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The Lost Republic - Cicero's De oratore and De re publica (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,718
Discovery Miles 27 180
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The Lost Republic - Cicero's De oratore and De re publica (Hardcover)
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Donate to Against Period Poverty
Total price: R2,728
Discovery Miles: 27 280
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Cicero's dialogues De oratore (On the Orator) and De re publica (On
the Commonwealth), composed between 55 and 51 BCE, examine two
topics central to Roman public life: the role of the orator in
society and the importance of honorable statesmanship for the
preservation of republican government-which came to an end in Rome
with the dictatorship of Julius Caesar only a few years later. The
two dialogues are closely related to one another in Cicero's choice
of Plato as a literary model, in the selection of Roman public
figures of the two generations before Cicero as speakers, and in
their intertwined arguments about the values of civic life and
political engagement. The Lost Republic provides the first detailed
analysis of these two dialogues taken together. It demonstrates how
carefully they complement one another and, in addition to
explaining their arguments and their place in the history of
rhetoric and political theory respectively, reads them as the first
examples of literary dialogue in Latin. Cicero, as James Zetzel
demonstrates, uses Platonic models as a means to question the value
of Platonic ideals, just as he uses an idealized portrait of Roman
aristocrats of earlier generations both to praise and to
interrogate the virtues of the Roman past. The two dialogues create
a complex and subtle argument about the relationship between the
traditional values of Rome and the new approaches to both ethics
and rhetoric brought by Greek philosophy. By treating these
dialogues as masterpieces of literary imagination shaped to present
a compelling vision of the intellectual and moral underpinnings of
civil society, Zetzel makes an original and important contribution
to our understanding of Cicero and of the world in and about which
he wrote.
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