The arrival of eloquence? The changing parameters of public speech in the second century

Steel, C. (2023) The arrival of eloquence? The changing parameters of public speech in the second century. In: Santangelo, F. and Balbo, M. (eds.) A Community in Transition: Rome between Hannibal and the Gracchi. Oxford University Press: New York, pp. 293-309. ISBN 9780197655245 (doi: 10.1093/oso/9780197655245.003.0011)

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Abstract

Did the practice and function of oratory change at Rome during the second century BCE, and if so, what was the relationship between that change and the range of demonstrable change visible in other elements of Roman politics, society, and culture? At least two distinct stories can be told in response to this question. One sees the second century as a time of significant change in public speech, as the strains of imperial power create new arenas for debate and a consequent enthusiasm among the elite for new technique of speaking imported from the Greek-speaking world. The embassy of Athenian philosophers in 155 would be the emblematic moment for this story. But one can also develop a story of continuities, in which both circumstances and methods remain broadly similar, and the most significant innovation is the increasing use of written texts to preserve a record of oratory. The Elder Cato is the mascot for this story. Confusingly, Cicero proposes both narratives in different works. The underlying difficulty is the inaccessibility of public speech to those who were not present; texts are only a partial remedy. Cicero filled the gaps in the evidence available to him in different ways driven by differing priorities during his career. Oratory’s contribution to analyzing the second-century transformation is thus fundamentally historiographical, revealing points of stress and uncertainty that subsequent generations of Romans had in grasping the nature of the changes that took place between the defeat of Hannibal and the death of Tiberius Gracchus.

Item Type:Book Sections
Status:Published
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Steel, Professor Catherine
Authors: Steel, C.
Subjects:D History General and Old World > DE The Mediterranean Region. The Greco-Roman World
P Language and Literature > PA Classical philology
College/School:College of Arts & Humanities > School of Humanities > Classics
Publisher:Oxford University Press
ISBN:9780197655245
Published Online:17 November 2022
Copyright Holders:Copyright © Oxford University Press 2023
Publisher Policy:Reproduced in accordance with the publisher copyright policy

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