:oratory, law, and justice in the age of the Sophists
/ Michael Gagarin
1st ed.
Austin
: University of Texas Press,
, 2002.
x, 222 p. 24 cm.
e
ng
Includes bibliographical references (p. [195]-202) and index.
Machine generated contents note: 1. THE SOPHISTIC PERIOD -- I. Who Were the Sophists? -- z. Inquiry and Experiment -- 3. Paradox and Play -- 4. Public Competition -- 5. Logos, Argument, Rhetoric -- 6. Relativism and Humanism -- 7. Conclusion -- 2. ANTIPHON: LIFE AND WORKS -- i. Orator and Sophist -- z. The Authenticity of the Tetralogies -- 3. TRUTH -- I. The Papyrus Fragments -- z. Nomos and Physis -- 3. Justice -- 4. Advantage and Disadvantage, Pleasure and Pain -- 5. The Senses and the Intellect -- 6. Language and Truth -- 7. Structure and Style -- 8. Conclusion -- 4. CONCORD, DREAM-INTERPRETATION -- 1. Concord: Content -- 2. Concord: Style -- 3. Dream Interpretation -- 4. Other Works -- 5. THE TETRALOGIES -- 1i. The Tetralogies and Their Audience -- 2. Pollution -- 3. Tetralogy I -- 4. Tetralogy 2 -- 5. Tetralogy 3 -- 6. Conclusion -- 6. THE COURT SPEECHES -- I. Athenian Homicide Law -- 2. Antiphon 6: On the Chorus Boy -- 3. Antiphon I: Against the Stepmother -- 4. Antiphon 5: The Murder of Herodes -- 5. Antiphon's Speech in His Own Defense -- 6. Antiphon's Logographic Strategies -- 7. Conclusion -- 7. FROM THE SOPHISTS TO FORENSIC ORATORY -- I. The Complete Antiphon -- 2. Style -- 3. Argument -- 4. Thought -- 5. The Career of Antiphon -- Appendix A. Truth: The Papyrus Fragments -- Appendix B. Concord: The Fragments -- Abbreviations and Works Cited -- Indices -- Citations from Ancient Authors -- General Index.
Antiphon, ca. 480-411 B.C.- Criticism and interpretation
Speeches, addresses, etc., Greek- History and criticism