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Rhetoric : an historical introduction / Wendy Olmsted.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Malden, MA ; Oxford : Blackwell Pub., 2006.Description: xix, 157 p. ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 1405117729 (hbk)
  • 9781405117722 (hbk)
  • 1405117737 (pbk.)
  • 9781405117739 (pbk.)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 808 22
LOC classification:
  • PN183 .O46 2006
Online resources:
Contents:
The rhetorician : demagogue or statesman? Plato's Gorgias and Aristotle's Rhetoric -- Eloquence, persuasion, and invention : Cicero's De oratore -- Rhetoric and the search for God : Augustine's On Christian doctrine and confessions -- Practical reason or self-interested calculation? : Cicero's On duties and Machiavelli's Prince -- Tradition and invention : Bacon's aphorisms and the Essays -- Deception, strong speech, and mild discourse in Milton's early prose and Paradise lost -- Prudence and eloquence in Jane Austen's Persuasion -- Literary criticism and rhetorical invention : Wayne C. Booth's The rhetoric of fiction and Stephen Greenblatt's Marvelous possessions -- Faction, and politics, and rhetorical invention : Eugene Garver's For the sake of argument and Danielle S. Allen's Talking to strangers -- Legal reasoning, historical contingency, and change : Edward H. Levi's An introduction to legal reasoning.
Summary: "This introduction to the art of rhetoric argues that knowledge of rhetoric improves deliberation about particular issues and problems. By mastering rhetorical concepts and modes of argument, readers can address the sometimes turbulent circumstances in their own lives, times, and fields of study. But because rhetoric speaks to the demands of the moment, it must be practiced with an understanding of its historical context. The author provides an intellectual frame for understanding the history and conceptual foundations of rhetoric and gives a strong sense of the ways classic rhetorical texts continue to influence us by providing contexts and resources for contemporary debates. The texts, which range from Aristotle's Rhetoric to Edward H. Levi's An Introduction to Legal Reasoning and Danielle S. Allen's Talking to Strangers serve simultaneously as models of persuasion and as thoughtful considerations of how rhetoric works." -- Book cover.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

The rhetorician : demagogue or statesman? Plato's Gorgias and Aristotle's Rhetoric -- Eloquence, persuasion, and invention : Cicero's De oratore -- Rhetoric and the search for God : Augustine's On Christian doctrine and confessions -- Practical reason or self-interested calculation? : Cicero's On duties and Machiavelli's Prince -- Tradition and invention : Bacon's aphorisms and the Essays -- Deception, strong speech, and mild discourse in Milton's early prose and Paradise lost -- Prudence and eloquence in Jane Austen's Persuasion -- Literary criticism and rhetorical invention : Wayne C. Booth's The rhetoric of fiction and Stephen Greenblatt's Marvelous possessions -- Faction, and politics, and rhetorical invention : Eugene Garver's For the sake of argument and Danielle S. Allen's Talking to strangers -- Legal reasoning, historical contingency, and change : Edward H. Levi's An introduction to legal reasoning.

"This introduction to the art of rhetoric argues that knowledge of rhetoric improves deliberation about particular issues and problems. By mastering rhetorical concepts and modes of argument, readers can address the sometimes turbulent circumstances in their own lives, times, and fields of study. But because rhetoric speaks to the demands of the moment, it must be practiced with an understanding of its historical context. The author provides an intellectual frame for understanding the history and conceptual foundations of rhetoric and gives a strong sense of the ways classic rhetorical texts continue to influence us by providing contexts and resources for contemporary debates. The texts, which range from Aristotle's Rhetoric to Edward H. Levi's An Introduction to Legal Reasoning and Danielle S. Allen's Talking to Strangers serve simultaneously as models of persuasion and as thoughtful considerations of how rhetoric works." -- Book cover.

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