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Rhetorical questions : studies of public discourse / Edwin Black.

Van Pelt Library PN4096 .B57 1992
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Black, Edwin, 1929-
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Oratory.
Rhetoric.
Criticism.
Physical Description:
209 pages ; 23 cm
Place of Publication:
Chicago : University of Chicago Press, 1992.
Summary:
From classical antiquity through the Renaissance, rhetoric was the prime vehicle of education in the West and the discipline that prepared students for civic life. With a comprehensiveness drawn from this tradition, Edwin Black here probes the incongruities between form and substance that open public discourse to significant interpretation. Locating rhetorical studies at the confluence of literature and politics, Black focuses on the ideological component of seemingly literary texts and the use of literary devices to advance political advocacy. The essays collected here range in subject matter from nineteenth-century oratory to New York Times editorials to the rhetoric of Richard Nixon. Unifying the collection are the concerns of secrecy and disclosure, identity, opposition, the scope of argument in public persuasion, and the historical mutability of rhetorical forms. Rhetorical Questions will appeal to those in communication, political science, literary study, composition theory, and journalism. Scholars involved in the considerable number of intellectual disciplines that are rediscovering rhetorical studies--especially law, sociology, and cultural anthropology--will find this book to be a model of rhetorical analysis. Indeed, these essays--five of which have never before been published--are essential reading for anyone, whether specialist or nonspecialist, who is concerned with the moral quality of public life and who values its rigorous exploration.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages [187]-202) and index.
ISBN:
0226055019
OCLC:
24429055

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