Here's a brief overview of the texts we've read as they relate specifically to style, and more specifically figurative language. (Citations aren't properly formatted yet.) I'm not sure yet if this will make it to my final essay, so I thought I'd post it here.
Style,
the third of the five canons of rhetoric, is the arrangement of words to vivify
and clarify expression. Style as an intentional rhetorical strategy can be
traced back to the Sophist Gorgias, whose compositions were drenched in four figures:
antithesis, isocolon, parison, and homoeoteleuton. Gorgianic rhetoric was, in fact, so stylized that
it is often “characterized as overly antithetical and symmetrical and overly
alliterative and assonant” (Bizzell and Herzberg 42). Despite his fervent and
sometimes clumsy attempts, Gorgias’s use of figures initiated a rhetorical trend
that others refined into a tradition. Aristotle made plain the importance of
style, saying “For it is not enough to know what we ought to say; we must also
say it as we ought” (Rhetoric III.1). He claimed that the virtue (aretĂȘ)
of style is clarity, the primary aim of speech (Aristotle, Rhetoric III.2). While
Gorgias and Aristotle employed a handful of figures, Greek and Roman
rhetoricians continued to expand the catalog of figures. The first-century text
Rhetorica ad Herennium describes 45 figures
of diction (10 of these are separated into a special category) and 19 figures
of thought, making it the earliest extant detailed treatment of figures. Cicero
briefly takes on the topic of style in De Oratore, admitting that there was
then a “very minute species of knowledge” (trans. Calvert 181) on the subject. Cicero suggests figurative language “may give
compactness and coherence, and a smooth and equable flow, to language” (trans.
Calvert 187). Quintilian synthesized theories of rhetoric in Institutio Oratoria, adding a strong
component of moral philosophy in his discussions of style, insisting that a “good
speaker be a good man,” but that such goodness could be taught.
Sunday, April 20, 2014
Sunday, March 30, 2014
Aristotelian or Platonic Office Space?
My workplace office is Aristotelian, but my home office is
Platonic.
At work, everything is tethered to reality that can be
categorized and linked logically. For example, I advise about 185 English
majors, and I often determine which students need what messages according to categories
such as emphasis areas, anticipated graduation date, likeliness to be in
academic jeopardy, and so on. I have to keep meticulous records of registration
information, progress toward graduation, etc. I have come up with systems of
categories to help me revise or refine lists and stay current and
efficient. My books are shelved
thematically, and sometimes chronologically; folders are color-coded and
labeled; the stapler, pencil sharpener, hole-puncher, and telephone are lined
up neatly; and I have a dual monitor computer for better functionality.
Furthermore, at work, I tend to approach the psyche in terms
of capacities, or what it can do. I tend to see spaces, people, texts, and
objects mostly according to their utility. And, people tend to see me according
to what I can do, which I don’t begrudge in that space. Categorization and
utility, after all, are part of the commonplaces of work spaces.
My home office certainly that must, by requirement, occasionally
be Aristotelian, but it is mostly Platonic. There, my thinking is often
dualistic, trying to reconcile the real with the unreal, the knowable with the
unknowable. And, in my home office I am free to think circuitously and
contemplate almost endlessly. I am able—however, rarely and only briefly—to
step outside the cave and see the sun.
My home office is also my bedroom, so in that way, we could
say that at least my bed is Aristotelian in one sense: There, my brain is a
grey lump of useless matter.
Sunday, March 23, 2014
The Poetics & Shakespeare
The question: Does Castelvetro offer
new insights on Aristotle?
My answer: No. The introduction gave
us our first clue that Castelvetro was an unreliable interpreter/mediator
between Aristotle and Castelvetro’s audience because he aims to align himself
with Aristotle but, in fact, offers a meandering rather than parallel
interpretation.
Castelvetro offered an interesting
perspective on the Poetics and drama
nevertheless. As I read “The Poetics
of Aristotle Translated and Explained,” I found myself stopping to compare
Castelvetro’s interpretation/supplementations to English Renaissance theatre,
wondering how much his translation and interpretation influenced the
Elizabethan playwrights. I can think of particular violations by the three most
well-known playwrights—William Shakespeare, Christopher Marlowe and Ben Johnson—but
I can also think of particular instances that adhere to the Aristotelian tenets
of tragedy and comedy. I know it seems dumb, but I’ve been familiar with
Aristotle’s Poetics almost as long as I’ve been familiar with Shakespearean
literature/theatre and never until reading Castelvetro had I considered the
influence of the former on the latter. The
Comedy of Errors, I believe, follows Aristotle’s unities of action, time,
and place. And, The Tempest might as
well. However, most of Shakespeare’s plays violate all three rules of unity; although, many do conform to other aspects, such as letting
the audience know a summary of events that already took place outside of the
limited boundaries of action, time, and place. In other words, Shakespeare
often has characters report historical or biographical summaries to keep help
the audience make sense of plot while keeping the action, time, and place
contained.
Beyond the unities, I’ve been
contemplating how Elizabethan plays use catharsis, tragic flaw, and fear and
pity. I’m thinking of Macbeth, Hamlet,
and Titus Andronicus respectively.
Saturday, March 1, 2014
Aspasia: Discussion Notes for Monday, March 3
The following notes are taken from The Rhetorical Tradition (B/H),
Rhetoric Retold by Cheryl Glenn (Glenn) and a book chapter titled “Aspasia:
Rhetoric, Gender, and Colonial Ideology” by Susan Jarratt and Rory Ong (J/O). Because
there is so little known about Aspasia, and because we only know her
vicariously through her contemporaries and historians (we have no known primary
texts authored by Aspasia), there is much debate about whom she was, what her
contributions were to rhetoric, and in what ways she ignored, diffused, or
crossed gender boundaries. These notes, then, form a picture of Aspasia, but
they may not be factual. I’ve divided the notes thematically, and have included
questions for Monday’s class discussion at the end. I am open to moving the
discussion beyond the questions I offer; this is merely a starting point.
Biography
·
Born in Miletus (Asia Minor), daughter of
Axiochus (Athenian political figure and aristocrat). Miletus is thought to be the
birthplace of Western philosophy where “Milesian philosophers . . . sought to
explain the natural world through abstraction and physical law rather than
divine agency and anthropomorphic mythical figures” (J/O). While there isn’t
any explicit connection to Milesian philosophers, we can assume Aspasia was
strongly influenced by their teachings.
·
Born about 470 BCE and died about 400 (note that
her birth and death dates closely match Socrates’s)
·
Lived with Pericles (they couldn’t marry because
she was a foreigner), which was probably a “unique” (J/O) arrangement in mid-5th
century BCE Athens
·
Mother of Pericles the Younger, who was awarded
Athenian citizenship at Pericles’s urging, which is ironic since Pericles
initiated Athenian law that only gave citizenship to children of two Athenian
parents
·
After Pericles’s death, she married a sheep
dealer; her influence led him to later become a political leader
·
She was famous/infamous for her sexual prowess
·
Some believe Diotima, the female teacher in
Plato’s Symposium, is a
representation of Aspasia
·
Like Socrates and Aristotle, she was charged
with impiety, but Pericles fought the charges and she was acquitted
Contributions to Rhetoric
·
Famous teacher of rhetoric who fraternized (yes,
I used that word intentionally) with famous 5th century BCE Athenian
philosophers and politicians
·
Some scholars argue she wrote some speeches that
have been attributed to Pericles, most notably the funeral oration (which we
see unreliable evidence of in Menexenus);
and some contend she inspired the Socratic Method
·
Plato associates Aspasia with the sophists;
however Aspasia and Plato agree on several primary points; for example, they
each taught that belief and truth are not necessarily the same, that rhetoric
can obscure truth, and that public rhetoric has political potential (Glenn 43)
·
B/H note that Menexenus could be read multiple ways, including one that has
Aspasia testify against her own rhetorical abilities; or one that playfully
illustrates Socrates’s deference to her
·
She arrived in Athens, probably age 30, already
well educated; she was influenced by and influenced Milesian and Athenian
philosophy
·
She valued reflective learning
·
“Aspasia treats her interlocutors as her
intellectual equals, not attempting to knock them down with agonistic argument
but rather gently drawing them toward her own point of view by means of
premises they provide and endorse” (B/H 59)
·
Aspasia’s salon was a place for “doing” rhetoric
·
“Aspasia takes each interlocutor through a
series of analogous questions, leading each to an embarrassed aporia, an
admission of dissatisfaction with his or her spouse.” This method is related to
the Socratic method and to Protagoras’s method of questioning, a “practice of
generating contradictory propositions (dissoi
logoi) on any subject” (J/O).
·
She influenced Cicero; her lesson on induction
is the centerpiece for his argumentation chapter in De inventione (see page 64 of B/H for exerpt)
Gender Boundaries
·
Pericles’s friends were bothered that she lived
with Pericles in the main house rather than in the women’s quarters; they
thought this was an affront to gender assignments
·
She probably paid taxes, which was highly
unusual for women
·
She often held egalitarian social gatherings in
her home; men and women (sometimes the men’s wives) had lively philosophical
discussions, rather than having slaves or prostitutes ‘entertain’ the men
·
Best
known and most influential of the few women who were able to actively
participate in an otherwise oppressive social, academic, and political system;
Sappho is as well known, but her contributions were literary
·
Women were either slaves or not slaves (“the
word free simply has no meaning here”
[J/O]), and their roles were clearly defined and normalized; because Aspasia so
notably and publicly stepped beyond her assigned role (not only as a woman, but
also a metic), she was despised by the general citizenry of Athens
·
Thucydides writes that Pericles celebrated
Aspasia as the ideal woman, even advising her “Your greatest glory is not to be
inferior to what God has made you,” which gave Aspasia license to ignore many
of the strictures placed on most women. Compare this to Pericles’s pronouncement about
women in general, which was that “The greatest glory of a woman is to be least
talked about by men, whether they are praising . . . or criticizing” (qtd. in Glenn 38).
·
She gave advice to men about rhetoric, yes, but
about their personal lives too. Notably, Athenaeus calls her Socrates’s “preceptor
in love” and describes how she gave Socrates advice on how to woo Alcibiades,
the young man of Socrates’s desire (see “From Deipnosophistae” B/H 65).
Questions for Discussion
1. Plato’s Menexenus—which contains Plato’s version
of Socrates’s version of Aspasia’s version of Pericles’s funeral oration—suggests
Aspasia was a colleague to the great Atheno-androcentric thinkers of 5th
century BCE Athens. To what do you attribute her acceptance into such an elite
circle? What evaluation do you give her and her contemporaries for her
non-standard inclusion among the great thinkers?
2. Page 61
of B/H has Socrates saying that “even the pupil of very inferior masters….might
make a figure if he were to praise Athenians among Athenians”… Does this suggest that Plato thought
Aspasia was an inferior master, but Athenians were attracted to her praise of
them? Is Plato suggesting this is how she beguiled Socrates?
3. As
Menexenus prods Socrates to share what he overheard Aspasia rehearsing,
Socrates says to him, “…you will laugh at me if I continue the games of youth
in old age.” What does Plato mean to suggest?
4. What
interpretations can we draw from Plato’s rhetorical choice to have a
non-Athenian woman articulate the themes of rhetoric and democracy? Is Plato
being ironic, satirical, serious, or playful? Do we trust Plato’s
interpretation? Do we trust Aspasia’s?
5. By Aspasia’s
inclusion in Menexenus and his
treatment of her, is Plato expanding or devaluing the possibilities for
females/metics in Athenian culture and Western philosophy?
Thursday, February 20, 2014
Sunday, February 16, 2014
Cupid is Stupid & Other Platonic Thoughts
Why is “love” used as an example in Plato? What is true and false rhetoric?
Love is a universal topic, the subject of which was
ubiquitous among philosophers and poets, so Plato had a lot to draw from,
calling up not only Phaedrus and Socrates’ dialogue, but the contributions--presented vicariously--of
others as well. Additionally, the lovers/nonlovers, passionate/dispassionate, dithyrambic/hexameter binaries can serve as a samples
or metaphors for any subjects that share similar binaries. However, we should
remember that love is not really the subject of Pluto’s Phaedrus. Rather, the
topic actually seems to be rhetoric. In other words, Plato’s Phaedrus—to play
on a Raymond Carver short story title—is not a matter of what we talk about
when we talk about love, but instead a matter of how we talk when we talk about
love.
Socrates says to Phaedrus that he is “fond of learning” (BH
140), and that, though he typically learns in the city from the city people, he
trusts that Phaedrus has led into nature because there something to be gained
beyond the city walls. In this act, the teacher is showing that he is willing to be taught. In this way (among others), Socrates sets himself apart from the Sophists. Phaedrus begins reading a speech on love first given by Lysias.Nonlovers don't have the same expectations lovers impose on each other. Rather, their Platonic (my word, not Lysias's) love affords them the freedom to speak freely, without the burden of not-yet-realized regret, the kind that is particular to lovers when passion ceases. Lysias contends that passionate love breeds insanity and vanity. Furthermore, passionate love is ephemeral and easily replaced by the next desirable person to come along; however, Platonic love—or Divine Eros—is stable and constant. Whereas lovers create poor—maybe even hostile—conditions for learning and betterment, nonlovers are the bedrock for non-obligatory negotiations where one can pursue matters of self-interest. Phaedrus, quoting Lysisas, continues to extol the virtues of friendship and the vices of passionate love.
Socrates doesn’t disagree with Lysias. After all, one who is
as fond of learning as he must concede that Platonic relationships are the only
sort that could cultivate environments for learning. Passionate love impedes
knowledge-making endeavors. Socrates does, however, disagree with Lysias’s rhetorical
style, contending that he has surely heard better rhetoric on the subject
(though he can’t recall where or by whom). This maneuver is a teaching strategy employed by Socrates, one that reminds me of Stanley Fish's "How to Write a Sentence." Socrates, like Fish, basically says, "Let's not worry about the content right now, and instead let's focus on the style."
Upon Phaedrus’s urging, Socrates, like an evangelical
preacher overcome by the spirit, delivers a dithyrambic sermon that begins by
comparing love to gluttony and drunkenness. It serves a man nothing to be in
love because man is a jealous creature, and will, therefore, do everything in
his power to keep his lover more pale, less nourished, less knowledgeable, less
desirable, and less wealthy than himself. In this way, passionate love is a
metaphor for any passion or desire where excess takes over a man’s ability to
develop his best possible self.
Socrates, in an expert teaching moment, then goes on in his second speech to persuade Phaedrus further that not only his style but also his content is superior to Lysias's. Phaedrus can see by contrast how that with which he had earlier been so enamoured pales in comparison. We see in Plato's Phaedrus an example of true rhetoric, wherein the student and teacher have a dialogue almost as equals, wherein the student is persuaded through reason, example, alignment, and participation.
Socrates, in an expert teaching moment, then goes on in his second speech to persuade Phaedrus further that not only his style but also his content is superior to Lysias's. Phaedrus can see by contrast how that with which he had earlier been so enamoured pales in comparison. We see in Plato's Phaedrus an example of true rhetoric, wherein the student and teacher have a dialogue almost as equals, wherein the student is persuaded through reason, example, alignment, and participation.
Sunday, February 9, 2014
Teachers are Penultimate Sophists
At first the question “Are teachers penultimate sophists?”
didn’t make sense to me. I couldn’t derive even a semblance of meaning from it
and immediately thought “Did he mean ultimate? Are teachers ultimate sophists?”
I could at least answer that. But, after some contemplation, I like the
original question better.
My attention is drawn to the adjective, not the noun, in
this question, but first I have to make a case that teachers are sophists. They
are, or at least the good ones are. They teach the strategies of good rhetoric.
They teach their students to use good timing, to make themselves as credible as
possible, to think about arrangement and delivery. They teach students to add
flavor to otherwise bland ideas. Sophistry carries with it a connotation of
manipulation, which itself carries a negative connotation. But manipulation
is actually a neutral term; the motive and result of manipulation should
be evaluated and perhaps contested, but not necessarily the manipulation
itself. Think of a parent who uses euphemistic language to soften tragic news
for a child. That’s a manipulation without intent to deceive for personal gain,
and shouldn’t be classified synonymously with a malicious deceit. At any rate,
teachers may teach the strategies for manipulation, but few teach sophistry as
it’s commonly (mis)understood, as the craft of deception.
Now on to the adjective: penultimate. I understand the word
penultimate to mean second to last. Teachers as penultimate sophists means
their students would be the last of the sophists, but then those students would
eventually become the teachers, or the penultimate sophists. In other words,
the question could be rephrased in this way: “Is education perpetuating
sophistry?” We have no choice but to answer yes. We have 2500 years of sound
evidence that teachers are, indeed, penultimate sophists. Thursday, January 30, 2014
Hodgepodge of Thoughts on Isocrates
C.S. Lewis had a physical impediment he inherited from his father that restricted the range of motion in his thumb. He said that as a boy he dreamed of making models of ships and castles, but his disabled thumb made model-making difficult if not impossible. So he put his creative efforts into writing, creating imaginary worlds with words instead of paper and string. In essence, his impediment gave him the freedom to explore a way of experiencing the world that he might have otherwise missed. His disability prompted discovery of an ability. The same can be said of Isocrates. His weakness in oratory arts led him to re-imagine how he might experience the world of rhetoric; thus, he put his efforts into written argument and others were blessed by the sequence of events. Much has been written of Isocrates’s lackluster speaking skills, but perhaps he wouldn’t have become “the father of teaching” had he been a polished orator (is this where we get that terrible saying “those who can’t do teach”?).
I like that Isocrates puts an emphasis on writing as an intellectual (rather than practical) pursuit. He was promoting a “writing to learn” philosophy, what 2400 years before William Zinsser?
I wish I knew Greek, and could read and hear Isocrates’ prose in his native language. I know enough about Greek to know that Homeric poetry, written in dactylic hexameter, doesn’t translate well into English, a language more suited for iambic pentameter (Shakespeare’s preferred rhythm and meter). I think we can only approximate—never replicate—the prose of the Greeks, which is a shame.
I like that Isocrates puts an emphasis on writing as an intellectual (rather than practical) pursuit. He was promoting a “writing to learn” philosophy, what 2400 years before William Zinsser?
I wish I knew Greek, and could read and hear Isocrates’ prose in his native language. I know enough about Greek to know that Homeric poetry, written in dactylic hexameter, doesn’t translate well into English, a language more suited for iambic pentameter (Shakespeare’s preferred rhythm and meter). I think we can only approximate—never replicate—the prose of the Greeks, which is a shame.
I find it interesting that Isocrates finds fault with the sophists for professing to teach virtue, but demanding pay for it. Isn’t this what a university does? Isn’t this the model we use now?
Sunday, January 26, 2014
Lessons from Gorgias
What are
contemporary applications or lessons you could apply from the work of Gorgias
in your own life?
The particular contemporary application I draw from Encomium of Helen is one related to critical thinking. Gorgias was willing
to view a commonly accepted idea from a different
perspective. Gorgias was surrounded by a unified perspective of Helen’s
relationship with Paris (Alexander); yet, he was willing to voice an alternative narrative, an
argument exonerating her. Though unpopular, his reasons were sound, or at least
as sound as the arguments condemning her.
The second contemporary application I can draw from Gorgias is to
wrestle with tensions and paradoxes, understanding that language—more than any
other vehicle—can get me close to having wisdom, but that language is also a
barrier to knowing truth. The tension between
harmony and discord can be resolved through language. As TCR-ers, we
probably all believe this in large measure; otherwise, what are we doing here?
Plato criticizes Gorgias’s emphasis on style, but it seems from the texts we
read, that Gorgias valued reason, but enjoyed the challenge and amusement of
decoration in written and oratory arts.
I like satire (everything from Jonathan Swift to John Stewart), so
maybe I read Gorgias through that lens, but it seems like his claim to be able to speak ornamentally, even persuasively, on any
subject familiar or unfamiliar isn’t as egotistical as it is accusing. Gorgias
saying, “Hey, look what I can do,” translates into, “Be careful, look what
others could be doing too.”
Aside from rhetoric, we can learn a thing or two about living long
and well from Gorgias. The MKH book suggests he lived to be 105 because he
avoided excess (except in speech). However, I like to think we could attribute his
longevity to the fact that he was
enjoying life, getting a big kick out of ruffling feathers and making waves.
That, or—since, as an itinerant, he didn’t pay taxes—he simply didn’t accept that
the whole death and taxes thing applied to him until one day… it did. I have to
think the guy was just having a damn lot of fun playing with words and poking
his finger in the eye of conformity.
Also,
share at least one useful link about Classical Rhetoric and why it's useful.
I initially thought I would offer rhetoric.byu.edu or The Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy for my site because they are the two I depend on
most for getting a quick primer on vocab/concepts/philosophers, but I noticed
they’re both already on Dr. Rice’s list, so I had to go a-hunting. Sadly, I
didn’t find any sites that I would recommend above BYU’s or Standford’s that
weren’t also on Dr. Rice’s list, so the site I’ll submit is YouTube. Lame, I know! But, hear me
out. Lately, I’ve been watching everything from short animated clips to long
university lectures on rhetoric while I’m on the treadmill or stationary bike
at the gym. Jon Hoffman’s lectures
are particularly good, but even student PowerPoints sometimes surprise me.
While the content on YouTube doesn’t meet the academic standard to which most
of us are accustomed, it does put the material in an easy-to-gnaw-on vocabulary
(and, as an extra bonus, we get to actually hear
some of the words and names that are tricky to pronounce). Getting information
in multiple formats and styles reinforces the concepts and promotes memory.
Monday, January 20, 2014
Course Introduction & Discussion Preference
I have reviewed the introductory material for this class and have no questions about the syllabus or schedule for this class yet, though I'm sure they'll pile on as the semester progresses.
My preference for leading the discussion is "Apasia and Opportunities for Women." I teach Saphho's poetry in my World Lit course and think it would be interesting to discover more about gender politics and social attitudes during that time. Women's voices were often slighted and lost, but they weren't absent.
My preference for leading the discussion is "Apasia and Opportunities for Women." I teach Saphho's poetry in my World Lit course and think it would be interesting to discover more about gender politics and social attitudes during that time. Women's voices were often slighted and lost, but they weren't absent.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)