Witnesses and Evidence: Information and Decision in Drama and Oratory
Second International Conference on Drama and OratoryDay 2 – Wednesday, March 28, 2018
Drama and Poetry IΙ
Chair: Andreas Markantonatos
9:00-9:20
Gods as witness in Euripidean oaths. Three case studies
By Ariadne Gartziou, Professor of Ancient Greek Philology, University of Ioannina
A common practice during the Archaic greek era was to invoke gods as witnesses
9:30-9:50
Poet, Patron, Message: Witness-Roles and the game of truth in the Epinician Eidography
By Margarita Sotiriou, Lecturer of Ancient Greek Philology, Faculty of Philology, University of the Peloponnese
The victory Odes of Bacchylides and Pindar do not belong either to the masterpieces of the narrative genre
10:00-10:20
Reciprocal narrative influences between Greek texts of Drama and Rhetoric of the fifth and fourth centuries B.C.
By Penelope Frangakis, Post-doc, Faculty of Philology, University of the Peloponnese
Inartistic proofs, as is known from Aristotle, were among the materials used for the purposes of argumentation
testimony. Witness testimony was among the sources of information that led to decision-making not only in the law courts but also in ancient Greek drama. The organisation of judicial speeches, the use of witness testimony in theatres and law courts and by extension the rhetorical similarities exhibited between Athenian drama and the oratory of the law courts,
reveal that tragedy and judicial rhetoric have reciprocal influences. This paper will explore the reciprocal narrative influences between judicial rhetoric and drama evidenced during the fifth and fourth centuries B.C. The paper will provide a narrative analysis of the narrative
construction used to create judicial speeches and by extension the organisation of direct evidence that is given through witness testimony in texts of drama and rhetoric. The paper will examine the subsequent decision-making resulting from the information provided by
witness testimony in such texts. An emphasis will be placed on the reception of the narrative techniques of judicial speeches from texts of rhetoric and drama such as those by orators such
as Antiphon, and playwrights such as Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides.
Keynote Lecture: Oratory
10:30-11:30
Τhe Function of Witnesses in Athenian Law
By Michael Gagarin, Centennial Professor Emeritus, Department of Classics, The University of Texas at Austin
Witnesses in Athenian courts testified by swearing to a written document prepared ahead of time and read out by a clerk during a
11:30-12:00
Διάλειμμα / Coffee Break
Documents
Chair: László Horváth
12:00-12:20
Written documents as evidence in Attic forensic oratory
By Edward Harris, Professor of Ancient History, University of Durham
In his speech Against Ctesiphon Aeschines (3.75) praises the Athenian practice of preserving the texts of public documents.
preserving the texts of public documents. He observes that this record does not change, but gives
the people the opportunity to see which politicians have been scoundrels in the past but now
claim to be honest men. This passage makes an implicit contrast between written texts, which are
kept in the public archive and considered reliable, and oral statements of politicians, which may
be dishonest and must be checked against written documents. This talk will study the use of
written documents in Athenian courts and show that in public cases decrees and other public
records were considered more trustworthy than oral statements. Litigants might interpret the
written laws in their oral arguments, but their interpretations were constrained by the existence of
written documents. This part of the talk will concentrate on the speeches delivered at the trial of
Ctesiphon, at the trial of Aeschines in 343 and Demosthenes’ Against Aristocrates. In private
cases, there were methods of authenticating written records, which were considered essential in
trials about contracts and wills Dem. 32-37, Dem. 56; Isaeus 1,9). Phratries also kept extensive
written records to establish legitimacy in inheritance cases. Finally, the paper will discuss the
role of the written plaint, which shaped the oral presentation of the litigants in court provided a
yardstick for the judges to evaluate their oral statements. The extensive use of writing helped to
keep the Athenian courts democratic and to prevent the emergence of an elite ruling through
expertise in rhetoric.
12:30-12:50
Classical witnesses: Early Greek theories of forensic testimony
By Robert Sullivan, Associate Professor of Classical Studies, Department of Communication Studies, Ithaca College, NY
The earliest conceptualizations of rhetorical theory prominently featured accounts of how
- All rely on a wooden and reductive notion of argumentation derived from situational strategies observed in Athenian trials. These can be categorized as non-productive modes of argument based on tactical manuevering.
- These accounts make little distinction between the statements of willing witnesses or those whose testimony would have been given after torture, or the testimony of persons under oath. All seem to exist in a single category, testimony, under which the various forms are subsumed.
- Argumentation based on testimony is firmly distinguished from that derived from probability (eikos), the productive mode of argumentation with which Antiphon seems to have been most familiar.
- Many of the manuevers displayed in the Tetralogies appear in a number of the earliest recorded Greek trials (Antiphon 1. 6-12; 5. 20-30, 31-39, 49-56; 6. 16-19, 22-32; Andocides 1.11-19, 37-42, 69-70, 112-114, 127).
Taken together these features mark the Tetralogies as instances of argumentation by commonplaces. This mode of argumentation passed into the technical tradition, the earliest surviving instances being the Aristotelian Rhetoric and the pseudo-Aristotelian Rhetoric to Alexander, but in doing so underwent important change:
- Types of testimony became distinguished from each other as testimony relying on oaths, witnesses, and torture came to be considered separately.
- The heretofore isolated instances of commonplace lines of argument became arranged in a more systematic manner that expressed more clearly how one might deploy or refute one’s positions.
- The commonplaces came to be considered in an abstract manner. No longer embedded in examples of common approaches to pisteis, they were seen as being theoretically separate from other, more flexible and productive modes of argumentation. So, for instance, in the Rhetoric to Alexander testimony by opinions, witnesses, evidence given under torture, and oaths are considered «supplementary» or «additional» (έπιθέτων) to the more substantial modes of proof; probablities, examples, enthymemes, maxims, and signs. In Aristotle , the ἀτέχνων πίστεων, laws, witnesses, contracts, torture, and oaths are literally ‘outside the art,’ the proper pisteis of which being ethos, pathos, and logos.
Furthermore the two surviving technai elaborate on the base of commonplace lines of argument with theoretically eccentric additions. Aristotle insists on a divison of witnesses into ancient (παλαιοἰ) and recent (πρόσφατοι) where the ancient ‘witnesses’ appear to be indistinguishable from maxims and the Rhetoric to Alexander suggests lines of maneuver that go either to the testimony’s general probability or to the witnesses’ credibility. Both of these technai reflect processes of elaboration and categorization that marked treatise composition in the 4th century BCE.
13:00-13:20
Manuscripts and Evidence / Witnesses in the Speeches of Aeschines
By Dora Solti, Assistant Professor in Greek Philology, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest
joint abstract with A. Efstathiou
In present paper we will examine the testimonies and other documents of the Aeschinean Corpus in terms of originality, their role in the textual tradition, as well as their rhetorical value. Moreover, we will concentrate on the rhetorical use of testimonies by Aeschines in order to make them function within the overal rhetorical strategy opposing to Timarchus (speech 1) and Demosthenes (speeches 2 and 3).
13:30-14:00
The rhetorical effect of evidence/witnesses in the speeches of Aeschines
By Athanasios Efstathiou, Professor of Ancient Greek Language and Literature, Ionian University
joint abstract with D. Solti
In present paper we will examine the testimonies and other documents of the Aeschinean Corpus in terms of originality, their role in the textual tradition, as well as their rhetorical value. Moreover, we will concentrate on the rhetorical use of testimonies by Aeschines in order to make them function within the overal rhetorical strategy opposing to Timarchus (speech 1) and Demosthenes (speeches 2 and 3).
14:00-15:30
Μεσημεριανό / Lunch Break
15:30-15:50
The Curious Case of “Against Timarchos”: Ancient evidence and modern conclusions
By Kostas Kapparis, Professor of Classics, Director of the Center for Greek Studies, University of Florida
The speech Against Timarchos has received a lot of attention in the past 40 years
16:00-16:20
Word of Mouth: the rhetoric of pheme in Attic oratory
By Andreas Serafim, Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Cyprus
In his book Rumour and Renown: Representations of Fama in Western Literature
16:30-16:50
A dream on trial: religious evidence in legal decision-making in classical Athens
By Rebecca Van Hove, Research Fellow, King’s College London
This paper offers an investigation into the use of religious evidence in the legal decision
Reception in Antiquity
Chair: Christos Kremmydas
17:00-17:20
The foundation of the ancient quarrel between philosophy and poetry and its rhetoric in Plato’s Apology of Socrates
By Ioannis Perysinakis, Emeritus Professor of Ancient Greek Literature, University of Ioannina
In his second critique of poetry in the tenth book of the Republic Socrates and Glaucon conclude
I am going to suggest that the foundations of this “ancient quarrel” are laid in the Apology of Socrates. It consists not only of the popular charges of the old accusers- the first accusation is referred to by the adjective παλαιά (διαβολὴ and ἀπέχθειαι: Aristophanes’ Clouds, Socrates is a sophist, the oracle, Socrates’ ‘pupils’), and the present formal charges brought by Meletus, but also of Socrates’ condemnation and his death itself. The oracle is an ad hoc invention and its meaning in forensic terms is that it is not Socrates’ fault that people or the oracle say that he is wise. Ιt is not Socrates’ fault, either, that those whom these young men (following Socrates of their own initiative) test, become angry at him, not at themselves, and they say “this fellow Socrates is utterly polluted, and corrupts the youth” (23c4-d2). Socrates not only has not harmed the Athenians, but he “believes that no greater good for the Athenians has ever come about in the city than his service to the god” (30a5-7, Reeve). He counts it of greatest importance that “the young should be as good as possible” (24d-e). He exhorts the Athenians to care about having concern for truth and the greatest possible excellence of their soul (29d8-e2). His main concern is to inspire the jurors to be concerned with philosophy and virtue.
17:30-17:50
Μά (Νή) Τὸν Κύνα: Thoughts about the oath of Socrates
By Flora Manakidou, Professor of Ancient Greek Philology, Department of Greek Philology, Democritus University of Thrace
One category of ancient witnessing which played a vital part in Greek society is oathtaking
One category of ancient witnessing which played a vital part in Greek society is oathtaking. Contrary to the ban on oath of Jewish Law, which is replicated in the New Testament, oaths are pertinent to all levels of human life in Greek antiquity to verify
This paper will focus on one specific oath the sources attributed to Socrates and this is his oath by the dog. Plato describes Socrates swearing in the name of the dog thirteen times (Apol. 22a, Charm. 172d‒e, Crat. 411b3‒4, Gorg. 461a7‒b2, 466c3‒5, 482b4‒6, Hip. Maj. 287e5‒6, 298b5‒9, Lys. 211e 6‒8, Phaed. 98e‒99a, Rep. 399e5, 567d‒e, 592a). It is noteworthy that neither Xenophon nor Aristophanes refer to that oath when depicting the philosopher. Up to now the Socratic oath by the dog has been interpreted in two different directions: the first saw in it another proof for the philosophers’ religious
18:00-18:30
Διάλειμμα / Coffee Break
18:30-18:50
Memories of Demosthenes’ speech Against Meidias: the case of Strato reimagined
By Kathryn Tempest, Senior Lecturer in Latin Literature & Roman History at the University of Roehampton, London
I am writing a little and reading around; but when I read, I feel my own writing is poor by comparison
19:00-19:20
Galen as an Orator. Medical Rhetoric in the 2nd century A.D.
By Athena Bazou, Lecturer in Ancient Greek Literature, Faculty of Philology, Department of Classical Philology, National & Kapodistrian University of Athens
Galen (2nd A.D.) is known as the greatest physician of antiquity after Hippocrates and
19:30-19:50
Witness evidence in Thucydides: the case of the Mutilation of the Herms and its aftermath (Th. 6.27-29 And 53-61)
By Vassileios Liotsakis, Post-doctoral Fellow at Ruprecht-Karls Universität Heidelberg
The mutilation of the Herms in Athens at the dawn of the Sicilian Expedition
20:00-20:20
Witness of virtue: the epigraphic evidence of Hellenistic honorific decrees
By Antiope Argyriou, PhD, Department of Classics, Royal Holloway, London
In this paper I will investigate the importance of witnessing in Hellenistic honorific decrees.
20:30
Δείπνο / Dinner
Centre for Rhetoric and Ancient Drama
class-phil [at] uop [dot] com
Co-Organizers
Regional Unity of Messinia
Municipality of Calamata
Sponsors
Elite City Hotel Resort
Map
Web Design: Dora Kourkoulou- Copyright©2018 Centre for Ancient Rhetoric and Drama (C.A.R.D.)