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Modern Rhetorics of Style

Modern Rhetorics of Style. Tonight’s Themes. Metaphor and Language Rhetoric and Reality Style and Substance. Richard Weaver (1910-1963). Ideas have Consequences (1948) The Ethics of Rhetoric (1953) Language is Sermonic . To Write the Truth.

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Modern Rhetorics of Style

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  1. Modern Rhetorics of Style

  2. Tonight’s Themes • Metaphor and Language • Rhetoric and Reality • Style and Substance

  3. Richard Weaver (1910-1963) • Ideas have Consequences (1948) • The Ethics of Rhetoric (1953) • Language is Sermonic

  4. To Write the Truth • What is Weaver’s problem with the way composition is being taught? • What are vereloqui, recteloqui, and utiliterloqui? • What does Weaver argue is the proper role of the teacher?

  5. Types of Compositionists • Vereloqui (metaphysicians) • Speaking truthfully • Recteloqui (empiricists) • Speaking correctly (etiquette) • UtiliterLoqui (sophists) • Speaking usefully

  6. Kenneth Burke (1897-1993) • Marx, Freud, Nietzsche • Rhetoric: “Symbolic means of inducing cooperation in beings that by nature respond to symbols.”

  7. Burkean Concepts • Dramatism • Identification • Pentad • Act • Scene • Agent • Agency • Purpose • Terministic Screen

  8. Four Master Tropes • According to Burke, what are these and how are they related? • Metaphor/perspective • Metonymy/reduction • Synecdoche/representation • Irony/dialectic

  9. Four Master Tropes • Metaphor (Perspective) • Seeing something in terms of something else • Metonymy (Reduction) • Conveying something incorporeal or intangible in terms of something corporeal or tangible (science) • Synecdoche (Representation) • Part for the whole; relationships of convertibility between terms • Irony (Dialectic) • Universalizing or abstracting the perspectives of all the characters from the perspective of a single character.

  10. Wayne C. Booth (1921-2005) • The Rhetoric of Fiction (1961) • A Rhetoric of Irony (1974) • The Company We Keep: An Ethics of Fiction (1988)

  11. The Rhetorical Stance • What is the rhetorical stance and how does it differ from the pedant’s, advertiser’s, and entertainer’s stance? • What does a “good author” do that lesser authors do not? • What is the rhetorical balance Booth discusses in the last sections?

  12. Metaphor as Rhetoric • What are Booth’s criteria for judging good and bad metaphors? • Why does Booth like the catfish metaphor so much? • How does (and should) metaphor choices affect or determine ethos? (57)

  13. Metaphor as Rhetoric II • Read (aloud) Metaphor Delivered (58) • What kind of passage is this? What is the context? • What sort of ethos comes through?

  14. Metaphor III • What does Booth mean on p. 64: “The quality of any culture will in part be measured both by the quality of the metaphors it induces or allows and the quality of the judges of metaphor that it educates and rewards. • P. 66: “Criticism of metaphoric worlds, or visions, becomes one clear and important…instance of a general human project of improving life by criticizing it.” • How are these issues related to advertising? (69)

  15. Metaphor IV • 71: “Even the most secular literary work is engaged in the religious exchange.” • 71: “There can be no ‘innocent’ art, no art that can be considered free of ethical responsibility.”

  16. Stylistic Performances • Thomas Pynchon • The Crying of Lot 49 • Jonathan Franzen • The Corrections • William S. Burroughs • The Naked Lunch

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