In "Discursive Ideologies," C. H. Knoblauch argues that European
rhetorical theory comprises several distinct and fundamentally
opposed traditions of discourse. Writing accessibly for the upper
division student, Knoblauch resists the conventional narrative of a
unified Western rhetorical tradition. He identifies deep
ideological and epistemological differences that exist among
strands of Western thought and that are based in divergent "grounds
of meaningfulness." These conflicts underlie and influence current
discourse about vital public issues.
Knoblauch considers six "stories" about the meaning of meaning
in an attempt to answer the question, what encourages us to believe
that language acts are meaningful? Six distinctive ideologies of
Western rhetoric emerge: magical rhetoric, ontological rhetoric,
objectivist rhetoric, expressivist rhetoric, sociological rhetoric,
and deconstructive rhetoric. He explores the nature of language and
the important role these rhetorics play in the discourses that
matter most to people, such as religion, education, public policy,
science, law, and history.
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