Image for How to tell a joke: an ancient guide to the art of humor

How to tell a joke: an ancient guide to the art of humor

Cicero, Marcus TulliusFontaine, Michael(Translated with commentary by)
Part of the Ancient Wisdom for Modern Readers series
See all formats and editions

"Everyone knows that Marcus Tullius Cicero was one of the great statesmen, lawyers, and effective orators in the history of Rome.

But did you also know he was regarded as one of the funniest people in Roman society as well?

Five hundred years after his death, in the twilight of antiquity, the writer Macrobius ranks him alongside the comic playwright Plautus as the one of the two greatest wits ever.

In this book, classicist Michael Fontaine, proposes to translate selections from Cicero's great rhetorical treatise, On the Ideal Orator (De Oratore).

That larger work covered the whole of rhetoric and effective public speaking and debate.

However, contained within it, is a long section focused on the effective use of humor in public speaking.

In it, Cicero is concerned not just with various kinds of individual jokes, but with jokes that are advantageous in social situations.

He advises readers on how to make the most effective use of wit to

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£40.20
Product Details
Princeton University Press
0691211078 / 9780691211077
eBook (Adobe Pdf, EPUB)
875.01
01/01/2021
English
328 pages
Copy: 100%; print: 100%