Anthologies of speeches excerpted from history books constitute a relatively little-known rhetorical and bibliographic genre. From ancient times to the present day, the practice of culling charactersâ orations from one or more works and publishing them independently of their original source has produced new and different ways of reading and using history. Anthologies of Historiographical Speeches offers an introduction to the very diverse questions that arise from the study of the genre through a variety of approaches and methodological tools. Lying at the point where rhetoric and historiography intersect, the essays included in this volume focus on the rhetorical aspects of the collections, as well as on their production, transmission, and reception from antiquity to the early modern period.
J. C. Iglesias-Zoido, Ph.D. (1992), teaches Classical Philology at the University of Extremadura. Previous publications on Thucydides and historiographical speeches include Retórica e historiografÃa (Madrid, 2008) and El legado de TucÃdides en la cultura occidental (Coimbra, 2011).
Victoria Pineda, Ph.D. (1993), University of Michigan, teaches Comparative Literature at Universidad de Extremadura. Her most recent publications include a book on Luis Cernudaâs ekphrastic poems (Barcelona, 2017) and a critical edition of Lope de Vega's Los Prados de León (Madrid, 2017).
All interested in rhetoric (ancient, medieval and modern), historiography (ancient, medieval and modern), the history of the book and of reading, classical studies, the classical tradition, collective genres, military eloquence.