James Fredal is Associate Professor of English at The Ohio State University. He is the author of Rhetorical Action in Ancient Athens: Persuasive Artistry from Solon to Demosthenes.
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Description
Introduction Part One 3.0 1. Enthymeme 3.0: The Truncated Syllogism 2. 3.0 and Its Problems Part Two 2.0 3. Aristotle, Sullogismos, and 2.0 4. 2.0 and Its Problems Part Three 1.0 5. Enthymizing in the Orators 6. Oratorical Enthymizing in Context 7. Enthymizing and Adversarial Narratives Part Four Lysias and the Enthymeme 8. Enthymizing in Lysias 1, On the Death of Eratosthenes 9. A Many-Layered Tale Conclusion Notes References Index
"James Fredal challenges traditional Aristotelian interpretations of the enthymeme as an abstract theoretical concept by examining 'enthymizing' as a situational activity occurring within rhetorical narratives of Greek oratory. A provocative and insightful study that compels readers to reconsider long-accepted notions of Hellenic rhetorical theory." -Richard Leo Enos, author of Greek Rhetoric Before Aristotle "Fredal's interdisciplinary approach is impressive, demonstrating currency in fields such as classical rhetoric, formal logic, and legal theory; his treatment of Aristotle-his argument that terms such as syllogism have a general sense rather than the technical sense they acquired later-resonates with contemporary philology." -P. E. Ojennus, Choice