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Adams, John Charles. – Western Journal of Speech Communication, 1989
Argues against Thomas O. Sloane's allegation that John Milton's "Artis Logicae," a commentary on Pierre de la Ramee's "Dialecticae libri duo," manifests antihumanism characteristics of Milton and Ramus. Reexamines Milton's account of probability, the links between Ramus and Cicero, and the roles Ramism played in sixteenth- and…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Literary Criticism, Persuasive Discourse, Poetry
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Rickert, William E. – Journal of the American Forensic Association, 1978
Debate is compared to modern poetry in its tension between content and form. From the perspective of this comparison, debate is defended against charges that it is unnecessarily structured, a distortion of normative language use, uncommunicative, and pertinent only to an esoteric group of listeners. (JF)
Descriptors: Ambiguity, Comparative Analysis, Debate, Discourse Analysis
Scott, Robert P., Ed. – 1969
The theme of this symposium was the classic concern about the rhetoric-poetic relationship as applied to modern communication problems. In the first paper, "The 'Vision' of Martin Luther King," Edwin Black postulates that Dr. King contributed to the development of a "revolutionary literature" because of his impact, not only on…
Descriptors: Analytical Criticism, Civil Rights, Communication (Thought Transfer), Literary Criticism
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Geissner, Hellmut – Communication Education, 1983
Focuses on the interdependence of rhetoricity and literarity. Reviews some historical, functional, formal, generic, and aesthetic aspects to determine if there is any clear distinction between the rhetorical and the literal. Concludes that no distinction exists and that rhetoricity is ubiquitous: it is present in every communication process. (PD)
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Literature, Persuasive Discourse, Poetry
Sloan, Thomas O. – 1969
The ability to think of poetry rhetorically is a valuable instrument for interpreting poetry. The poet is the speaker "of" the poem, the persona the speaker "in" the poem. The communicative circle is complete when it includes the reader who combines an analysis of the text (the words of the persona) with an analysis of the…
Descriptors: Characterization, Critical Reading, Interpretive Reading, Literary Criticism
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Wai-Yee, Li – International Journal of Social Education, 1991
Discusses fu, a flowery form of rhetorical writing developed in China during the Han Dynasty. Provides historical background and criticisms of the genre. Emphasizes the feminine principle of fu rhetoric with its resort to pleasure, ornamentation, and flattery. Argues that what is considered love poetry was actually political allegory. (DK)
Descriptors: Allegory, Chinese Culture, Cultural Influences, Females