupote 30%
  • Formatas: 400 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-Aug-2025
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781003424833
"This volume provides, for the first time, a focused study of scare tactics and fearmongering in a broad range of Greek and Roman authors and genres, showing how alarmist tactics were used in both antiquity and today. Scare tactic rhetoric is a timely topic; fear in current politics can justify actions and decisions and be used to control what is debated in the public arena, with the truth often shaped and even removed from what was being said. The ancient world was no different. In this volume, an international selection of scholars discusses how and why alarmist tactics were used in a variety of genres in Greco-Roman literature, including oratory, historiography, drama, philosophy, and children's stories, to convey political messages and ideas. They also draw parallels between ancient and contemporary fear. Fearmongering in Greek and Roman Literature and Beyond is suitable for students and scholars in Classics and Ancient History, Rhetoric and Rhetorical Theory, Ancient Societies and Politics, as well as those operating in adjacent fields of study, along with the general reader interested in the ancient world, psychology, politics, and the exploitation of rhetoric"-- Provided by publisher.

This volume provides, for the first time, a focused study of scare tactics and fearmongering in a broad range of Greek and Roman authors and genres, showing how alarmist tactics were used in both antiquity and today.

Scare tactic rhetoric is a timely topic; fear in current politics can justify actions and decisions and be used to control what is debated in the public arena, with the truth often shaped and even removed from what was being said. The ancient world was no different. In this volume, an international selection of scholars discusses how and why alarmist tactics were used in a variety of genres in Greco-Roman literature, including oratory, historiography, drama, philosophy, and children’s stories, to convey political messages and ideas. They also draw parallels between ancient and contemporary fear.

Fearmongering in Greek and Roman Literature and Beyond is suitable for students and scholars in Classics and Ancient History, Rhetoric and Rhetorical Theory, Ancient Societies and Politics, as well as those operating in adjacent fields of study, along with the general reader interested in the ancient world, psychology, politics, and the exploitation of rhetoric.



This volume provides, for the first time, a focused study of scare tactics and fearmongering in a broad range of Greek and Roman authors and genres, showing how alarmist tactics were used in both antiquity and today.

General Introduction

Maria Patera

1. Introducing Fear

1. Aristotle on the Nature of Fear and its Persuasive Use

Jamie Dow and Alba Curry

2. Oratory

2. Forensic Fearmongering: Making a Lasting Impression on the Judges

Michael J. Edwards

3. The Scarcity Scare: The Discourse of Limited Resources in Athenian
Oratory

Jakub Filonik

4. Fearmongering in Lysias: A Glimpse into his Corpus

Enrico Medda

5. Fearmongering in Isocrates: The Areopagiticus and the Call for a Restored
Politeia

Ticiano Estrela Curvelo de Lacerda

6. Dangling Fears: Scare Tactics in the Speeches of Aeschines

Daniel Bajnok

7. Rumour and Scare Tactics in Demosthenes Public Speeches

Priscilla Gontijo Leite

8. Marcus Antonius: The Roman Philip? Demosthenes Fearful Influence on
Cicero

Stephen Clarke

9. Cross-Examination and Scare Tactic Rhetoric in Ciceros In Vatinium

Gilson Charles dos Santos

10. The Spectrum of Anxiety in Dio Chrysostom

N. Bryant Kirkland

11. Scare Tactics in Pre-Battle Exhortations

Juan Carlos Iglesias Zoido

3. Historiography

12. The Rhetoric of Fear in Herodotus

Vasiliki Zali-Schiel

13. Fear and Deliberation in Thucydides

Sandra Lścia Rodrigues da Rocha

14. Prudent Alarm and Illustrated Threats: Rhetorical Fear in Xenophon

Richard Fernando Buxton

15. Fear and Loathing in Polybius Histories

Craige B. Champion

16. Fearmongering and Performance in Plutarch: Fear as Narrative Technique in
the Lives of Solon, Alcibiades, and Phocion

Delfim Lećo

17. Fearing the Enemy: Livys Description of the Gauls

Priscilla Adriane Ferreira Almeida

4. Drama and Philosophy

18. Prospective Precedent as a Scare Tactic in Athenian Tragedy

Ruth Scodel

19. The Threat of Comedy: Aristophanes, Böhmermann, and the Scare Tactic
Game

A.S. Lewis

20. Puppets of Fear on the Stage of the Ideal City: Imbibing Civic
Transformation in Platos Republic and the Laws

Eva Anagnostou-Laoutides

5. And Beyond

21. The Unchanging Face of Jingoistic Rhetoric?

Ian Worthington

22. Pįthei Mįthos: Ancient Rhetorical and Poetic Techniques and the
Production of Fear in Modern Film

Maria Cecķlia de Miranda Nogueira Coelho

23. The Rhetorical Use of Fear in Childrens Education

Marina Pelluci Duarte Mortoza
Priscilla Gontijo Leite is Adjunct Professor of Ancient History at the Department of History at the Federal University of Paraķba (Joćo Pessoa/ Brazil). She has published numeous papers and books, for example Ética e retórica forense asebeia e hybris na caracterizaēćo dos adversįrios em Demóstenes (2013) and Religićo e Jogos de Poder: o Contra Mķdias de Demóstenes (2017).

Ian Worthington is Professor of Ancient History at Macquarie University, Sydney. He has published extensively on Greek History and Greek oratory. His most recent publications are The Military Legacy of Alexander the Great: Lessons for the Information Age with Major Michael Ferguson (2024) and The Last Kings of Macedonia and the Triumph of Rome (2023).