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Annotated bibliography on Ancient Oratorical Structuring
Albright, Christine L. “Harnessing Students’ Competitive Spirit: Using Reacting to the Past to Structure the Introductory Greek Culture Class.” The Classical Journal 112.3 (2017): 364-379.
In this journal, the writer has utilized the reacting to the previous game The Threshold of Democracy: 403 B.C. in Athens as motivation for rearrangement a whole introductory class of Greek Culture. Scholars undertake their characters in that game for the entire period and contribute to extra role-playing actions which originate from the pedagogy competitive essence. Formal research is done in two classes that used this format displayed that scholars trusted that they learned an important quantity about ancient Greek history and culture through playing, and the extra role-playing actions improved their course material understanding. I think this journal is credible because the game-playing method used made sure that students understood the classical oration of ancient Greek.
Bozia, Eleni. “Eclectic mimēsis in Imperial Greek oratory: Topological metrics for syntactical quantification using wavelets.” Digital Scholarship in the Humanities (2021).
This article offers a novel technique to determine specific syntactical characteristics of Ancient Greek oratory to compare the orators of the Imperial era quantitatively to those of the Classical founded on their writing style. The study first offers a philological outline of Classical Atticism and its Majestic counterpart and claims that the last is the creative mimēsis product and not a simple reproduction of archetypes. There is a brief clarifies a node-based metric technique that was established to quantify the archeology of a syntactically annotated Treebank that directed to a thorough weighting scheme utilizing Haar Wavelets. They were afterward utilized to apprehend the tree web topology of the corresponding syntactic tree and the linear topology of a sentence. I think the article was credible because the outcome was successively managed using principal component examination to visualize and scrutinize the figures.
Gianitsos, Efthimios, et al. “Stylometric classification of Ancient Greek literary texts by genre.” Proceedings of the 3rd Joint SIGHUM Workshop on Computational Linguistics for Cultural Heritage, Social Sciences, Humanities and Literature. 2019.
This paper seeks to scrutinize the classification of texts through genre and how it is an essential ordinary language application processing to the literary corpora however stays under learned for non-English and pre-modern customs. We cultivate a stylometric attribute set for olden Greek, which allows text recognition as verse or prose. The set holds more than 20 principally syntactic traits that are deliberated in reference to, language-specific heuristics. Utilizing these particular aspects, we categorize almost every classical Greek literature surviving as either verse or prose with over 97% precision; I felt the article runs a well-reasoned-out thorough discussion because it further categorizes a verse texts selection into the customary categories of drama and epic that may also contain classical oration in ancient Greek.
González-Vaquerizo, Helena. “‘Visit Greece and Live your Myth’. The Use of Classical Antiquity by the Greek National Tourism Organization.” thersites. Journal for Transcultural Presences & Diachronic Identities from Antiquity to Date 6 (2017).
The writer seeks to scrutinize the usages of Classical Antiquity in contemporary marketing over an adjustment of the campaigns and posters put up by the National Tourist Organization of Greek in the 21st and 20th centuries. The research displays the way tourism in Greek takes alternatives to the ideas of continuousness and actually as the ‘cradle of Western civilization so that it can endorse the nation as a brand destination. Additionally, it also displays that Classical Ancient times are the Greece major characteristics from its opponents within the Mediterranean area texts, videos and Images emphasize olden standards like authenticity, anthropocentrism, and hospitality together with historical-artistic and mythical aspects, therefore carrying a message of exceptionalism and endurance. This paper is viable because it has an in-depth analysis of the Ancient Greek culture that also will shed some light on classical oration in ancient Greek.
Keersmaekers, Alek, et al. “Creating, Enriching and Valorizing Tree banks of Ancient Greek.” Proceedings of the 18th International Workshop on Tree banks and Linguistic Theories (TLT, Syntax Fest 2019). Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL), 2019.
The writer in this paper displays the degree to which Treebank’s of Ancient Greek takes part of a central responsibility in the continuing Pedalion scheme at the University of Leuven. Structuring on various Treebank’s available readily nowadays, the project targets to form development in the automatic parsing of postclassical and classical Greek scripts. Instead of developing new technology like, our project endeavors to form methodical and deliberate utilization of the technology that exists already, fundamentally, by adapting and combining both data and technology. I think this paper is reliable; it also touches on the classical oration in ancient Greek as they try to go on with their Pedalion scheme at the University of Leuven.
Sneed, Debby. “The architecture of access: ramps at ancient Greek healing sanctuaries.” Antiquity 94.376 (2020): 1015-1029.
This article talks about Ancient Greece and how it’s well-recognized for its numerous sanctuaries and temples, comprising of some put aside to healing and linked cults. Conversant by readings of disability, this paper scrutinizes the community facilities and spaces architecture, together with iconographic, epigraphic, and proof literary, to debate that the ancient Greeks require making sure the availability of healing sanctuaries. Even in the absence of a civil rights framework, we comprehend them nowadays; these places’ constructors made architectural decisions that allowed persons with impaired mobility to gain entry to these spaces. I think this paper is well thought out as it talks about the architectural design in ancient Greece. Additionally, I think it’s credible as it also touches on ancient Greek oration.
Works cited
Albright, Christine L. “Harnessing Students’ Competitive Spirit: Using Reacting to the Past to Structure the Introductory Greek Culture Class.” The Classical Journal 112.3 (2017): 364-379.
Bozia, Eleni. “Eclectic mimēsis in Imperial Greek oratory: Topological metrics for syntactical quantification using wavelets.” Digital Scholarship in the Humanities (2021).
Gianitsos, Efthimios, et al. “Stylometric classification of Ancient Greek literary texts by genre.” Proceedings of the 3rd Joint SIGHUM Workshop on Computational Linguistics for Cultural Heritage, Social Sciences, Humanities and Literature. 2019.
González-Vaquerizo, Helena. “‘Visit Greece and Live your Myth’. The Use of Classical Antiquity by the Greek National Tourism Organization.” thersites. Journal for Transcultural Presences & Diachronic Identities from Antiquity to Date 6 (2017).
Keersmaekers, Alek, et al. “Creating, Enriching and Valorizing Tree banks of Ancient Greek.” Proceedings of the 18th International Workshop on Tree banks and Linguistic Theories (TLT, Syntax Fest 2019). Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL), 2019.
Sneed, Debby. “The architecture of access: ramps at ancient Greek healing sanctuaries.” Antiquity 94.376 (2020): 1015-1029.