Fr. 52.50

Politeness in Ancient Greek and Latin

English · Paperback / Softback

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Contributions based on papers presented at the conference Approaches to Greek and Latin im/politeness held at the Universidad Autâonoma de Madrid in June 2017.

List of contents










Part I. Introduction: 1. Im/Politeness Research in Ancient Greek and Latin: Concepts, Methods, Data Luis Unceta Gómez and ¿ukasz Berger; Part II. The Expression of Im/Politeness: 2. Towards a Comparison of Greek and Roman Politeness Systems Peter Barrios-Lech; 3. How to Be Polite without Saying 'Please' in Classical Greek? The Role of ¿¿ in Polite Requests Camille Denizot; 4. Text as Interaction: ut mihi (quidem) uidetur as a Hedging Device in Latin Literary Texts Francesca Mencacci; 5. Politeness Formulae in Roman Non-Literary Sources: The Case of Juridical Texts Rolando Ferri; Part III. Im/Politeness in Use: 6. Friendship Terms in Plato Michael Lloyd; 7. Conversational Openings and Politeness in Menander. An Integrated Pragmatic Approach to Menandrean Dialogue Giada Sorrentino; 8. Im/politeness of Interruptions in Roman Comedy ¿ukasz Berger; 9. Im/Politeness and Conversation Analysis in Greek Tragedy: The Case of Theseus and the Herald in Euripides' Supplices Evert Van Emde Boas; 10. Qui honoris causa nominatur. Form and Function of Third-Party Politeness in Cicero Lidewij Van Gils and Rodie Risselada; 11. Banter, Teasing and Politeness in Varro's De re rustica Jon Hall; Part IV. Ancient Perceptions on Im/Politeness: 12. Being Polite the Roman Way. Comments about Im/Politeness in the Comedies of Plautus and Terence Luis Unceta Gómez; 13. Impoliteness outside Literature: The Colloquium Harleianum Federica Iurescia; 14. Politeness in Ancient Scholarship Anna Zago.

About the author

Luis Unceta Gómez is Senior Lecturer in Latin Philology at the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. His research interests focus on Latin semantics and pragmatics, and especially linguistic politeness, topics on which he has published extensively.Łukasz Berger is a lecturer in Classics at the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań. His research interests are pragmatic aspects of dialogue in Roman comedy.

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