La sirène et l'enchanteur : portraits croisés d'Eschine et de Démosthène à la tribune
GOTTELAND, Sophie
Ausonius-Institut de recherche sur l'Antiquité et le Moyen âge
LabEx Sciences archéologiques de Bordeaux [LASCARBX]
Ausonius-Institut de recherche sur l'Antiquité et le Moyen âge
LabEx Sciences archéologiques de Bordeaux [LASCARBX]
GOTTELAND, Sophie
Ausonius-Institut de recherche sur l'Antiquité et le Moyen âge
LabEx Sciences archéologiques de Bordeaux [LASCARBX]
< Reduce
Ausonius-Institut de recherche sur l'Antiquité et le Moyen âge
LabEx Sciences archéologiques de Bordeaux [LASCARBX]
Language
fr
Article de revue
This item was published in
Revue des Études Grecques. 2006, vol. 119, n° 2, p. 588-608
Association pour l'encouragement des études grecques en France / Les Belles Lettres
English Abstract
In the derogatory portraits that they reciprocally paint of each other, Aeschines and Demosthenes leave a great part to oratory action, claiming to unmask their adversary's true personality and to show how he strays from ...Read more >
In the derogatory portraits that they reciprocally paint of each other, Aeschines and Demosthenes leave a great part to oratory action, claiming to unmask their adversary's true personality and to show how he strays from the norm of σωφροσύνη. Each of them however chooses to emphasize a different aspect. Demosthenes denounces the vocal prowess and the seasoned technique of a voice that doesnot reflect the true orator's state of mind and is raised only to serve his personal ambitions. As much as his façade solemnity and his seductive speeches, his eloquent silences betray the former actor's ambiguous role. Aeschines's criticisms, on the contrary, deal essentially with his adversary's range of gestures. His often abrupt taking of the floor, his gesturing at the tribune, his vulgar or unbecoming postures, are the mark of a dangerous orator, whose excesses echo back to the figure of a Cleon and who, like the latter, tries to cast on his audience a spell that would be that of miracle makerRead less <
Origin
Hal importedCollections