The careers of two popular second-century rhetorical virtuosos offer Maud Gleason fascinating insights into the ways ancient Romans constructed masculinity during a time marked by anxiety over manly deportment. Declamation was an exhilarating art form for the Greeks and bilingual Romans of the Second Sophistic movement, and its best practitioners would travel the empire performing in front of enraptured audiences. The mastery of rhetoric marked the transition to manhood for all aristocratic citizens and remained crucial to a man's social standing. In treating rhetoric as a process of self-presentation in a face-to-face society, Gleason analyzes the deportment and writings of the two Sophists--Favorinus, a eunuch, and Polemo, a man who met conventional gender expectations--to suggest the ways character and gender were perceived. Physiognomical texts of the era show how intently men scrutinized one another for minute signs of gender deviance in such features as gait, gesture, facial expression, and voice. Rhetoricians trained to develop these traits in a "masculine" fashion. Examining the successful career of Favorinus, whose high-pitched voice and florid presentation contrasted sharply with the traditionalist style of Polemo, Gleason shows, however, that ideal masculine behavior was not a monolithic abstraction. In a highly accessible study treating the semiotics of deportment and the medical, cultural, and moral issues surrounding rhetorical activity, she explores the possibilities of self-presentation in the search for recognition as a speaker and a man.
Bibliographic references
Includes bibliographical references (p. [171]-174) and indexes.
Source of description
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 23. Mai 2019)
Language note
In English.
Contents
Frontmatter
CONTENTS
PREFACE
INTRODUCTION
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
CHAPTER ONE. Favorinus and His Statue
CHAPTER TWO. Portrait of Polemo: The Deportment of the Public Self
CHAPTER THREE. Deportment as Language: Physiognomy and the Semiotics of Gender
CHAPTER FOUR. Aerating the Flesh: Voice Training and the Calisthenics of Gender
CHAPTER FIVE. Voice and Virility in Rhetorical Writers
CHAPTER SIX. Manhood Achieved through Speech: A Eunuch-Philosopher's Self-Fashioning
CONCLUSION
A NOTE ON FINDING SOURCES IN TRANSLATION
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX LOCORUM
GENERAL INDEX
ISBN
9780691187570
0691187576
OCLC
1132223023
1076414535
Doi
10.1515/9780691187570
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