ENG 5028 Graban Spring 2021
This course offers an historical overview of selected landmarks in the formation of 20th and 21st century rhetorical theory, focusing on available ideas of rhetoric. Our emphasis will be on studying the influences of particular rhetoricians and theorists on their own noetic fields—what James Berlin has called “closed system(s) defining what can, and cannot be known” as well as the nature of the relationship between knower, known, and audiences—and on each other.
Rather than try to recreate the whole history of rhetorical theory in the Western (or even non-Western) tradition(s), we will focus on a few areas of theoretical activity—language, philosophy, multiculturalism, new media, and transnational feminism—reading extensively in the primary treatises and secondary texts that signal contours and shifts in these areas. We will give some attention to classical and neoclassical concepts, but most of our attention will ultimately be given to contemporary traditions that have survived various evolutions from rhetorical modernity to postmodernity. By the end of the course, you will have a comprehensive sense of key critical movements in rhetorical theory, and of how vexing a task it is to chart out a (singular) rhetorical theoretical tradition.
This course is open to students in other tracks and departments.
Requirements: This course satisfies the requirement for coursework in the following Area of Concentration: Rhetoric and Composition. This course fulfills 3 credit hours of the academic requirement for the Certificate in Editing and Publishing. If a student has already met the academic requirement, the course can count for additional credits toward the 12-hour Certificate.