Pragmatic Approaches to Drama: Studies in Communication on the Ancient Stage: The Language of Classical Literature, cartea 32
Gunther Martin, Federica Iurescia, Severin Hof, Giada Sorrentinoen Limba Engleză Hardback – 14 oct 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004440197
ISBN-10: 9004440194
Pagini: 498
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria The Language of Classical Literature
ISBN-10: 9004440194
Pagini: 498
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria The Language of Classical Literature
Notă biografică
Gunther Martin, DPhil (2005), University of Oxford, is a lecturer and researcher at the Universities of Zurich and Bern. He has, among other things, published books on historiography, oratory, and a commentary on Euripides' Ion.
Federica Iurescia, Ph.D. (2017), Universities of Siena and Pisa, worked as SNSF scientific collaborator at the University of Zurich. Her research interests focus on pragmatics in Latin, chiefly im/politeness and dialogues. Her main publication is Credo iam ut solet iurgabit. Pragmatica della lite a Roma (Göttingen, 2019).
Severin Hof, MA (2016), University of Zurich, has written his PhD thesis on multiperspectivity in Sophocles at that university. His research interests include Greek drama, Medieval Latin, and papyrology.
Giada Sorrentino, Ph.D. (2013), Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg i. Br., has completed her post-doc research project at that university. She is author of various articles on Middle and New Comedy and of Comunicazione e relazioni interpersonali nelle commedie di Menandro (Göttingen 2020).
Contributors are: Rutger J. Allan, Peter Barrios-Lech, Luigi Battezzato, Łukasz Berger, Anna Bonifazi, Evita Calabrese, Matteo Capponi, Evert van Emde Boas, Severin Hof, Federica Iurescia, Michael Lloyd, Gunther Martin, Sandra Rodríguez-Piedrabuena, Renata Raccanelli, Licinia Ricottilli, Carlo Scardino, Lavinia Scolari, Camille Semenzato, Giada Sorrentino, Luis Unceta Gómez, Vanessa Zetzmann.
Federica Iurescia, Ph.D. (2017), Universities of Siena and Pisa, worked as SNSF scientific collaborator at the University of Zurich. Her research interests focus on pragmatics in Latin, chiefly im/politeness and dialogues. Her main publication is Credo iam ut solet iurgabit. Pragmatica della lite a Roma (Göttingen, 2019).
Severin Hof, MA (2016), University of Zurich, has written his PhD thesis on multiperspectivity in Sophocles at that university. His research interests include Greek drama, Medieval Latin, and papyrology.
Giada Sorrentino, Ph.D. (2013), Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg i. Br., has completed her post-doc research project at that university. She is author of various articles on Middle and New Comedy and of Comunicazione e relazioni interpersonali nelle commedie di Menandro (Göttingen 2020).
Contributors are: Rutger J. Allan, Peter Barrios-Lech, Luigi Battezzato, Łukasz Berger, Anna Bonifazi, Evita Calabrese, Matteo Capponi, Evert van Emde Boas, Severin Hof, Federica Iurescia, Michael Lloyd, Gunther Martin, Sandra Rodríguez-Piedrabuena, Renata Raccanelli, Licinia Ricottilli, Carlo Scardino, Lavinia Scolari, Camille Semenzato, Giada Sorrentino, Luis Unceta Gómez, Vanessa Zetzmann.
Cuprins
Notes on Contributors
Introduction
Gunther Martin, Federica Iurescia, Severin Hof and Giada Sorrentino
How To Do Things with (ἐ)κεῖνος and αὐτός in Tragedy: Initial Suggestions
Anna Bonifazi
Pointing to Common Ground in Dramatic Dialogue: The Case of δή and τοι
Rutger J. Allan
Terms of Address on Right Periphery in Greek Tragedy
Sandra Rodríguez Piedrabuena
The Linguistic Characterisation of Oedipus in OT: A Pragmatics-Based Approach to ‘Mind Style’
Evert van Emde Boas
Resonance in the Prologue of Sophocles’ Ajax
Severin Hof
Pentheus und Dionysos in den Bakchen: Die Grenzen des klaren Dialogs
Camille Semenzato
Iphigenie und ihre Mutter: Pragmatische Bemerkungen zur Iphigenie in Aulis
Giada Sorrentino
Oedipus and Tiresias: Im/politeness Theory and the Interpretation of Sophocles’ Oedipus Tyrannus
Luigi Battezzato
Politeness and Impoliteness in Aristophanes
Michael Lloyd
Developments in Politeness from Aristophanes to Menander and Beyond
Peter Barrios-Lech
Advice-Giving in Roman Comedy: Speech-Act Formulation and Im/politeness
Łukasz Berger
The Politics of Manipulation: Politeness and Insincerity in the Language of Parasites and Courtesans in Plautus’ Comedies
Luis Unceta Gómez
Silence and the Failure of Persuasion in Tragic Discourse
Vanessa Zetzmann
Doing Things with Words … and Gestures on Stage
Matteo Capponi
Reflections on Gestures and Words in Terence’s Comedies
Licinia Ricottilli
The Kiss in Plautus’ Stichus: Notes on Gestures and Words in View of a Pragmatics of Comic Communication
Renata Raccanelli
Lacrimae and uultus: Pragmatic Considerations on Gestures in Seneca’s Tragedies
Evita Calabrese
Pragmatics of fraus: Encoding and Decoding of Deceit in Seneca’s Troades and Thyestes
Lavinia Scolari
Euripides: Von der Rhetorik zur Pragmatik
Carlo Scardino
Index Locorum
Index Rerum
Introduction
Gunther Martin, Federica Iurescia, Severin Hof and Giada Sorrentino
Part 1 Verbal Communication I: Doing Things with Words
How To Do Things with (ἐ)κεῖνος and αὐτός in Tragedy: Initial Suggestions
Anna Bonifazi
Pointing to Common Ground in Dramatic Dialogue: The Case of δή and τοι
Rutger J. Allan
Terms of Address on Right Periphery in Greek Tragedy
Sandra Rodríguez Piedrabuena
The Linguistic Characterisation of Oedipus in OT: A Pragmatics-Based Approach to ‘Mind Style’
Evert van Emde Boas
Resonance in the Prologue of Sophocles’ Ajax
Severin Hof
Pentheus und Dionysos in den Bakchen: Die Grenzen des klaren Dialogs
Camille Semenzato
Iphigenie und ihre Mutter: Pragmatische Bemerkungen zur Iphigenie in Aulis
Giada Sorrentino
Part 2 Verbal Communication II: Being More or Less Kind with Words
Oedipus and Tiresias: Im/politeness Theory and the Interpretation of Sophocles’ Oedipus Tyrannus
Luigi Battezzato
Politeness and Impoliteness in Aristophanes
Michael Lloyd
Developments in Politeness from Aristophanes to Menander and Beyond
Peter Barrios-Lech
Advice-Giving in Roman Comedy: Speech-Act Formulation and Im/politeness
Łukasz Berger
The Politics of Manipulation: Politeness and Insincerity in the Language of Parasites and Courtesans in Plautus’ Comedies
Luis Unceta Gómez
Part 3 Verbal and Non-verbal Communication: Doing Things Not Just with Words
Silence and the Failure of Persuasion in Tragic Discourse
Vanessa Zetzmann
Doing Things with Words … and Gestures on Stage
Matteo Capponi
Reflections on Gestures and Words in Terence’s Comedies
Licinia Ricottilli
The Kiss in Plautus’ Stichus: Notes on Gestures and Words in View of a Pragmatics of Comic Communication
Renata Raccanelli
Lacrimae and uultus: Pragmatic Considerations on Gestures in Seneca’s Tragedies
Evita Calabrese
Pragmatics of fraus: Encoding and Decoding of Deceit in Seneca’s Troades and Thyestes
Lavinia Scolari
Epilogue
Euripides: Von der Rhetorik zur Pragmatik
Carlo Scardino
Index Locorum
Index Rerum