Ideology, knowledge and text: Pulling at the knot in Ariadne's thread

Contemporary controversies in rhetorical criticism cluster in three ostensibly separate areas: the ethical and political consequences of ideological or cultural criticism, the possibility and desirability of viewing rhetoric as an epistemic process, and the implications of broadening the purview of...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Quarterly journal of speech Vol. 87; no. 4; pp. 378 - 395
Main Author Cyphert, Dale
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Abingdon Taylor & Francis Group 01.11.2001
Taylor & Francis
Taylor & Francis Ltd
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Summary:Contemporary controversies in rhetorical criticism cluster in three ostensibly separate areas: the ethical and political consequences of ideological or cultural criticism, the possibility and desirability of viewing rhetoric as an epistemic process, and the implications of broadening the purview of rhetoric beyond text to include cultural and personal performance. In each of these realms, current theory provides no conceptual room for reconciling oppositional positions. Proponents are left to agree to disagree-a civil enough resolution within the discipline, but a sign that the current paradigm might have outlived its usefulness. This essay argues that contemporary critical vexations are not unrelated, but stem from a single theoretical source: a failure to consistently distinguish between culture-bound rhetorical practice and the transcultural processes by which humans create and maintain rhetorical community.
ISSN:0033-5630
1479-5779
DOI:10.1080/00335630109384347