Cicero composed his
Oratorin 46 BC, following upon the earlier publication of
Brutusin that same year. It stands as the last major critical rhetorical work of his life. Internal references in the treatise (1, 3, 52, 174), as well as a letter to Atticus (14. 20), make it clear that it was written to comply with Marcus Brutus’ insistent requests, and, from Cicero’s point of view, perhaps even to counter the younger orator’s Atticist leanings in terms of style—an objective that Cicero subsequently admits with regret he failed to achieve (
Att.14. 20. 3). The
Orator, as Fantham notes (1989: 237), represents “a sort of utopian counterpart to the historical account of
Brutus”, and while the treatise certainly searches for the ideal orator of
De Oratore, it shifts the focus from an…
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Citation: May, James. "Orator". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 06 February 2014 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=35072, accessed 24 November 2024.]