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How Renaissance Rhetoric Transformed the Classical Tradition

Thursday 16 October 2014, 5.00PM

Speaker(s): Professor Peter Mack (University of Warwick)

Rhetoric was a central part of the legacy of the classical world and at the same time a defining characteristic of renaissance humanism. This paper will examine the ways in which northern European humanists, in particular Rudolph Agricola (1443-85) and Erasmus of Rotterdam (?1469-1536) used elements of their classical inheritance, both rhetorical and literary, to produce innovations in rhetorical theory.

Among other doctrines the paper will discuss exposition, argumentation, disposition, the topics of invention and the techniques of copia. It will also consider the conditions which made innovation within the classical tradition an effective strategy.

Professor Peter Mack teaches on the English and Comparative Literary Studies program and is on secondment as the Director of the Warburg Institute, London.

His research interests include Medieval and Renaissance European intellectual, cultural and literary history, and especially rhetoric. Most of his publications - among them, Renaissance Argument: Valla and Agricola in the Traditions of Rhetoric and Dialectic (1993) – have been in fields connected with Renaissance rhetoric and dialectic.

This lecture is hosted by CREMS

Location: Berrick Saul Seminar Room BS/008

Admission: All Welcome, tea/coffee 15 mins before start

Email: crems-enquiries@york.ac.uk