Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por University of South Carolina Pre, 2015
ISBN 10: 1611174554 ISBN 13: 9781611174557
Librería: Midtown Scholar Bookstore, Harrisburg, PA, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 50,75
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritohardcover. Condición: Good. HARDCOVER Good - Bumped and creased book with tears to the extremities, but not affecting the text block, may have remainder mark or previous owner's name - GOOD Standard-sized.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por Univ of South Carolina Pr, 2015
ISBN 10: 1611174554 ISBN 13: 9781611174557
Librería: Revaluation Books, Exeter, Reino Unido
EUR 108,25
Cantidad disponible: 2 disponibles
Añadir al carritoHardcover. Condición: Brand New. 344 pages. 9.25x6.25x1.00 inches. In Stock.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por University Of South Carolina Press Apr 2015, 2015
ISBN 10: 1611174554 ISBN 13: 9781611174557
Librería: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Alemania
EUR 109,30
Cantidad disponible: 2 disponibles
Añadir al carritoBuch. Condición: Neu. Neuware - The Effects of Rhetoric and the Rhetoric of Effects tackles one of the thorniest and longest-standing issues in the discipline of rhetoric - the issue of effects. While the field's founders valued the assessment of a speech's effects, later scholars moved away from it, privileging textual analysis, symbols, and meaning. Though situated and strategic oral rhetoric is created for instrumental ends, its study has been limited in recent decades. Editors Amos Kiewe and Davis W. Houck seek to resurrect the study of effects and consider it as the cornerstone of the rhetorical critic's enterprise - what rhetoric actually does.In 1925, when Herbert Wichelns essentially created the field of rhetorical criticism, he founded it on the cornerstone of effect: what did oral rhetoric do to an observable audience Wichelns's founding statement held sway for decades, even as rhetorical critics struggled doggedly to determine "causes" to rhetoric's effects. As the speech discipline matured and cast off the ghost of Aristotelian criticism and its seeming obsession with effect, critics eventually adopted the study of symbol systems as a guiding thematic. That thematic, while enormously productive, never resolved larger questions of what these symbol systems might be doing - beyond their incipient meaning.In this volume scholars across several subfields of rhetorical criticism return to the study of effect in a world impossibly different from preWorld War II era scholarship. With the rhetorical revolution and the linguistic turn across the humanities and social sciences, effects can and should be reconceptualized to engage the myriad ways that rhetoric matters to audiences - whether in the form of listening to a speech or reading an online script for a documentary. Rhetoricians have always known that rhetoric matters; this volume asks how and how we might demonstrate that.