Monash University Arts Undergraduate handbook 1995

Copyright © Monash University 1995
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CRT4230

Rhetoric

Walter Veit

8 or 12 points * 2 hours per week * Second semester * Clayton

The subject studies the philosophical foundations and historic development of rhetoric as a theory of communication. It investigates its beginnings in theory and practice in Greek and Roman antiquity (Plato, Aristotle, Cicero and Quintilian); the major forces during the Middle Ages (Augustine, Boethius, Abelard, Anselm of Canterbury); the decline of rhetoric from the Renaissance to the nineteenth century; and the reassessment of the function of rhetoric in the work of contemporary theoreticians and scholars like E R Curtius, Hans-Georg Gadamer, Ernesto Grassi, Paul Ricoeur, Chaim Perelman, Jürgen Habarmas, Hans Blumenberg and Hayden White, and in the journal Philosophy and Rhetoric. Particular points of discussion will be the theory of argumentation, the function of `topoi', the theory of metaphor, and the relationship between rhetoric, philosophy, literature and literary criticism.

Assessment: 8 points

Two seminar papers * Long essay (4000 words)

Assessment: 12 points

Two seminar papers * Long essay (6000 words)

Prescribed texts

Brock B and Scott R Methods of rhetorical criticism: A twentieth-century perspective Wayne State UP

Burks D Rhetoric, philosophy and literature: An exploration Purdue UP

Curtius E European literature and the Latin Middle Ages Princeton UP

Dixon P Rhetoric Methuen



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