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El. knyga: When a Gesture Was Expected: A Selection of Examples from Archaic and Classical Greek Literature

  • Formatas: 176 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Dec-2022
  • Leidėjas: Princeton University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780691252520
  • Formatas: 176 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Dec-2022
  • Leidėjas: Princeton University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780691252520

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A boldly innovative study of nonverbal communication in the poetry and prose of Hellenic antiquity

When a Gesture Was Expected encourages a deeper appreciation of ancient Greek poetry and prose by showing where a nod of the head or a wave of the hand can complete meaning in epic poetry and in tragedy, comedy, oratory, and in works of history and philosophy. All these works anticipated performing readers, and, as a result, they included prompts, places where a gesture could complete a sentence or amplify or comment on the written words. In this radical and highly accessible book, Alan Boegehold urges all readers to supplement the traditional avenues of classical philology with an awareness of the uses of nonverbal communication in Hellenic antiquity. This additional resource helps to explain some persistently confusing syntaxes and to make translations more accurate. It also imparts a living breath to these immortal texts.

Where part of a work appears to be missing, or the syntax is irregular, or the words seem contradictory or perverse—without evidence of copyists' errors or physical damage—an ancient author may have been assuming that a performing reader would make the necessary clarifying gesture. Boegehold offers analyses of many such instances in selected passages ranging from Homer to Aeschylus to Plato. He also presents a review of sources of information about such gestures in antiquity as well as thirty illustrations, some documenting millennia-long continuities in nonverbal communication.

Recenzijos

"In this nearly organized, well written, and lucid study on non-verbal communication in Archaic and Classical Greek Literature, Professor Alan Boegehold offers interesting and helpful insights into the understanding of passages in both poetry and prose . . . ."---James J. Clauss, Bryn Mawr Classical Review "There is much to praise in this book. It has an original and creative thesis that provides new insight into some old problems . . . Boegehold makes many perceptive and significant observations. . . . This study is an excellent model of how to tease out new meaning from familiar texts."---Gregory S. Aldrete, Classical World

List of Illustrations
xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Note to the Reader xv
List of Abbreviations
xvii
Introduction 3(9)
One Nonverbal Communication
12(17)
Circumstantial Notices in Literature
12(4)
Illustrations
16(4)
Continuities
20(2)
Generally Understandable
22(4)
Mostly Greek
26(2)
Summary
28(1)
Two Some Attic Red-Figure Scenes
29(7)
The Vote on the Arms of Achilles
29(3)
Sociabilities
32(1)
Come Here
33(2)
Summary
35(1)
Three Homer
36(12)
Demonstrative: Homer Iliad 16.844
36(1)
"Incomplete" Conditional Sentence
37(1)
Aposiopesis
38(1)
Gesture for Apodosis
39(6)
Gesture for Protasis
45(1)
Summary
46(2)
Four Archaic Poets
48(5)
Archilochus
48(2)
Pindar
50(2)
Summary
52(1)
Five Tragedy
53(14)
Aeschylus
54(3)
Sophocles
57(6)
Euripides
63(2)
Summary
65(2)
Six Aristophanes
67(11)
Quotation and Parody
67(6)
Continuities: Curses!
73(4)
Summary
77(1)
Seven Orators
78(16)
Forensic Oratory
78(1)
Deliberative or Display Oratory
79(1)
Alcidamas
80(1)
Antiphon
80(3)
Andocides
83(2)
Lysias
85(3)
Demosthenes
88(2)
Lycurgus
90(1)
The Law Code of Gortyn
91(2)
Summary
93(1)
Eight Historians
94(16)
Herodotus
94(5)
Thucydides
99(6)
Xenophon
105(3)
Summary
108(2)
Nine Plato
110(16)
Plato's Characters in Action
110(15)
Summary
125(1)
Conclusion 126(5)
Bibliography 131(10)
Art Index 141(2)
Index Locorum 143(6)
General Index 149
Alan L. Boegehold, Professor of Classics, teaches Latin and Greek at Brown University. Within recent years he has published Agora 28. The Lawcourts at Athens; Athenian Identity and Civic Ideology, with Adele Scafuro; and In Simple Clothes, translations into English of eleven poems by Constantine Cavafy.