Historical Reconstruction“philological fidelity to extant textual evidence
and avoidance of anachronism” (108)
Contemporary Appropriation“the rendering of ancient theories through
some sort of contemporary theoretical lens” (108)
Approaches to the Contemporary Use of Classical Text
An “ironist” is:“the sort of person who faces up to the
contingency of his or her own beliefs and desires – someone sufficiently historicist and nominalist to have abandoned the idea that those central beliefs and desires refer back to something beyond the reach of time and chance” – Richard Rorty
Taking an Ironic Stance
What is Rhetoric?
“Speech is a powerful lord, which by means of the finest and most invisible body effects the divinest works: it can stop fear and banish grief and create joy and nurture pity” – Encomium of Helen
Bia – violent force
Relation of truth (aletheia) and opinion (doxa)
Gorgias’ Rhetoric
Rhetoric as dunamisDunamis designates “potentiality” with
respect to objects and animals, and “ability” with respect to humans
“Let rhetoric be an ability (dunamis), in each case, to see the available means of persuasion.”
In Nicomachean Ethics: “An art never produces an activity, but the capacity for an activity”
Aristotle’s Rhetoric
“The Rhetoric enables a legislator to understand how rhetoric works in the polis without imposing the necessity to employ it, since the act of persuasion—or, rather, its external end—is not as noble as a detached (internal) understanding of how persuasion works”
Aristotle believed that judges act “at the moment”, rather than after careful consideration, like legislators
Rhetoric comes into play when the situation exceeds the parameters circumscribed by law.
Rhetoric in the Polis
Rhetoric as hēgemōn (leader)logos as a civilized force, at once a principle
of social unification and a mechanism through which this unification is achieved
The power of discourse is the ability to sanction the social order and to challenge it through individual rhetorical acts
Isocrates’ Rhetoric
Takis Poulakos: For Isocrates “citizenship is an identity that must be reclaimed, and the problem with citizenship appears to be how to disclose that identity publicly—how a king can prove that his royal status did not violate but actually derived from his status as a citizen, or how an orator can demonstrate that his words did not originate in his interest for self-advantage, but in his position as the citizen who speaks as a member of the polis”
Isocrates fuses the ideas of individual merit with the performative ideal of accountability to the polis
Nicocles: Nicocles must obey the hegemony of speech the same as any orator.
Rhetoric in the Polis
Rhetoric as bia (violent force)
Rhetoric as dunamis (ability)
Rhetoric as hēgemōn (leader)
Discussion
Role of Rhetoric
Problems with democracyImportance of leisure in order for active
political participationConfusion of roles for the subjects of a
democracy
Role of rhetoric is to act as a buffer between the rhetor and the demos
Aristotle
Rhetoric as a means of unificationThrough persuasion “we have come together,
built cities, made laws, and invented arts” –Antidosis 254 and Nicocles 6
Rhetoric and kairos
Isocrates
What is the role of rhetoric in today’s society?
Whose vision of the role of democracy do you see as being most influential and present today?
Discussion
Consumerism killed classical rhetoric
How can you see the change in the role of rhetoric in society as influencing pedagogy?
Discussion
“In the sphere of language education, the shift has been away from civic rhetoric toward the business-friendly “plain style” celebrated by Carnegie and codified by Strunk and White’s Elements of Style.”
“The plain style also creates the illusion that language can be like glass, a medium without the infusion of self. It pretends the facts can speak for themselves in ways that the old rhetoric never did. The very style has helped perpetuate the belief that there are technical, apolitical solutions to political problems. It is perhaps the most deceptive style of them all” -Kenneth Cmiel
Pedagogy
Haskins believes that with a ironic stance we could benefit from an Isocratean pedagogy since it “calls for sympathy toward the common cultural denominator as a starting point of critical inquiry the goal of which is learning to question the limits of cultural knowledge (135).
Back to an ironic stance…