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Summary Political rhetoric

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Political Rhetoric
1 Lecture 1 – introduction
The importance of political rhetoric

 No politics without persuasion
 Reason: uncertainty
 Persuasion by speech vs. persuasion by force
 The fundamental political skill?

What is rhetoric?

 < Greek ‘retoriketekhne’
o Rhetor = speaker
o Tekhne = art
 Studying rhetoric = learning the practical skills of persuasion
 Studying rhetoric = studying the persuasiveness of speech
 Not limited to spoken word (oratory)
o Written word
o Visuals

Political rhetoric

 Many areas of rhetorical studies
o E.g. law, organization studies,…
o Persuasion in the political realm
o Not limited to politicians!
o “What makes a political speech persuasive (or not)?”

Diverse research field

 Different backgrounds, different questions
o Linguistics (e.g. rhetorical figures)
o Psychology (e.g. emotions vs. the cognitive)
o Political science (e.g. questions of power)
o Communcation science (e.g. mass media)
 Each with their own terminology & research methods
 Difficulty: they don’t always talk to each other
 This course: eclectic approach

1.1 History
Rhetoric, a contested notion

 Words often associated with rhetoric: “mere”; “empty”
o Rhetoric is contrasted with reality
 Association with danger
o Can people be persuaded of anything? (violence, misinformation)
 At the same time: no democracy without free speech?

Rhetoric was central to ancient democracy

,  Greece, 500 BC
 From aristocracy to democracy
o Demos = people
o Ekklesia
 Highly participatory system
o Status of being citizen comes with obligations
 Rhetorical skills were important
 Teachers: sophists
o ▪ Sophos = wisdom
 ▪ E.g. Gorgias, Protagoras
 Culture of oral transmission
 Different views of classical thinkers

Plato

 Belief in one moral “truth”
o Allegory of the cave
o Only a small elite can see it
 Rhetoric is empty and dangerous
o It can persuade most people of anything; a ‘rudderless boat’; “sophistries”
o Can do bad instead of good (death of his mentor Socrates)
 “The Republic”
o Society should be based on reason
o Strict division: philosopher-kings; guardians and traders
 Ideas were later criticized (e.g. Popper)
 More sympathetic reading: argument for alternative type of rhetoric (dialectic)
o Cf. technocracy today

Aristotle

 Student of Plato
 More positive reading of rhetoric
o Man is a ‘political animal’
o ‘Good life’ is life in accordance with community (vs. Plato: natural state)
 Rhetoric complements philosophical reasoning
o How should the best case be put, given the argument, evidence, audience?
o Best case is not always clear
 “The art of rhetoric”
 Disclaimer: exclusive notion of ‘citizen’
o Cf. importance of ‘enthymeme’
o Degree of permitted disagreement is limited

Cicero

 Great orator of the Roman world
 Treatises on rhetoric (e.g. “De Oratore”)
 Like Aristotle, refuted sophism
o Understanding of topic comes first; then follows good speech
o But he himself was pragmatic
 Persuasion is not about techniques but about the talent to adapt

,Rhetoric diminished when modern state emerged

 Centralized, powerful authorities
 Laws to be obeyed without discussion (monopoly of violence)
o Subordination of citizen assemblies to rules
 Two thinkers (Hobbes and Rousseau)
o Contrasting interpretations of sovereign state
o Similar perception of danger of rhetoric

Hobbes

 “Leviathan” (1651)
 Pessimist about nature of human beings: uncertainty & competition driven by
passion/appetite
o Capable of reasoning (not like animals)
o But different interpretations of the same event; no shared morality
 Rhetoric leads to even more confusion
o E.g. metaphors
o vs. ‘Perspicious words’
 Rational thing to do: one-time “social contract”
o Appoint supreme power to bring civil piece

Rousseau

 “Social contract” (1762)
 Humans are ‘naturally good’ but modern society made them selfish
 Return to harmony through agreement among citizens
o State is not a distant Leviathan; no external authority
o Collective citizen body remains in charge
o Obey the “General Will” (internal motivation)
 General Will: not developed through rhetoric
o “Long debates bespeak the assendance of particular interests and the decline of the
state”
o Persuasion is essentially non-argumentative; appeals to individual’s conscience
 Need for unanimity: small & highly exclusive state
o People identify with each other; shared sentiment from within
 Cf. ‘dogmatic’ forms of speech today

Martin: politics vs political

 “Why do so many people (and classical thinkers / political theorists) see rhetoric as
dangerous?”
 Argument of James Martin (handbook): politics vs. the political
o Politics = regular activities taking place within the rules of the game
o The political = higher principles (what are the rules of the game?)
 The political is only partially settled…
o Realization that things might be done differently
o Power relations can always change
 … vs. philosophers who search for stable principles
 Potential for chaos, disorder, crisis

,  Dismissal of rhetoric is a symptom of that concern
 Because rhetoric involves both politics & the political
o “Just rhetoric”: Mundane day -to -day -business
o “Speeches that changed the world”: efforts to establish new principles
o Most often in between
 If thinker has sympathy for rhetoric (e.g. Aristotle), often limits (e.g. very exclusive public
sphere) to eliminate discussion about the political
 Impossible to reconcile stability with inclusive rhetoric ?

1.2 Situating rhetoric
Language

 Rhetoric uses language
 Not all rhetoric is language
 Not all language is rhetoric

Ideology

 = Organized belief system (e.g. liberalism, communism)
 But rhetoric is about assembly/construction of ideas (and delivery)
 Ideology is a resource for rhetoric
 Rhetoric can change (or create) ideologies

Discourse

 Is also about how people ‘make meaning’ of things
 Also deals with persuasion and power (cf. critical discourse analysis)
 Discourse is broad and ungoing; rhetoric concentrates on situated encounters

2 Lecture 2 – classical rhetoric
Ancient rhetorical classifications and techniques – read chapter 1 (bb)

1. Occasions of speech
2. The issue
3. Discovery of the argument (ethos – pathos – logos)
4. Arrangement of the argument

2.1 Occasions of speech
 Good rhetoric is context-dependent
 Three “occasions” of speech

Sorts of speeches

 Epideictic (ceremonial)
o Honour/commerate individuals
o Eg. wedding, funeral, rousing oration before battle
o GOAL: creating shared sentiment
o Typical arguments: praise or blame, focus on present
 Forensic (judicial)
o Guilt or innocence
o Eg. defence in court

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