UID:
edocfu_9958352407402883
Format:
1 online resource
ISBN:
9780812291636
Note:
Frontmatter --
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Contents --
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Chapter 1. Parrhêsia, Free Speech, and Self- C ensorship --
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Chapter 2. Self- C ensorship in Ancient Greek Comedy --
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Chapter 3. Parrhêsia and Censorship in the Polis and the Symposium: An Exploration of Hyperides Against Philippides 3 --
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Chapter 4. A Bark Worse Than His Bite? Diogenes the Cynic and the Politics of Tolerance in Athens --
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Chapter 5. Censorship for the Roman Stage? --
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Chapter 6. The Poet as Prince: Author and Authority Under Augustus --
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Chapter 7. “Quae quis fugit damnat”: Outspoken Silence in Seneca’s Epistles --
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Chapter 8. Argo’s Flavian Politics: The Workings of Power in Valerius Flaccus --
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Chapter 9. Compulsory Freedom: Literature in Trajan’s Rome --
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Chapter 10. Christian Correspondences: The Secrets of Letter- Writers and Letter- Bearers --
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Chapter 11. “Silence Is Also Annulment”: Veiled and Unveiled Speech in Seventh- C entury Martyr Commemorations --
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Chapter 12. “Dixit quod nunquam vidit hereticos”: Dissimulation and Self- C ensorship in Thirteenth- C entury Inquisitorial Testimonies --
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Chapter 13. Inquisition, Art, and Self- C ensorship in the Early Modern Spanish Church, 1563–1834 --
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Chapter 14. Thomas Hobbes and the Problem of Self- C ensorship --
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Epilogue --
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List of Contributors --
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Index --
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Acknowledgments
Language:
English
DOI:
10.9783/9780812291636
URL:
https://doi.org/10.9783/9780812291636