- Progymnasmata
Progymnasmata (Greek "fore-exercises",
Latin "praeexercitamina") arerhetorical exercises gradually leading the student to familiarity with the elements of rhetoric, in preparation for their own practice speeches (gymnasmata , "exercises") and ultimately their own orations.Both
Hermogenes of Tarsus andAelius Festus Aphthonius wrote treatises containing progymnasmata (in the second and third century CE, respectively).The traditional course of rhetoric gave the progymnasmata in this order:
#Fable
#Narrative
#Chreia
#Proverb
#Refutation
#Confirmation
#Commonplace
#Encomium
#Vituperation
#Comparison
#Impersonation
#Description
#Thesis
#Defend or attack a lawOnce these exercises were mastered, the student would begin preparation of a gymnasmatum, a full oration on a topic given a specific context.
External links
* [http://www.progymnasmata.com Teaching The Progymnasmata]
* [http://www.progymnasmata.org Learning The Progymnasmata]
* [http://www.leeds.ac.uk/classics/resources/rhetoric/prog-aph.htm "The Progymnasmata" of Aphthonius]
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