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Textbook Review: ENC 6339. Matthew McBride and David Dadurka Nov. 8, 2010. Integrating Classical Rhetoric in a Writing about Writing Curriculum . A Review of Classical Rhetoric for the Modern Student (4th ed.) and Ancient Rhetorics for the Contemporary Students (4th ed.).
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Textbook Review: ENC 6339 Matthew McBride and David Dadurka Nov. 8, 2010
Integrating Classical Rhetoric in a Writing about Writing Curriculum A Review of Classical Rhetoric for the Modern Student (4th ed.) and Ancient Rhetorics for the Contemporary Students (4th ed.)
Benefits of Incorporating Classical Rhetoric into WAW • Draws attention to historical roots of composition studies • Establishes foundation for understanding of contemporary uses and studies of rhetoric • Useful heuristics for invention • Compliments and balances focus on academic writing with attention to other social and political concerns
Student Learning Outcomes For ENC 1101 at UCF • understand how writers construct texts persuasively (or not); • understand how readers construct meaning(s) from texts; • understand the concept of the rhetorical situation and be able to apply it to writing and reading situations; • understand writing and research as processes requiring planning, incubation ,revision, and collaboration; • understand how language practices mediate group activities; • understand how and why discourse conventions differ across groups (including groups within the university); • have acquired a vocabulary for talking about writing processes and themselves as writers; • have acquired strategies for reading complex, college‐level texts; • have acquired tools for analyzing the discourses and genres of various communities (including within the university); • have acquired tools for successfully responding to varied discourse conventions and genres in different situations (including different classes); • be able to actively reflect on their own writing processes and practices and adjust them as appropriate to rhetorical situations.
Written by Edward P.J. Corbett and Robert J. Connors • First published in 1965 • Last updated in 1999
Feature: Handbook-Style Reference Guide • Makes finding specific items easy • Most helpful if you know what you are looking for • Suggests use as a Reference
Feature: Survey of the History and Theory of Rhetoric • Brief but useful background for instructors • Seems to present a linear and progressive narrative • Leaves out early women contributors
Feature: Introduction • Exposes readers to the basics • Presents rhetoric as a scholarly analytical tool • Might not engage students
Feature: Progymnasmata • Lists 14 ancient exercises • Adapts them to create 8 exercises appropriate for modern writers • Independent section in the back of the book
Feature: Bibliography • Divided into six sections: 1. Bibliographies 2. Primary Texts 3. History of Rhetoric 4. Theories of Rhetoric 5.Collections of Articles of Rhetoric 6.Style • Useful for instructors and students • No entries were written in the last 11 years
Observations and Criticisms: Illustrative examples • Belletristic • Dated • Authors’ writing may seem stilted “Literature and Science” by Matthew Arnold “Civil Disobedience” by Henry David Thoreau Beloved by Toni Morrison Lake Wobegon Days by Garrison Keillor
Observations and Criticisms: The Canons How many canons? 1. Discovery 2. Arrangement 3.Style 4. Memory 5.Delivery
Observations and Criticisms: The Canons Discovery Arrangement Style Memory Delivery • Limited largely to logical appeal • Useful for analysis • Larson’s plan is valuable • Incomplete discussion of status theory
Observations and Criticisms: The Canons Discovery Arrangement Style Memory Delivery • Formulaic • May seem limiting
Observations and Criticisms: The Canons Discovery Arrangement Style Memory Delivery • Core of the book • Provides a stilted argument for style • Useful for teaching meaning with sentence variety and construction
Observations and Criticisms: Presentation of Rhetoric Aristotelian • A collection of discrete pieces • Rhetoric as an abstraction • Assumes a largely uniform audience • Logic as the primary appeal
Written by Sharon Crowley and Debra Hawhee • First edition authored together 1999 • Last Updated in 2009
Feature: Introduction • Not called an introduction • Begins with what readers are likely to know already • Casts rhetoric as human action, not just rules • Illustrates contemporary examples of rhetoric
Feature: Progymnasmata and Rhetorical Activities • Integrated in the text • Thorough explanations • Additional rhetorical activities
Feature: Glossary • Increase ease of use • Terms are bolded in the text proper • Glossary descriptions are useful but not exhaustive
Feature: Bibliography/ Suggested Readings • Concise • Up to date
Feature: Signposts • Ancient Rhetoric as its scope • Brief • Provides limited context
Observation and Criticism: Invention • Treatment of Invention takes up over half the book • Entire chapter devoted to rhetorical situation • Emphasizes the roles of kairos • Gives adequate attention to all three appeals: logos, ethos, pathos
Observations and Criticisms: Illustrative Examples • Generally engaging • Tied to mostly to civic concerns • Timely • Left leaning
Observation and Criticism: Heuristics • Heuristics for invention • Rhetoric as a heuristic
Observation and Criticism: Presentation Rhetorics Isocratean and Kairotic • Associated with human action • Contingent
Recommendations • Best if used as a reference • Could be used by instructors for brushing up • Heuristics for invention and some sections regarding style can be used in class • Not recommend as core text • Excellent for training FYC instructors with little experience studying rhetoric • Many chapters could be used as readings for students • Recommended as a complimentary text for WaW curricula
Ways to Compliment WAW with Classical Rhetorics • Incorporate classical modes of discourse in a discussion of genres • Consider the classical concept of partition with Swales’s CARS Model • Pair C&H chapter on rhetorical situation and kairos with Grant-Davie’s “Rhetorical Situations and Their Constituents” • Pair C&H’s discussion of grammar and style with John Dawkins’s “Teaching Punctuation as a Rhetorical Tool” or Joseph William’s “The Phenomenology of Error”
Ways to Compliment WAW with Classical Rhetorics • Include C&H’s discussion of ideologies with the study of discourse community • Include the teaching of the five canons as a contrast to contemporary conceptions of the writing process • Introduce modes of appeal into discussion of types of evidence valued by different communities • Provide heuristics to students for inventing arguments
References Corbett, Edward P.J., and Robert J. Connors. Classical Rhetoric for the Modern Student. New York: Oxford UP, 1999. Print. Crowley, Sharon, and Debra Hawhee. Ancient Rhetorics for Contemporary Students. LOCATION: Longman, 2009. Downs, Doug, and Elizabeth Wardle. Writing about Writing: A College Reader. Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2011. Print. Fulkerson, Richard. “Four Philosophies of Composition.” College Composition and Communication 30.4 (1979): 343-348. JSTOR. Web. 7 Nov. 2010. Haskin, Ekaterina V. Logos and Power in Isocrates and Aristotle. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 2004. Welch, Kathleen E. “Appropriating Plato’s Rhetoric and Writing into Contemporary Rhetoric and Writing Studies.” The Contemporary Reception of Classical Rhetoric: Appropriations of Ancient Discourse. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum, 1990. PDF. UCF WebCourses. Web. 8 Nov. 2010. 93-111. Print. Welch, Kathleen E. “Appropriating Competing Systems of Classical Greek Rhetoric: Considering Isocrates and Gorgias with Plato in the New Rhetoric of the Fourth Century B.C.” The Contemporary Reception of Classical Rhetoric: Appropriations of Ancient Discourse. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum, 1990. PDF. UCF WebCourses. Web. 8 Nov. 2010. 113-141. Print.