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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
In ten pages this paper compares and contrasts the approaches of rhetorical persuasion advocated by Cicero in De Oratore (On the Orator) and Longinus in On the Sublime. There are no additional sources listed in the bibliography.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGciclong.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
in the United States. However, in ancient Greece and Rome, rhetoric was a subject considered every bit as important a discipline to master as philosophy or military strategy.
Its apologists during this time were many, but two of the most esteemed were the Roman statesman Cicero (106 B.C. - 43 B.C.) and the Greek teacher and philosopher Dionysius
(some have reported his name to be Cassius) Longinus (213-273). Both of these individuals were not only practitioners of persuasive rhetoric; they actually were rhetoricians that shared their skills
with the many pupils they taught during their respective lifetimes. Before presenting a comparative analysis regarding how these respected men approached rhetoric in instruction and practice, it is recommended
that what is actually meant by rhetoric first be examined. Rhetoric is a complex term that can be applied to the practice of oratory or speechmaking, using language in
speech and in writing as a means of persuasion or for information purposes. Of all the Roman orators, there was no one greater than Marcus Tullius Cicero.
William Shakespeare, the worlds premier dramatist, was strongly influenced by Cicero and acknowledged this rhetorical debt by featuring him in his historical play Julius Caesar. Cicero believed rhetoric
was the most effective and persuasive when practically employed. He emphasized brevity and believed all words should be directed toward the objective of audience persuasion. Like Longinus, Cicero
was a perfectionist driven to succeed and master all disciplines though a relentless quest for knowledge. He wrote extensively about rhetorical skills should be developed and fine-tuned, and his
most famous text was De Oratore (On the Orator) which was composed in 55 B.C. A compilation of dialogues, De Oratore was Ciceros exploration of the components that comprise
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