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  1. Intratext, Declamation and Dramatic Argument in tacitus' Dialogus de Oratoribus.Christopher S. Van Den Berg - 2014 - Classical Quarterly 64 (1):298-315.
    Tacitus'Dialogus de oratoribus(c. 100c.e.) may be the most perplexing of the extant Roman dialogues, quite possibly, of the entire Greco-Roman tradition. Despite advances in the rhetorical and literary appreciation of ancient dialogues, this text continues to elude understanding. Oddly, the difficulties stem neither from obscurities of subject matter and presentation nor from any anomalismvis-à-visthe norms of the genre. Six compelling speeches lucidly detail the value, history and development ofeloquentia(‘skilled speech’) from the perspective of the late first and early second centuriesc.e. (...)
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  • Between Contumacy and Obsequiousness.Daniel Kapust - 2009 - European Journal of Political Theory 8 (3):293-311.
    This article explores Tacitus’ negotiation of the dilemmas of writing due to the emergence of the Principate and the displacement of Republican politics. These developments constrained the orator and the historian, and required a distinctive approach to the writing of history. I argue that Tacitus develops a conception of the historian’s task that centers on the historian’s moral freedom and educative role in the Principate. This freedom is evident in Tacitus’ depiction of good and bad principes, as well as his (...)
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  • Hunting for Boars with Pliny and Tacitus.Rebecca Edwards - 2008 - Classical Antiquity 27 (1):35-58.
    This paper will examine intertextual references between the Dialogus of Tacitus and the letters of Pliny, in particular those regarding boar hunting. It will argue that there are clues in the letters of Pliny which can help us to understand the relationship between these two writers as well as the tone and purpose of the Dialogus. By studying Pliny's letters to Tacitus on hunting , one can see the specific reference to boars as an allusion to Marcus Aper, the chief (...)
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  • Poetics of Conspiracy and Hermeneutics of Suspicion in Tacitus's Dialogus de Oratoribus.Alex Dressler - 2013 - Classical Antiquity 32 (1):1-34.
    This article argues that the end of Tacitus's Dialogus de Oratoribus is inconclusive in ways that draw attention to the difficulty of interpretation not only of the dialogue, as by modern scholars, but also in the dialogue, as by its leading characters. The inconclusiveness is especially marked by a commonly noted, but little discussed, feature of the end: when the rest of the characters laugh at the point of departure, Tacitus himself does not. Arguing that this difference of affective response (...)
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