Genos Dikanikon: Amateur and Professional Speech in the Courtrooms of Classical Athens (Hellenic Studies) (Hellenic Studies (HUP))

Genos Dikanikon: Amateur and Professional Speech in the Courtrooms of Classical Athens (Hellenic Studies) (Hellenic Studies (HUP))

by Victor (Author), Bers (Author)

Synopsis

Under the Athenian democracy, litigants were expected to speak for themselves, though they could memorize a speech written for them. The texts of about one hundred judicial speeches of the genos dikanikon (the forensic genre) have survived, all attributed to Demosthenes or another of the ten writers of canonical status. These professionals wrote either for themselves or members of a small elite. Victor Bers argues that men too poor to afford a professionally written speech frequently spoke before judicial bodies in procedures crucial to their status, wealth, or even their lives, and that these amateur performances often manifested an unmanly yielding to emotions of anger or fear. Professional speech, Bers seeks to demonstrate, was to a large degree crafted in reaction to amateur stumbling.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 160
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Published: 04 Sep 2009

ISBN 10: 0674032039
ISBN 13: 9780674032033

Author Bio
Victor Bers is Professor of Classics at Yale University.