Rhetoric and Irony: Western Literacy and Western Lies

Capa
Oxford University Press, 05/09/1991 - 344 páginas
This pathbreaking study integrates the histories of rhetoric, literacy, and literary aesthetics up to the time of Augustine, focusing on Western concepts of rhetoric as dissembling and of language as deceptive that Swearingen argues have received curiously prominent emphasis in Western aesthetics and language theory. Swearingen reverses the traditional focus on rhetoric as an oral agonistic genre and examines it instead as a paradigm for literate discourse. She proposes that rhetoric and literacy have in the West disseminated the interrelated notions that through learning rhetoric individuals can learn to manipulate language and others; that language is an unreliable, manipulable, and contingent vehicle of thought, meaning, and communication; and that literature is a body of pretty lies and beguiling fictions. In a bold concluding chapter Swearingen aligns her thesis concerning early Western literacy and rhetoric with contemporary critical and rhetorical theory; with feminist studies in language, psychology, and culture; and with studies of literacy in multi- and cross-cultural settings.
 

Índice

Introduction
3
Proem
20
Logos and Logic Among the Preplatonics
22
Platos Defense of Dialogue
55
A Logic of Terms a Rhetoric of Motives
95
Defining the Value of Literacy
132
Augustines Critique of Mendacity
175
6 Inscriptions of Self and the Erasure of Truth
215
Epi Dia Logos
255
Notes
259
References
297
Index
315
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Página 3 - This is the source from which has sprung the undoubtedly absurd and unprofitable and reprehensible severance between the tongue and the brain, leading to our having one set of professors to teach us to think and another to teach us to speak.

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