Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Performance Space

Thomas, Edmund

Performance Space Thumbnail


Authors



Contributors

William A. Johnson
Editor

Daniel S. Richter
Editor

Abstract

This chapter explores how public speakers of the second and third centuries ce, accustomed to extravagant physical demonstrations of their art, exploited the architectural spaces where they performed. Theaters, temples, and smaller roofed assembly buildings were all locations for oratorical performances and adapted to achieve stronger oral expression through sharper acoustics. As the demand for public speaking increased, halls were built specially, their materials chosen to enhance the voices of orators. With the vast wealth they accrued from their teaching and public speaking, “sophists” sponsored ambitious building projects, particularly gymnasia, which included spacious auditoria, as from the later second century the palaestra became an intellectual and cultural arena instead of an athletic space. Private houses too had lavishly decorated halls for public speaking, as both literary accounts and archaeological evidence attest. At Rome, the emperors’ projects, not only bath-gymnasia, but the imperial fora, were adapted to similar uses.

Citation

Thomas, E. (2017). Performance Space. In W. A. Johnson, & D. S. Richter (Eds.), The Oxford handbook of the Second Sophistic (181-201). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199837472.013.15

Acceptance Date Jul 31, 2017
Online Publication Date Nov 6, 2017
Publication Date Dec 28, 2017
Deposit Date Jul 31, 2017
Publicly Available Date Sep 7, 2017
Publisher Oxford University Press
Pages 181-201
Book Title The Oxford handbook of the Second Sophistic.
DOI https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199837472.013.15
Keywords architecture, rhetoric, acoustics, performance, orators, audience, theater, gymnasium, bouleuterion, auditoria, sounding-boards

Files





You might also like



Downloadable Citations