Allannah K. Karas: Coercion, Ambiguity, and Rhetoric in Ancient Greece, Gebunden
Coercion, Ambiguity, and Rhetoric in Ancient Greece
- The Dangers of Peitho
- Publisher:
- Cambridge University Press, 07/2026
- Binding:
- Gebunden
- Language:
- Englisch
- ISBN-13:
- 9781009656863
- Item number:
- 12680691
- Volume:
- 248 Pages
- Release date:
- 31.7.2026
- Note
-
Caution: Product is not in German language
Other releases of Coercion, Ambiguity, and Rhetoric in Ancient Greece |
Price |
|---|---|
| Buch, Kartoniert / Broschiert, Englisch | EUR 50.85* |
Blurb
The ancient Greek goddess and action peith, which was understood as a form of inducement or psychological pressure at work in rhetoric but also in other spheres of human activity, presented dangers to interpersonal and political persuasion. Evidence from poetry, drama, vase painting, oratory, and magical papyri reveals ways in which communities and individuals understood and learned to tolerate peith's threats of ambiguity and coercion. Allannah Karas examines peith in connection with other coercive, semi-divine forces, such as bia (physical force), anank (constraint, necessity), and thelgein (enchantment), which are perceived as acting on the human psyche and within the human community. She also draws on social psychology, especially the concept of ambiguity tolerance and reactance theory, to illuminate the efficacy of ancient Greek communal practices (e. g. drama, ritual, romanticization and visual humor, and oratorical piety) as mechanisms for managing peith's necessary yet dangerous presence in society.