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Summary.

Poetry in the Courtroom.

Guarding Poetic Texts.

Poetry and the Tyrants.

Poetry & the Dēmos.

Index of Citations

General Index

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Poetry and the Dēmos: State Regulation of a Civic Possession 

Casey Dué, edition of January 31, 2003

Index locorum (sorted by citation)

Primary Sources
 
( * = link to author’s description; ** = link to work’s description)
 
Aeschin. 1.11 (in text as: Against Timarchus 11) * **
·    Poetry in the Courtroom
Aeschin. 1.147 (in text as: Against Timarchus 147) * **
·    Poetry in the Courtroom
Aeschin. 1.153 (in text as: Aeschines, Against Timarchus 153) * **
·    Poetry in the Courtroom
Aeschin. 1.4 (in text as: Aeschines Against Timarchus 4-5) * **
·    Poetry & the Dēmos
Anecdota Graeca 1.6 ed. Cramer (in text as: Anecdota Graeca 1.6 ed. Cramer)
·    Poetry and the Tyrants
Aristot. Rh. 1375a (in text as: Aristot. Rh. 1375a-b) *
·    Poetry in the Courtroom
Aristot. Rh. 1375b (in text as: Aristotle, Rhetoric 1375b) *
·    Poetry in the Courtroom
Cic. de Orat. 3.137 (in text as: Cicero De oratore 3.137)
·    Poetry and the Tyrants
Hdt. 3.82 (in text as: Herodotus 3.82) * **
·    Poetry & the Dēmos
Hdt. 5.90.2 (in text as: Hdt. 5.90.2) * **
·    Poetry and the Tyrants
Hdt. 5.90.2 (in text as: Herodotus 5.90.2) * **
·    Poetry and the Tyrants
Hdt. 7.159 (in text as: Herodotus 7.159-161) * **
·    Poetry in the Courtroom
Plat. Hipparch. 228 (in text as: Hipparchus 228-229)
·    Poetry and the Tyrants
Plut. Lyc. 4.4 (in text as: Plutarch Life of Lycurgus 4.4) *
·    Poetry and the Tyrants
Plut. Mor. 1011b (in text as: Plut. Platonic Questions 1011b) *
·    Poetry in the Courtroom
Plut. Mor. 814f (in text as: Plut. Mor. 841F) *
·    Guarding Poetic Texts
·    Guarding Poetic Texts
Plut. Sol. 10.2 (in text as: Plutarch Solon 10.2-3) *
·    Poetry in the Courtroom
Thuc. 1.22 (in text as: Thuc. 1.22) * **
·    Guarding Poetic Texts

Secondary Sources
 
Andrew Ford, “Reading Homer from the Rostrum: Poems and Laws in Aeschines” Against Timarchus’ (in Performance Culture and Athenian Democracy, ed. Simon Goldhill and Robin Osborne, 1999.
·    Poetry & the Dēmos
C. Higbie, “The Bones of a Hero, The Ashes of a Politician: Athens, Salamis, and the Usable Past.” Classical Antiquity 16 (1997): 279-308.
·    Poetry in the Courtroom
Camp, pp. 39-40..
·    Poetry & the Dēmos
G. Nagy, Pindar’s Homer 174.
·    Poetry and the Tyrants
G. Nagy in a chapter entitled “Epic, Praise, and the Posession of Poetry” (Pindar’s Homer [Baltimore, 1990]), p. 158.
·    Poetry and the Tyrants
J. M. Camp, The Athenian Agora: Excavations in the Heart of Classical Athens (London, 1986), pp. 39-40.
·    Poetry & the Dēmos
P. Cartledge, “‘Deep Plays’: theatre as process in Greek civic life.’ The Cambridge Companion to Greek Tragedy. ed. P. E. Easterling. Cambridge, 1997.
·    Poetry & the Dēmos
S. Perlman, “Quotations from Poetry in Attic Orators of the Fourth Century BCE” [American Journal of Philology 85 (1964): 155-172].
·    Poetry & the Dēmos
Shear, Jr., pp. 8-11.
·    Poetry & the Dēmos
T. Leslie Shear, Jr., “Tyrants and Buildings in Archaic Athens.” Athens Comes of Age from Solon to Salamis . Princeton, 1978, p.4.
·    Poetry & the Dēmos
Vernant in J-P. Vernant and P. Vidal-Naquet, Myth and Tragedy in Ancient Greece. trans. Janet Lloyd. New York, 1990..
·    Poetry & the Dēmos

Index locorum (sorted by section)

Summary

There are no citations in this section.   (top)

Poetry in the Courtroom

Aeschin. 1.153 (in text as: Aeschines, Against Timarchus 153) ; Aeschin. 1.11 (in text as: Against Timarchus 11) ; Aeschin. 1.147 (in text as: Against Timarchus 147) ; Aristot. Rh. 1375a (in text as: Aristot. Rh. 1375a-b) ; Aristot. Rh. 1375b (in text as: Aristotle, Rhetoric 1375b) ; Hdt. 7.159 (in text as: Herodotus 7.159-161) ; Plut. Mor. 1011b (in text as: Plut. Platonic Questions 1011b) ; Plut. Sol. 10.2 (in text as: Plutarch Solon 10.2-3) .  
 
Secondary Sources: C. Higbie, “The Bones of a Hero, The Ashes of a Politician: Athens, Salamis, and the Usable Past.” Classical Antiquity 16 (1997): 279-308.   (top)

Guarding Poetic Texts

Plut. Mor. 814f (in text as: Plut. Mor. 841F) ; Plut. Mor. 814f (in text as: Plutarch Lives of the Ten Orators 841F) ; Thuc. 1.22 (in text as: Thuc. 1.22) .   (top)

Poetry and the Tyrants

Anecdota Graeca 1.6 ed. Cramer (in text as: Anecdota Graeca 1.6 ed. Cramer) ; Cic. de Orat. 3.137 (in text as: Cicero De oratore 3.137) ; Hdt. 5.90.2 (in text as: Hdt. 5.90.2) ; Hdt. 5.90.2 (in text as: Herodotus 5.90.2) ; Plat. Hipparch. 228 (in text as: Hipparchus 228-229) ; Plut. Lyc. 4.4 (in text as: Plutarch Life of Lycurgus 4.4) .  
 
Secondary Sources: G. Nagy, Pindar’s Homer 174; G. Nagy in a chapter entitled “Epic, Praise, and the Posession of Poetry” (Pindar’s Homer [Baltimore, 1990]), p. 158.   (top)

Poetry & the Dēmos

Aeschin. 1.4 (in text as: Aeschines Against Timarchus 4-5) ; Hdt. 3.82 (in text as: Herodotus 3.82) .  
 
Secondary Sources: Andrew Ford, “Reading Homer from the Rostrum: Poems and Laws in Aeschines” Against Timarchus’ (in Performance Culture and Athenian Democracy, ed. Simon Goldhill and Robin Osborne, 1999; Camp, pp. 39-40.; J. M. Camp, The Athenian Agora: Excavations in the Heart of Classical Athens (London, 1986), pp. 39-40; P. Cartledge, “‘Deep Plays’: theatre as process in Greek civic life.’ The Cambridge Companion to Greek Tragedy. ed. P. E. Easterling. Cambridge, 1997; S. Perlman, “Quotations from Poetry in Attic Orators of the Fourth Century BCE” [American Journal of Philology 85 (1964): 155-172]; Shear, Jr., pp. 8-11; T. Leslie Shear, Jr., “Tyrants and Buildings in Archaic Athens.” Athens Comes of Age from Solon to Salamis . Princeton, 1978, p.4; Vernant in J-P. Vernant and P. Vidal-Naquet, Myth and Tragedy in Ancient Greece. trans. Janet Lloyd. New York, 1990..   (top)