Disciplinary Identities: Rhetorical Paths of English, Speech, and CompositionWhat are the historical relations among academic disciplines focused on oral and written rhetoric? In Disciplinary Identities, Steven Mailloux examines the formation of English literary studies, speech communication, and composition, explaining how these fields came to be shaped and separated as they are today. In so doing, Mailloux illustrates the interpretive power of a technique he calls rhetorical hermeneutics: his critical history of disciplinary formations both describes rhetoric as a topic of study and uses it as a tool for understanding how scholarship is organized professionally and politically. Mailloux thus traces the paths taken by the topic of rhetoric as it migrates among disciplines. At the same time, he examines the tropes, arguments, narratives, and other pieces of rhetoric used by practitioners to shape disciplinary identities. Mailloux also uses rhetorical hermeneutics to explore the intersections of academic disciplines and nonacademic public spheres, moving from the role of nineteenth-century African American intellectuals in and outside the academy to that of the academic intellectual within post-September 11 cultural politics. Through multidisciplinary inquiry, Disciplinary Identities seeks to engage all teachers and scholars of the language arts in a renewed conversation about our shared history and our mutual devotion to pedagogy, criticism, history, and theory. |
From inside the book
21 pages matching philosophical hermeneutics in this book
Page 149
Where's the rest of this book?
Results 1-3 of 21
Contents
On the Track of Phronesis | 38 |
Interpreted Canons and Interpretive Contexts | 67 |
Thinking with Rhetorical Figures | 83 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Disciplinary Identities: Rhetorical Paths of English, Speech, and Composition Steven Mailloux No preview available - 2006 |
Common terms and phrases
African American argues arguments Aristotelian phronesis Aristotle Aristotle's Badiou beliefs canon century chapter claims classical contemporary context critical critique cultural rhetoric debates disciplinary identity discussion Douglass English departments English studies essay Ethics everyday example Fish Frederick Douglass Gadamer Gadamer's Gaonkar Graff Greek Greener Heidegger Heidegger's human rights human sciences ical interdiscipline interpretation Kuhn Kuhn's language literary study Mailloux meneutics ment NCTE Negro Nicomachean Ethics oric paradigm paths of thought Perelman philosophical hermeneutics phronesis phronetic Plato political postmodern practical wisdom pragmatist professional Public Speaking public sphere question reading Reception Histories relation rhet rhetoric of science rhetorical and hermeneutic rhetorical hermeneutics rhetorical paths rhetorical studies rhetorical tradition rhetoricians Richard Graff role Rorty Rothstein Scarborough September 11 situation Sophist specific speech communication Stanley Fish strategies teachers teaching techne theoretical theory thinking tion torical tropes Truth and Method understanding universals William Sanders Scarborough Woolbert writing