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Detailed Completeness and Pleasure of the Narrative. Some Remarks on the Narrative Tradition and Plato

  • Michael Erler
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Plato’s Styles and Characters
This chapter is in the book Plato’s Styles and Characters

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Table of Contents VII
  3. Introduction 1
  4. Plato’s Literary Style
  5. Beyond Language and Literature 5
  6. The Three Waves of Dialectic in the Republic 15
  7. Plato’s Unfinished Trilogy: Timaeus–Critias–Hermocrates 33
  8. The Myth of the Winged Chariot in the Phaedrus: A Vehicle for Philosophical Thinking 47
  9. Perspectivism, Proleptic Writing and Generic agón: Three Readings of the Symposium 63
  10. Plato’s Argumentative Strategies in Theaetetus and Sophist 77
  11. Other Genres and Traditions
  12. Detailed Completeness and Pleasure of the Narrative. Some Remarks on the Narrative Tradition and Plato 103
  13. The meeting scenes in the incipit of Plato’s dialogue 119
  14. The Philosophical Writing and the Drama of Knowledge in Plato 137
  15. Comic Dramaturgy in Plato: Observations from the Ion 157
  16. Amicus Homerus: Allusive Art in Plato’s Incipit to Book X of the Republic (595a–c) 173
  17. Performance and Elenchos in Plato’s Ion 187
  18. Plato and the Catalogue Form in Ion 203
  19. Orphic Aristophanes at Plato’s Symposium 211
  20. Socrates as a physician of the soul 227
  21. The Style of Medical Writing in the Speech of Eryximachus: Imitation and Contamination 241
  22. Gorgias, the eighth orator. Gorgianic echoes in Agathon’s Speech in the Symposium 253
  23. Plato’s Phaedrus: A Play Inside the Play 263
  24. Plato’s Characters
  25. He longs for him, he hates him and he wants him for himself: The Alcibiades Case between Socrates and Plato 281
  26. Five Platonic Characters 297
  27. Who Is Plato’s Callicles and What Does He Teach? 317
  28. Doing business with Protagoras (Prot. 313e): Plato and the Construction of a Character 335
  29. Theaetetus and Protarchus: two philosophical characters or what a philosophical soul should do 357
  30. The Role of Diotima in the Symposium: The Dialogue and Its Double 379
  31. Contributors 401
  32. Citations Index 407
  33. Author Index 411
  34. Subject Index 419
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