Paralinguistics, Community and the Rhetoric of Division in Attic Oratory

Keywords:

Paralinguistics, community, division, emotions

Abstract

The study of paralinguistics, i.e. the ways of communicating without the use of language, whether conscious, intentional and voluntary or otherwise, is an essential component of any attempt to reconstruct, understand and interpret the systems of cultural, societal, institutional, moral and inter-personal communication in modern and ancient societies. Three specific aspects of paralinguistics, as they are described in Attic oratory, are examined in this paper: face and facial organs (such as mouth and nose), hands, and gait. It is argued that the references to paralinguistics aim to win over the audience in the lawcourt or in political conventions by arousing emotions and by sustaining a war between the speaker’s opponents and the Athenian community, whose cultural values and beliefs the opponents are presented as violating.

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Author Biography

Andreas Serafim, Academia de Atenas

Research Fellow (Profesor Asistente) en el Centro de Investigación de Literatura Griega y Latina de la Academia de Atenas. Se especializa en oratoria/retórica griega, derecho y performance. Sus otros intereses de investigación incluyen la religión griega antigua, la recepción, la lingüística, las teorías de género/sexualidad y otras teorías interdisciplinarias (como las del humor y la persuasión). Es Doctor por la University College London y Magister por la Universidad de Texas en Austin. Fue Becario Posdoctoral en la Universidad de Chipre (2017-2019); Profesor Adjunto en la Universidad de Chipre (2014-2015 y 2016-2017), Profesor Adjunto en la Universidad Abierta de Chipre (2014-2017), Becario Posdoctoral del Gobierno de Irlanda en el Trinity College de Dublín (2015-2016), y desempeñó cargos docentes en University College London y en la Universidad de Texas en Austin.

Published

2022-11-17

How to Cite

Serafim, A. (2022). Paralinguistics, Community and the Rhetoric of Division in Attic Oratory. Circe De clásicos Y Modernos, 26(2), 123–152. Retrieved from https://cerac.unlpam.edu.ar/index.php/circe/article/view/7126