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  1. ‘To Heaven on a Hook’ (Dio Cass. 60.35.4): Ennius, Lucilius and an Ineffectual Council of the Gods in Aeneid 10.Llewelyn Morgan - 2019 - Classical Quarterly 69 (2):636-653.
    ‘The last stanza of Horace's poem’, writes Denis Feeney of Hor.Carm.3.3, ‘declares virtually outright that he has just been “quoting” epic matter: “desine peruicax | referre sermones deorum et | magna modis tenuare paruis” (70–2)’. A poem that recounts the doings of gods automatically demands comparison with epic, but if thespeechesof gods are presented, all the more so. Horace's poem in fact evokes an episode within a specific epic poem, the Council of the Gods that occurred during the first book (...)
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  • How to Make (and Break) a Cicero: Epideixis, Textuality, and Self-fashioning in the Pro Archia and In Pisonem.John Dugan - 2001 - Classical Antiquity 20 (1):35-77.
    This essay explores an aspect of Cicero's use of cultural writing for political ends: his employment of the epideictic rhetorical mode in two of his speeches, Pro Archia and In Pisonem. The epideictic is a ludic rhetorical domain that embraces paradoxes: it encompasses both praise and blame, is both markedly Greek and proximate to the Romans' laudatio funebris, and is associated both with textual fixity and viva voce improvisation. The epideictic mode is thus an ideal vehicle for Cicero's self-fashioning and, (...)
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