David Gribble
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Real Education: Varieties of Freedom
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published
1998
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2 editions
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Alcibiades and Athens: A Study in Literary Presentation (Oxford Classical Monographs)
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published
1999
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5 editions
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Lifelines
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published
2004
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2 editions
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A Really Good School
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published
2001
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Children Don't Start Wars
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Worlds Apart
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published
2006
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2 editions
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Schule im Aufbruch
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Überlebensschule: Ausgegrenzte Kinder lernen in Freiheit
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Schule im Aufbruch.
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Lifelines by David Gribble (2004-09-07)
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“Of the rhetorical works composed in the classical period on the subject of Alcibiades, four survive: Isocrates, 16; Lysias, 14 and 15; and [Andocides] 4. [And.] 4,”
― Alcibiades and Athens: A Study in Literary Presentation
― Alcibiades and Athens: A Study in Literary Presentation
“Indeed, what `display' speeches seek to display is partly expertise at appealing to a (notional) demos audience. It is in this area where ideology meets rhetoric that the discussion of this chapter will be located.”
― Alcibiades and Athens: A Study in Literary Presentation
― Alcibiades and Athens: A Study in Literary Presentation
“The trials also raised questions of pressing general interest: the role of the great individual in shaping the fortunes of the city, and the reasons for the failure in the Peloponnesian War and the loss of the empire.
"' See further Ch. 4 below. In a late anecdote (Plut. _`lie. 4. 5-6 and with variation Ath. 12. 534ef) someone called Anytus features as Alcibiades' shamefully treated lover. This has led some to suggest that one of the motives of Anytus in his prosecution of Socrates was to rid himself of the stigma of an association with Socrates. But the historical credentials of the store are pitiful.
" Dem. i9. i f i .
az Cf. Osborne (1985: esp. 52-3); Ober (ig8q: 148); both comparing courtroom to theatre.
2.”
― Alcibiades and Athens: A Study in Literary Presentation
"' See further Ch. 4 below. In a late anecdote (Plut. _`lie. 4. 5-6 and with variation Ath. 12. 534ef) someone called Anytus features as Alcibiades' shamefully treated lover. This has led some to suggest that one of the motives of Anytus in his prosecution of Socrates was to rid himself of the stigma of an association with Socrates. But the historical credentials of the store are pitiful.
" Dem. i9. i f i .
az Cf. Osborne (1985: esp. 52-3); Ober (ig8q: 148); both comparing courtroom to theatre.
2.”
― Alcibiades and Athens: A Study in Literary Presentation
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