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" Exhortations to philosophy : "


Document Type : BL
Record Number : 624238
Doc. No : dltt
Main Entry : Collins, James Henderson,II
Title & Author : Exhortations to philosophy : : the protreptics of Plato, Isocrates, and Aristotle /\ James Henderson Collins II
Page. NO : xiv, 300 pages ;; 24 cm
ISBN : 9780199358595 (hbk.)
: : 0199358591
Bibliographies/Indexes : Includes bibliographical references and index
Contents : Introduction -- Part one: Platonic protreptic. Levels of discourse in Plato's dialogues ; Narrative between Socrates and Crito ; From narrative to drama: inside the intradiegetic level ; Return to the extradiegetic level: metalepsis ; Creating consumers and consensus in the Protagoras -- Part two: Isocratean Protreptic. "Professional" protreptic: Against the Sophists ; Paraenetic protreptic: Tà àpxaĩa and exhorting young tyrants ; Judging protreptic: Antidosis, Panathenaicus -- Epilogue: Aristotelian protreptic and a stabilized genre
Abstract : This book is a study of the literary strategies which the first professional philosophers used to market their respective disciplines. Philosophers of fourth-century BCE Athens developed the emerging genre of the "protreptic" (literally, "turning" or "converting"). Simply put, protreptic discourse uses a rhetoric of conversion that urges a young person to adopt a specific philosophy in order to live a good life. The author argues that the fourth-century philosophers used protreptic discourses to market philosophical practices and to define and legitimize a new cultural institution: the school of higher learning (the first in Western history). Specifically, the book investigates how competing educators in the fourth century produced protreptic discourses by borrowing and transforming traditional and contemporary "voices" in the cultural marketplace. They aimed to introduce and promote their new schools and define the new professionalized discipline of "philosophy." While scholars have typically examined the discourses and practices of Plato, Isocrates, and Aristotle in isolation from one another, this study rather combines philosophy, narratology, genre theory, and new historicism to focus on the discursive interaction between the three philosophers: each incorporates the discourse of his competitors into his protreptics. Appropriating and transforming the discourses of their competition, these intellectuals created literary texts that introduced their respective disciplines to potential students. --Provided by publisher
Subject : Exhortation (Rhetoric)
Subject : Rhetoric, Ancient
Dewey Classification : ‭808.00938‬
LC Classification : ‭PA3265‬‭.C655 2015‬
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