Constitutive rhetoric
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Constitutive rhetoric is a theory of
Development of constitutive rhetorical theory
The constitutive model of
While these theorists all contributed to the theory of constitutive rhetoric, James Boyd White was the first to coin the term. In 1985, he explained that the term "constitutive rhetoric" described rhetoric that called a common, collective identity into existence. White wrote that persuasion and identification occur only when audiences already understand and relate to method and content. Thus, speech happens within culture, and speakers adapt messages to reflect the ideas and views of a community. When speeches address a diverse crowd as though they are of one community, White describes this as "calling [identity] into being" through material identification.
According to White, there are two methods of convincing an audience that they belong to an identity. The first is peithõ, persuasion, and the second is deceitful manipulation, or dolos. Using peithõ, speakers convince audiences of shared identity openly and honestly. Dolos creates belonging through deceit.[5]
In 1987, Maurice Charland further emphasized the importance of the
Political speeches, manifestos, and resistance movements participate in this type of discourse, to establish an identity and a call to action within that identity.
In 2015, Halstrøm and Galle picked up on constitutive rhetoric within the field of design studies. They explained how it may provide useful concepts for analysing designed artefacts. Design may be said to aim at providing an audience with a subject position, which it is to confirm. Thus, it aims at persuading by seeking to constitute its audience.[11]
Critical reception
Constitutive rhetoric and theories of logical persuasion (such as New Criticism or Neo-Aristotelianism) can be used together, but constitutive rhetoric presumes that belief and identity always precedes logical persuasion. Thus, constitutive rhetoric must address the previous identity and must either coincide with it, or change it.[12]
Jacques Derrida criticized the paradox of constitutive rhetoric when he analyzed the United States Declaration of Independence. He explained that the men signing the Declaration claimed to be representatives of "the people", but the people were not yet defined as a nation until that Declaration was signed. His criticism explains that an identity must be established before that identity exists in order for the speaker to represent the ideals of that identity, thus creating a paradoxical relationship in which only a third perspective can truly analyze the identity of the audience.[13]
See also
References
- ^ Sloane, Thomas, ed. "Constitutive Rhetoric" Encyclopedia of Rhetoric (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001), 616.
- ^ James Boyd White, Heracles' Bow (Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin, 1985), 37.
- ^ Charland, Maurice. "Constitutive Rhetoric: The Case of the Peuple Québécois." (The Quarterly Journal of Speech 73.2 1987), 133.
- ^ Sloane, "Constitutive Rhetoric", 617.
- ^ White, Heracles' Bow, 39-40.
- ^ Sloane, "Constitutive Rhetoric", 616.
- ^ Jasinski, James. "Narrative" Sourcebook on Rhetoric (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 2001), 403.
- ^ Althusser, Louis. "Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses." The Anthropology of the State (Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing, 2006), 105.
- ^ Charland, "Constitutive Rhetoric: The Case of the Peuple Québécois.",1.
- ^ Sloane, "Constitutive Rhetoric", 617.
- .
- ^ Sloane, "Constitutive Rhetoric", 617.
- ^ Sloane, "Constitutive Rhetoric", 618.