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NOTES

CHAPTER ONE
1 See Kennedy, New History of Classical Rhetoric, pp. 12–13.
2 See Kennedy, Comparative Rhetoric, pp. 1–28.
3 See ibid., pp. 128–31.
4 See ibid., pp. 162–64.
5 See ibid., pp. 183–85.
6 On rhetoric in early Greek literature, see Enos, Greek Rhetoric before Aristotle;
Kennedy, New History of Classical Rhetoric, pp. 11–15; John T. Kirby, “The ‘Great
Triangle’ in Early Greek Rhetoric and Poetics,” Rhetorica 8 (1992): 213–28; and
Richard P. Martin, Language of Heroes: Speech and Performance in the Iliad (Ithaca:
Cornell University Press, 1989).
7 See Lord, Singer of Tales, and J. M. Foley, Theory of Oral Composition.
8 The early Greeks projected this attitude onto their gods, both male and female.
Mortal women in early Greek literature, for example Andromache in Iliad and
Penelope in Odyssey, do not show this inclination.
9 See Ochs, Consolatory Rhetoric.
10 See Harris, Ancient Literacy.
11 See Ong, Orality and Literacy and Presence of the Word; Havelock, Literate
Revolution;
and Havelock and Hershbell, Communication Arts.
12 Translated in Matson et al., eds., Readings from Classical Rhetoric, pp. 38–42.
13 For further discussion of the effects of writing and additional bibliography,
see Kennedy, Comparative Rhetoric, pp. 116–17 and 191–92.
14 There are many modern translations of some of Sappho's poetry, the most
complete of which is that by David A. Campbell in the Loeb Classical Library, Greek
Lyric,
vol. 1; poetic translation by Mary Barnard, Sappho (Berkeley: University of
California Press, 1958). For a general study of Sappho, see Williamson, Sappho's
Immortal Daughters.
15 For discussion of Corinna and bibliography, see Easterling and Knox, eds.,
Cambridge History of Classical Literature, 1:239–41 and 749–50.
16 See Pomeroy, Women in Hellenistic Egypt.
17 See Waithe, History of Women Philosophers.
18 Translated in ibid., 1:20–21.
19 See ibid., 169–95.
20 E. R. Sewter, trans., The Alexeid of Anna Comnena (New York: Viking Pen-
guin, 1979).
21 See C. Jan Swearingen, “A Lover's Discourse: Diotima, Discourse, and De-
sire,” in Lunsford, ed., Reclaiming Rhetorica, pp. 26–76.
22 See Susan Jarratt and Rory Ong, “Aspasia: Rhetoric, Gender, and Colonial
Ideology,” in ibid., pp. 9–24.

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Publication Information: Book Title: Classical Rhetoric & Its Christian & Secular Tradition from Ancient to Modern Times. Contributors: George A. Kennedy - author. Publisher: University of North Carolina Press. Place of Publication: Chapel Hill, NC. Publication Year: 1999. Page Number: 301.
    
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