Maurizio Bettini, Manuela Giordano, Riccardo Palmisciano (eds.)
Book 9 in the Transcodification: Arts, Languages and Media seriesThis volume offers innovative perspectives that reassess and update so-called Oral Theory, bridging classical scholarship with cutting-edge theoretical contributions, and host a dialogue with cognitive sciences (linguistics and neuroscience), anthropology, and complexity theory. The book propounds theoretical perspectives alongside case-studies ranging from Homer and Athenian literacy to Roman law.
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Peer Review Information
This work has been peer reviewed.Language
- English
Date published
Pages
258ISBNs
9783111434841 Hardback9783111431611
- Frontmatter
- Foreword
- Contents
- Introductory Remarks: “from Homer to Neuroscience”Manuela Giordano
- Orality’s Theory of Mind: the Necessity of PerformancePeter Meineck
- Oral Poetics and Multimodal Language ModelsCristóbal Pagán Cánovas
- New Dawns Forever: Orality and the Plasticity of Homer’s VerseAhuvia Kahane
- The Clever Deception and Mirror NeuronsRoberto Nicolai
- The Narrative Mind. Narrating, Listening, ReadingAlberto Oliverio
- Storytelling and Greek Epic: How to Put the Experience in (Some) OrderAndrea Ercolani
- Poetic Pains and Pleasures: Theory of Mind and the Reception of Epic Performance (Odyssey 8 and Beyond)Manuela Giordano
- Demodocus, Odysseus, and the Double Standard of Authority in SpeechRiccardo Palmisciano
- Was Classical Athens an Oral Society?Margalit Finkelberg
- The Need for Voice in Classical Greek: Reading, Complexity, and Prose RhythmAlessandro Vatri & Alessandro Vatri
- Solemn Words: Ritual Performance in Ancient Roman CourtsMaurizio Bettini
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