5 edition of John Rainolds"s Oxford lectures on Aristotle"s Rhetoric found in the catalog.
Published
1986
by University of Delaware Press, Associated University Presses in Newark [Del.], London
.
Written in English
Edition Notes
Other titles | John Rainolds"s Oxford lectures. |
Statement | edited and translated by Lawrence D. Green. |
Contributions | Green, Lawrence D. |
Classifications | |
---|---|
LC Classifications | PN173.A73 R3 1986 |
The Physical Object | |
Pagination | 469 p. ; |
Number of Pages | 469 |
ID Numbers | |
Open Library | OL2550268M |
ISBN 10 | 0874132878 |
LC Control Number | 85040512 |
Without guilt and justice
Neurology of the visual system
Economics of Pakistan
Policy-making in Britain
Bees, magnetism and electricity.
use of ceramics in valves
The banknote that never was
Gustavus Adolphus
Sioux Uprising
Breton folklore and Arthurian romance.
Soil organisms and decomposition in tundra
Look! We have come through!
Temples of Nannilam Taluk
Cancer in native races
The Tokyo War Crimes Trial
As editor and translator, Green states, "John Rainolds's Oxford Lectures is the earliest critical study of Aristotle's Rhetoric in England," and the only lectures to survive from the Tudor university classroom (9).
As several scholars have noted, Rainolds's lectures rank as "one of the best examples of the humanistic method" in sixteenth Cited by: John Rainolds's Oxford Lectures on Aristotle's Rhetoric. by John Rainolds. Green states, "John Rainolds's Oxford Lectures is the earliest critical study of Aristotle's Rhetoric in England," and the only lectures to survive from the Tudor university classroom (9).
As several scholars have noted, Rainolds's lectures rank as "one of the best 5/5. John Rainolds's Oxford lectures on Aristotle's Rhetoric. Newark [Del.]: University of Delaware Press ; London: Associated University Presses, © (OCoLC) Online version: Rainolds, John, John Rainolds's Oxford lectures on Aristotle's Rhetoric.
These matters are discussed in more detail in my forthcoming book, Elizabethan Rhetoric (Cambridge, ). HUNTINGTON LIBRARY QUARTERLY - & 2 - 24 PETER MACK L. Green, John Rainoldss Oxford Lectures on Aristotles Rhetoric (Newark, N.J., ), ; and.
The outcome of his five years as Professor of Poetry at Oxford University were A. Bradley's two major works, Shakespearean Tragedy (), and Oxford Lectures on Poetry (). All his published work was originally delivered in the form of lectures. In her book Anthony Munday and the Catholics, D onna B.
H amilton offers an interesting hypothesis for Mundays translating a paradox book for dedication to F erdinando Stanley, whose father, H enry Stanley, had died in In offering Lord Strange a set of paradoxes that argue the side that would seem least desirable, Mundays consolation lies 5/5(2).
John Rainoldss lectures on Aristotles Rhetoric at Oxford university, adopting Agricolas and Juan Luis Vivess perspectives, illustrate how Aristotles assumptions regarding rhetoric are useful in a modern context and consistent with a Christian mentality.
Rainoldss lectures, which constitute the only known. Jasper Ridley, John Knox (Oxford, ), ; Margaret H.B. Sanderson, Ayrshire and the Reformation: People and Change (East Lothian, ), 31 On Henry Balnaves see Hugh Watt, Henry Balnaves and the Scottish reforma-tion, RSCHS, 5 (), 32 Gerhard Mller, Protestant Theology in Scotland and Germany in the Early Days of.