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Unsere Autor:innen
Autor:innen treffen
17aus63: Der C.H.Beck-Fragebogen
Klassiker und Werkausgaben
Sachbuch
Neuerscheinungen
Specials
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'I have a dream'
Johan Schloemann
‘I have a Dream’: The Art of Oration from Cicero to Barack Obama ‘We barely experience moments of strong eloquence.’ – this is not a comment of an observer of contemporary parliamentary debates, but a criticism of oration from the time preceeding the French Revolution. In his grand panorama from Homer to the present Johann Schloemann shows us not only the art, but also the miseries of the orators.
‘Only lecturing makes the orator’s luck’; the boring Wagner in Goethe’s Faust knows this and yet he and those like him are quite unable to captivate their listeners. They lack the ability to improvise at the spur of the moment, and the mental agility required to playfully rebuff an opponent’s attack with rhetorical ease. There have always been schools and teachers offering their services to remedy the lack; but whenever rhetoric is too successful, its students will be suspected of malign manipulation and enemies of the people – often to fatal results. This is why a speech must appear as spontaneous as possible – from the show of inspiration in a preacher to the use of PowerPoint and teleprompters. Schloemann’s book on the history of oration and its pitfalls is informative and entertaining – and includes along the way many a hint on how to improve one’s own public speaking.
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