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Liberas rhetoric
Liberas rhetoric










liberas rhetoric

Cornwell, H 2015, The King who would be Prefect: Authority and Identity in the Cottian Alps.Oxford Classical Monographs, Oxford University Press. Cornwell, H 2017, Pax and the Politics of Peace: Republic to Principate.Coins of the Roman revolution (49BC-AD14): evidence without hindsight. Burnett, A. Cornwell, H 2020, A place for peace in a time of war.in A Gibson (ed.), Robert Graves and the classical tradition. Classical presences, Oxford University Press. Burton, P 2015, "Essentially a Moral Problem": Robert Graves and the Politics of the plain Prose Translation.Burton, P 2017, Sulpicius Severus' Vita Martini.in T Arentzen & M Cunningham (eds), The reception of the Virgin in Byzantium: Marian narratives in texts and images. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. Brubaker, L 2019, The Virgin at Daphni.van der Blom, H 2016, Oratory and Political Career in the Late Roman Republic.Autorretratos: la creación de la imagen personal en la antigüedad. Marco Simón, F., Pina Polo, F.

liberas rhetoric

  • van der Blom, H 2016, Creating a great orator: The self-portrait and reception of Cicero the orator.
  • 234-56 (Historiography of Rome and its Empire vol. Omnium Annalium Monumenta: Historical Writing and Historical Evidence in Republican Rome. Sandberg, K.
  • van der Blom, H 2017, Ciceronian constructions of the oratorical past.
  • in F Pina Polo (ed.), The Triumviral Period: Civil War, Political Crisis and Socioeconomic Transformations. Libera Res Publica, Prensas de la Universidad de Zaragoza, pp.
  • van der Blom, H 2020, The reception of Octavian’s oratory and public communication in the imperial period.
  • Dimitris Tziovas researches the modern reception of Greek antiquity and Byzantium across literary studies, critical theory, translation, film, diaspora and cultural studies.
  • liberas rhetoric

  • Elena Theodorakopoulos works on poetic communication in the Roman republic and principate and the reception of classical culture and literature in modern film and literature.
  • Diana Spencer is particularly interested in language and etymology as expressions of and influences on experience and memory.
  • Leire Olabarria works on the reception of ancient Egypt in some aspects of popular culture, such as heavy metal music and science fiction literature.
  • Gideon Nisbet is an expert in ancient epigrams and in classical reception in nineteenth century literature, in modern translations and in popular culture.
  • Ailsa Hunt works, among other things, on the ancient meanings of central words and concepts and the ways in which modern (mis-)conceptions have influenced modern thinking about Roman religion.
  • Hannah Cornwell focuses on the communicative aspects of peace, diplomacy and negotiations in the Roman world.
  • Philip Burton works on the development of Christian Latin discourse and how modern novelists, poets, translators, and others have reinvented the ancient world.
  • Leslie Brubaker has a particular interest in the rhetorical relationship between text and image, and the ways in which gender is communicated in the Byzantine period.
  • Henriette van der Blom is a specialist in Roman oratory and rhetoric across the republican and imperial periods, and the founding director of the Network for Oratory and Politics.
  • Our reception specialists focus on projects which significantly develop our understanding of the ancient world through its later reception. We are particularly interested in communication across various media (public speech, literary texts, visual representations, coins and monumental inscriptions), which show the impact of persuasive strategies on the immediate and longer-term recipients, including the modern reception of the ancient world.












    Liberas rhetoric