| Ancient teachers of Rhetoric used a long set of exercises that have come to be known as progymnasmata. Details varied from teacher to teacher, but there is a remarkable degree of uniformity. Many of the exercises are still taught by modern teachers (and modern textbooks), though often without the classical terminology. | ||||||||||
| 1. Fable 2. Narrative 3. Anecdote/Cheria 4. Proverb/Maxim 5. Refutation 6. Confirmation 7. Commonplace |
8. Encomium/Panegyric 9. Vituperation/Invective 10. Comparison 11. Impersonation/Characterization 12. Description 13. Theme/Thesis 14. Propose/defend/attack a law |
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| The original exercises were taught over a long period of time, perhaps years. We are going to cover just a few of them in a single semester. Specific details and assignment due dates are are provided separately. | ||||||||||
There will, of course, be other assignments in addition to those involving the progymnasmata. |
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| Fable
Amplify one of Aesop's fables, turning indirect discourse into direct discourse, adopting a different point of view, or altering the chronological presentation (beginning in media res or using flashback for instance). The Ants and the Grasshopper Original version Study the following versions of the story, noting differences in point of view, tense, type of discourse, etc. - - - Weary in every limb, a solitary ant tugged over the snow a piece of corn he had stored up last summer. It would taste might good at dinner tonight. It was then that he noticed a grasshopper, looking cold and hungry, standing beside the path. - - - Weary in every limb, the ant tugged over the snow the piece of corn he had stored up last summer. It would taste mighty good at dinner tonight. - - - Cold and hungry, I watched the fat ant tugging a huge piece of corn over the snow. My feelers twitched, and I was conscious of a tic in my left hind leg. My stomach churned and my mouth watered at the sight of that succulent piece of corn. Finally I could bear it no longer. Please, friend ant, I asked politely, may I have a bite of your corn? - - - An ant tugged a large piece of corn over the soft, new fallen snow. He was perspiring in spite of the cold. Beside the path stood a grasshopper, its feelers twitching. He watched the ant for some time. "Please, friend ant, he said, may I have a bite of your corn? - - - It was a beastly cold afternoon. I always seem to get guard duty on the coldest days. A little after three oclock MacPherson came over the hill, lugging a piece of that corn from storeroom B over in Swan Creek Valley. He was mumbling to himself. Whats the matter, Laddie? I asked him. The cold numb your brain? - - - Grasshopper: Please, friend ant, may I have a bite of your corn? - - - Scene 12 - - - Formicae Gryllique Once through the winters wind trudged a black ant in the snow where the blizzards blast |
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| Narrative
Take a factual or fictional story from the poets or historians and retell it in their own words, attempting to be clear as to the facts:
For example, retell the story of Theseus and Minotaur as though you were reporting it for a newspaper account or as though it were copy for the morning news report on TV. Keep your story to 250 words or less. Other stories you might consider would be such things as
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Anecdote/Cheria
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| Proverb/Maxim
Very similar to the cheria exercise above except that it is usually some common saying familiar to most people within a specific culture. It may be attributable to someone, as in the case of many Biblical Proverbs attributed to Solomon. Generally the saying is meant to persuade or dissuade some action ("people who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones," "wake up and smell the coffee"). Obviously the book of Proverbs in the Bible provides a ready source of proverbs from ancient Hebrew culture. Other good sources would be such things as Bartlett's Familiar Quotations There were a wide variety of elements to the exercise, most of which can be applied to the Cheria exercise as well:
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| Refutation
Some texts combine the Refutation exercise with the following Confirmation exercise under one heading. Classically exercises in Refutation involved challenges to the credibility of a myth or legend. In general, it is pointless to refute that which is obviously untrue, although for exercise purposes this is sometimes done. Usually, however, the refutation, as pure exercise, will involve something almost everyone accepts as true. The traditional refutation exercise usually focused on a myth or legend and used the following instructions:
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| Confirmation
Confirmation is the opposite of the previous exercise. Again, it is usually pointless to argue something which is obviously true (that is, there's no need to argue that water is wet). For purposes of exercise, on the other hand, people will often attempt to confirm what most people believe to be false. The traditional confirmation exercise usually focused on a myth or legend and used the following instructions:
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| Commonplace
First, it is important not to confuse this "Commonplace" exercise with the list of "commonplaces" (common topics) associated with rhetorical discovery. The basic subject involved here is vice and virtue, or perhaps some commonly held belief about vice and virtue. The usual approach is to amplify the evils inherent in something (such as gambling, drinking, adultery, treason, tyranny) or to condemn persons who participate in such activities (against the gambler, against the drunkard, etc.). The Commonplace exercise requires you to argue against a common vice or to condemn a type of person exhibiting that vice, employing (where possible) the following steps:
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| Encomium
Encomium is an expression of praise. Subjects include persons, things (such as abstract ideas), times (as the seasons), places, animals, and growing things, either general or specific. Some of the most famous encomia involve persons. As an exercise, students might produce encomia dealing with persons not necessarily held in high esteem. Ancient teachers of rhetoric listed several dozen possible points of praise. You might include the following: An introduction/prologue with an announcement of the thing or person to be praised.
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| Vituperation/Invective
Invective is the opposite of encomium and is very similar to the "Commonplace" exercise except that it involves someone or something specific rather than a general vice. Condemnation would involve the same points as praise. |
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| Comparison
The exercise of Comparison involves the juxtaposition of two subjects side by side, showing one to be better than the other (double encomium), one to be worse than the other (double invective), or one to be good and the other bad (encomium combined with invective). Subjects may be the same as those involved in encomium and invective, but often included historical, legendary, or fictitious characters. Some famous comparisons involve comparison of Achilles with Hector and Demosthenes with Cicero. Specific details for the comparison assignment will be given separately. |
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Impersonation/Characterization Impersonation involves the imitation of the character (ethos) of a person. Traditionally the student was required to compose "lines" (a speech, a conversation, a dramatic monologue) a character, real or imaginary, alive or dead, to speak under given circumstances. One way to do this is to invent a conversation using direct speech that fits the character of the speaker in a specific circumstance. The Poet Robert Browning is especially noted for his skill at such dramatic monologues in which a character speaks directly to some specific audience. Novelists obviously create many characters, each with unique personalities. Writing such an impersonation often involves a good understanding of history, culture, and psychologynot to mention a good ear for language patterns. Classically, impersonation had three approaches:
The assignment: Consider the following:
You have read two Platonic Dialogs (the Crito and, earlier in the term, the Allegory of the Cave from The Republic). The dialog format was a standard form of written argument for about two thousand years. For this assignment you will write your own dialog using at least four of the characters listed above. Place the characters you have chosen in an entirely different contexta contemporary one of you own invention. For example, imagine that the four (or more) characters you have chosen are on a modern TV talk show such as the Larry King Show and have been asked to speak briefly on a list of issues and to respond to the brief speeches of the others. Or imagine all these men setting in a bar watching the evening news and commenting on what they hear. Write your response in the form of a dialog, allowing each person to speak on his own behalf. Address at least four modern issues, giving the opinion that you believe each person would have on that issue. You may choose from such issues as education, health care, the Enron bankruptcy, homosexual rights or ordination of priests, taxation, , the environment, sex and/or violence in the media, the current war on terrorism, privacy on the internet, abortion, drug use, illegal immigration . . .. If you have another issue that you feel is important enough to be addressed by the notable panel, you may add that as well. Remember, you goal here isnt so much to express your own opinion about these issues, but to place the ideas of these people in new contexts, while maintaining the character of the people. That is, what would these people be likely to say in a different context? You are encouraged to use actual quotations from the texts we have read in order to back up you ideas. |
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| Description
Description is a common exercise in beginning writing classes. Basically, it is the attempt to present through language a distinct view of something. Descriptions may involve persons, events, actions, places, objects, etc. Students writing descriptions should keep in mind, first, sensory details (sights, sounds, smells, tastes, textures) and, second, some sense of orderly presentation (top to bottom, left to right, clockwise, etc.). Generally, it is best to focus on something specific. That is, rather than trying to describe California, describe the bus station in San Francisco. For this assignment, select a place that somehow represents "civilization" to you.
A wide variety of places could work: a library, a hospital, a stock exchange, a courtroom, a freeway overpass, a classroom, etc. Classically, students were encouraged to employ many figures of speech in their descriptions, but they had previously been taught a great deal about the subject of "style" (diction, sentence patterns, and metaphorical language). Instead, focus on literalness of your description, presenting what it IS rather than what it is LIKE. |
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| Theme/Thesis
The term "thesis" here should be distinguished from the modern term "thesis statement." In this context of the progymnasmata, the term is used for the entire argument rather than just the specific claim to be established. Ancient teachers of rhetoric established a great subtypes of this exercise, distinguishing, for example, the question "Should a student study Rhetoric" from the more specific "Should Thomas study Rhetoric." Issues involving human activities ("should a city build walls?") were distinguished from theoretical questions considered by the mind alone ("Is Heaven spherical?") For this assignment your question is "Should university students be required to take general education classes?" [admittedly, this assignment, since it involves a rule or policy, may closely resemble the fourteenth progymnasmata exercise, "Propose a law."]
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| Propose/defend/attack a law
Various ancient teachers emphasized different approaches to defending or attacking proposed or existing laws. Some of the points to be considered include the following:
The structure of your argument should be similar to that of the "thesis" exercise above
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| last update 8/29/2003 Bert Dill |
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