COM 303

2003 SYLLABUS

Text

Lecture Notes

Grades

Reading summaries

Questions of the day

Extra Credit

Term Paper

Special Procedures

Schedule

Supplementary Readings

Texts

James L. Golden, Goodwin F. Berquist, William E. Coleman. The Rhetoric of Western Thought, 7th ed. (2000). Dubuque, Iowa: Kendall Hunt Publishing Company.

ISBN: 0-7872-1968-1

Lecture Notes

Lectures are available, on- line. You should study them, thoroughly, before coming to class. These will be further discussed in class.

Grades

Reading summaries (20) 500
Questions of the day (25) 250
Research Paper (first draft) 125
Research Paper (final) 125
Total points 1000 points
Final Grade Scale
1000-885: A 884-785: B 784-685: C 684-585: D <585: F

Reading summaries

Approximately 50% of your course grade is based on written summaries of the text readings. Complete the summaries prior to class on the day due; they are due at or before the start of each class. Summaries pasted into email are acceptable; do not use email attachments--I won't open them. Summaries will NOT be accepted after the start of class on the due day. Each summary should indicate the thesis of the reading and details about major points covered therein. Outlines are NOT acceptable. Summaries should run no longer than 5 pages (typed/word processed, 1 inch margins and top & bottom, double spaced, 12 point font).

Questions of the day

Approximately 25% of your grade is based on answering questions drawn from the lecture notes assigned for the day’s class session. You must be present in class in order to answer/submit answers to questions of the day.

Extra Credit

You may earn up to 50 points (5 @ 10 points each) extra credit by completing a reading summary of passages listed in the supplementary reading list at the end of this document. Each summary must treat a separate topic/person/theory/reading. Extra credit must be turned in, one per day, within one week of class treatment of the personage/concepts covered in the reading material.

Research Paper

Approximately 25% of your grade is based on submission of a scholarly research paper detailing an appropriate role for the teaching of rhetoric in American colleges and universities. 10 page term paper. First draft (worth 125) due on Nov. 18; final paper Dec. 9, 2003. Paper must be documented (MLA or APA) and must depend more on printed than web-based sources.


Special Procedures

  • Office Hours: TT: 10:30-12:00 and by appointment
  • COM has a Blackboard site to which I will post grades and announcements. We also have
  • We have a class e-mail alias
    <com30301-fa@bumail.bradley.edu>. Please check it daily (if you forward your mail out of it, be sure to empty the BU box regularly). I deduct 25 points (I'll notify you) from your score total each time--after the first (I'll warn you of this one)-- that I get bounced mail because your box is full.
  • I will answer questions, live or via phone or email about course content ANYTIME between the hours of 8am-9pm [CT] though our dinner time is usually between 5-7, during which I would prefer to be left alone. I will not answer questions about course mechanics (“what’s due in class in the morning?”) on, or the night before, due dates.
  • Please do not use tobacco products in class. I am distracted by their use and will insist that you leave if you persist.
  • Laptops may be used in class only to take or display notes. No email, web browsing, or chat.
  • All students are responsible to the same syllabus schedule, regardless of outside or BU- sponsored activities. I always accept materials early.
  • There are a number of books on reserve in the Bradley Library. Read as much as you can. Our textbook provides extensive bibliographic resources. Use them.
  • Familiarize yourself with the Index to Journals in Comunication Studies Through 1995, edited by Ronald J. Matlon and Sylvia P. Ortiz. It is available in the reference section of the library and is a standard bibliographic source for research in communication studies. Familiarize yourself with using COMSERVE and its COMINDEX, available on CD ROM in the reference section of the library. That service provides bibliographic sources for materials since 1990 and for journals not indexed in Matlon & Ortiz.
  • Always locate and study printed sources prior to supplementary web material—although the web links I provide on Rhetorical Resources feature lots of great stuff.
  • Students with certified learning disabilities: Make arrangements with me, immediately.
  • Plagiarism will not be tolerated. Do not borrow from, or share materials with, others. Do your own work. Cite sources fully and accurately. Otherwise, failure and referral to university authorities loom.
  • Study the readings for understanding so that you can discuss them in detail. Otherwise, class will be boring hard and you won't be able to keep up.
  • Re-write your summaries and paper whenever possible. Avoid turning in early drafts. Your work should be the result of extensive writing, re-writing, checking, and re-checking. I grade for writing too.
  • Copy and back-up your computer work every 10 minutes or so. Do NOT depend on one storage location/modality. "My computer ate it" will NOT suffice for excuse.

    Schedule

    In-Class Schedule[with reading assignment]

    [I reserve the right to make modifications, with notice, throughout the term]

    Don’t forget to arrange for an absentee ballot for Nov. 4.
    Remember: You will be quizzed over the online lecture notes the day the topic is listed on the syllabus.

    8/28 Welcome, orientation, and start of introductory lecture notes.

    9/2 Introduction to Rhetorical Theory (Golden, xiii-xvii; summary 1)

    9/4 Pre-Socratic Sophists (Golden, 1-9; summary 2; sophists parts 1 and 2, online)

    9/9 Plato (Golden, 14-26; summary 3)

    9/11 Weaver (Golden, 193-207; summary 4)

    9/16 Aristotle (Golden, 29-43; summary 5)

    9/18 Perelman (Golden, 263-287; summary 6)

    9/23 Summary and catch up: Classical Greek Rhetoric (nothing due though in-class quiz will be held).

    9/26 Rhetoric in Rome, Pt. 1: R in R and Cicero (Golden, 11-13; 45-60) summary 7; in class quiz over Rhetoric in Rome and Cicero online notes)

    9/30 Rhetoric in Rome, Pt. 2: Isocrates (parts 1 and 2) and Quintilian (no summary due; in class quiz over Isocrates and Quintilian online notes)

    10/2 Toulmin (Golden, 235-261; summary 8)

    10/7 Christianization of Rhetoric & St. Augustine (Golden, 61-69; summary 9)

    10/9 Classical Conception of Rhetoric (no summary, quiz over online)

    10/13 Fall Break

    10/16 Brief survey of Rhetoric in the middle ages (no summary; quiz over online)

    midterm grades are due from faculty by 10/20

    10/21 Renaissance, Ramus & Vico/Grassi (Golden, 69-74; 289-292; summary 10)

    10/23 Rhetoric and New Science (Golden, 97-106; summary 11)

    10/28 Kenneth Burke (Golden, 209-233; summary 12, in class quiz, Burke pt. 1 & 2)

    10/30 Belletristic rhetoric and George Campbell (Read Golden 81-95; read and summarize Golden119-127, summary 13)

    11/4 Vote.
    I. A. Richards (Golden, 173-180; summary 14)

    11/6 Michel Foucault (Golden, 297-301; summary 15)

    11/11 Feminist Rhetoric (Golden, 340-370; summary 16)

    11/13 African American Rhetoric (Golden, 371-387; 311-317; summary 17)

    11/18 Eastern/Asian Rhetoric (Golden, 390-404). Paper draft 1 due

    11/19 last day to drop classes

    11/20 Meetings over paper draft, by times, in office during class.

    11/25 Narration and Fantasies (Fisher & Bormann from online notes only; summary 18)

    11/27 Thanksgiving No Class

    12/2 McLuhan, (Golden, 185-190; summary 19)

    12/4 Post Modern Rhetorical Theory (Golden, 406-425 and McGee in online notes; summary 20)

    12/9 Final papers due

    Wed 12/17, 9am: final exam period. Must attend and pick up paper or receive “0” on final paper.

Supplementary Readings

  • Jaeger, Paideia v.1, 286-331. (sophists) (DF 77 .J274)
  • Kennedy, Art of Persuasion, p. 26-70 (sophists) (PA 3265. K4)
  • Smith, "The Father of Debate: Protagoras of Abdera," QJS March, 1918.
  • _____, "Corax and Probability" QJS, Feb. 1921.
  • _____, "Gorgias: a study of oratorical style" QJS, Nov. 1921.
  • (I have hard copies of these three articles. Library has microfilm).
  • Jaeger,Paideia,v.2,126-160(Plato)(PN 183 G6 1989)
  • Jaeger, Paideia, v.3, 182-196 (Plato)
  • Rhetorica Ad Herennium: Books I & II, III or IV. (PA 6156 R4 1964)
  • St.Augustine, On Christian Doctrine,Book 2(linguistics)(BR 65 .A655 E5)
  • Longinus, On the Sublime, ch. 1-15 (PA 4229 .L5 E5 1985
  • Wilson, John F. and Carroll C. Arnold (1983). Rhetorical theory: A heritage. In John F. Wilson and Carrol C. Arnold, Public speaking as a liberal art, 5th edition. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, pp. 306-339.
  • Cushman, Donald P. & Phillip K. Tompkins (1980). A theory of rhetoric for contemporary society. Philosophy and Rhetoric 13: 43-67.
  • McGee, Michael Calvin (1982). A materialist's conception of rhetoric. In Ray E. McKerrow (Ed), Explorations in rhetoric: Studies in honor of Douglas Ehninger. Glenview, IL: Scott, Foresman, pp. 23-48.
  • Bazerman, Charles. from Enos & Brown (eds) DEFINING THE NEW RHETORICS. Chapter 1: A contention over the term RHETORIC.
  • Booth, Wayne C. THE VOCATION OF A TEACHER: RHETORICAL OCCASIONS. Chapter 6: To those who do not teach English, but who belive that something called `English' should be taught: Mere rhetoric, rhetorology, and the search for a common learning.
  • Clark, Donald L. RHETORIC IN GRECO-ROMAN EDUCATION. Chapter 2: What the ancients meant by rhetoric; Epilog 262-266.
  • Corbett, Edward P.J. CLASSICAL RHETORIC FOR THE MODERN STUDENT 3rd ed). Chapter 1: Introduction.
  • Foss, S., Foss, K, and R. Trapp. CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVES ON RHETORIC. Chapter 1, pages 13-26.
  • Hauser, Gerald. INTRODUCTION TO RHETORICAL THEORY. Chapters 1: The eventfulness of rhetoric; 2: Rhetorical thinking.
  • Ijsseling, Samuel. RHETORIC AND PHILOSOPHY IN CONFLICT. Chapter I: The Rehabilitation of rhetoric.
  • Bizzell, P. & Herzberg, B. THE RHETORICAL TRADITION: READINGS FROM CLASSICAL TIMES TO THE PRESENT: General Introduction, 1-15; Gorgias, 38-42.
  • Conley, Thomas M. RHETORIC IN THE EUROPEAN TRADITION. p. 1-7.
  • Enos, Richard Leo. GREEK RHETORIC BEFORE ARISTOTLE. Chapters 1: Emerging notions of rhetoric: Homer, Hesiod, and the rhapsodes; 2: The evolution of logography in Hellenic discourse; 3: The birth of Hellenic rhetoric and the growth of the Sicilian sophistic; 4: Significant contributors to Sicilian Rhetoric.
  • Foss, S., Foss, K, and R. Trapp. CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVES ON RHETORIC. Chapter 1, pages 1-12.
  • Gill, Ann. RHETORIC AND HUMAN UNDERSTANDING. Chapter Three: Rhetoric.
  • Golden, J., Berquist, G., and W. Coleman. THE RHETORIC OF WESTERN THOUGHT (1st ed). Chapter 2: The world of Greece and Rome.
  • Murphy, James J (ed.) SYNOPTIC HISTORY OF CLASSICAL RHETORIC.Chapter 1: The Origins and Early Development of Rhetoric (p. 3-19).
  • Bizzell, P. & Herzberg, B. THE RHETORICAL TRADITION: READINGS FROM CLASSICAL TIMES TO THE PRESENT p. 19-28; Isocrates, 43-54; Plato, 55-142.
  • Clark, Donald L. RHETORIC IN GRECO-ROMAN EDUCATION. Chapter 3 The Schools.
  • Clark, Norman. "The Critical Servant : An Isocratean Contribution to Critical Rhetoric. QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF SPEECH, 82, #2, May 1996: 111-124.
  • Conley, Thomas M. RHETORIC IN THE EUROPEAN TRADITION 8-13.
  • Enos, Richard Leo. GREEK RHETORIC BEFORE ARISTOTLE. Chapter V: The platonic rejection of sophistic rhetoric and its Hellenic reception.
  • Ijsseling, Samuel. RHETORIC AND PHILOSOPHY IN CONFLICT. Chapters II: Plato and the sophists; III: Isocrates and the power of logos.
  • Bizzell, P. & Herzberg, B. THE RHETORICAL TRADITION: READINGS FROM CLASSICAL TIMES TO THE PRESENT. Aristotle, 144-194;
  • Conley, Thomas M. RHETORIC IN THE EUROPEAN TRADITION, p. 13-28.
  • Welch, Kathleen. Ch. 2: "An Isocratic Literacy Theory: An Alternative Rhetoric of Oral/Aural Articulation." In ELECTRIC RHETORIC.
  • Samuel Ijsseling. RHETORIC AND PHILOSOPHY IN CONFLICT. Chapter IV: The history and system of Greek rhetoric
  • Murphy, James J (ed.) SYNOPTIC HISTORY OF CLASSICAL RHETORIC. Chapter 2: Aristotle (Forbes I. Hill), p 19-76.
  • Bizzell, P. & Herzberg, B. THE RHETORICAL TRADITION: READINGS FROM CLASSICAL TIMES TO THE PRESENT. Cicero, 195-250; Quintilian, 293-363; Medieval Rhetoric, Introduction 367- 380; Augustine 381-422.
  • Conley, Thomas M. RHETORIC IN THE EUROPEAN TRADITION, Chapter 3 Late Classical and Medieval Greek Rhetorics and 4 Rhetoric in the Latin Middle Ages.
  • Ijsseling, Samuel. RHETORIC AND PHILOSOPHY IN CONFLICT. Chapters 5: Rhetoric and Philosophy in Rome, 6: Augustine and Rhetoric, and 7: The Liberal arts and education in the Middle Ages.
  • Murphy, James J (ed.) SYNOPTIC HISTORY OF CLASSICAL RHETORIC. Chapters 3: The age of codification: Hermagoras andthe pseudo-Ciceronian (James J. Murphy) p. 77-89), 4: Cicero's Rhetorical Theory (Donovan Ochs), p. 90-150; 5: Quintilian and the INSTITUTIO ORATORIA (Prentice A. Meador, Jr) p. 151-176; 6: The end of the ancient world: The second sophistic and Saint Augustine (James J. Murphy) p. 177-184.
  • Bizzell, P. & Herzberg, B. THE RHETORICAL TRADITION: READINGS FROM CLASSICAL TIMES TO THE PRESENT. Part 3, Renaissance Rhetoric, Introduction, 463-482. Ramus, 557-583; Wilson, 584-621; Vico, 711-727.
  • Conley, Thomas M. RHETORIC IN THE EUROPEAN TRADITION, Chapter 5 Rhetoric and Renaissance Humanism.
  • Foss, S., Foss, K, and R. Trapp. CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVES ON RHETORIC. Chapter 6: Ernesto Grassi.
  • Ijsseling, Samuel. RHETORIC AND PHILOSOPHY IN CONFLICT. Chapter 8: The Italian Humanists
  • Bizzell, P. & Herzberg, B. THE RHETORICAL TRADITION: READINGS FROM CLASSICAL TIMES TO THE PRESENT. Bacon, 622-634. Enlightenment rhetoric introduction, 637-669; Campbell, 746- 795; Blair, 796-827; Whately, 828-858.
  • Conley, Thomas M. RHETORIC IN THE EUROPEAN TRADITION, Chapters 6 (Eighteenth Century Rhetorics), 7 (Rhetoric in the Ninteenth Century), 8 (Rhetoric in the Nineteenth Century).
  • Ijsseling, Samuel. RHETORIC AND PHILOSOPHY IN CONFLICT. Chapters 9 (Francis Bacon, Rene Descartes and the New Science) 10 ( Pascal and the art of persuasion), 11 (Sacred Eloquence), 11 (Kant and the enlightenment).
  • Arthur E. Walzer, "Campbell on the Passons: A ReReading of the Philosophy of Rhetoric, QJS, 85 (1) 1999, 72-85.
  • Bizzell, P. & Herzberg, B. THE RHETORICAL TRADITION: READINGS FROM CLASSICAL TIMES TO THE PRESENT. Nietzsche, 885-896; Twentieth Century Rhetoric, Introduction, 897-923; Bakhtin, 924-963.
  • Ijsseling, Samuel. RHETORIC AND PHILOSOPHY IN CONFLICT. Chapters XIII (Marx, Nietzsche and Freud), XIV (Nietzsche and Philosophy).
  • Jamieson, Kathleen Hall. ELOQUENCE IN AN ELECTRONIC AGE: THE TRANSFORMATION OF POLITICAL SPEECHMAKING. Chapters 1 (Educating the Eloquent Speaker) and 2 (Incapacitating the Eloquent Speaker).
  • Bizzell, P. & Herzberg, B. THE RHETORICAL TRADITION: READINGS FROM CLASSICAL TIMES TO THE PRESENT. I. A. Richards, 964- 988; Weaver, 1042-1065.
  • Conley, Thomas M. RHETORIC IN THE EUROPEAN TRADITION, Richards, 260-267; Weaver, 277-284.
  • Foss, S., Foss, K, and R. Trapp. CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVES ON RHETORIC. Chapters 2 (I.A. Richards) and 3 (Richard M. Weaver).
  • Ijsseling, Samuel. RHETORIC AND PHILOSOPHY IN CONFLICT. Chapters XV (Philosophy and metaphor) and XVI (Who is actually speaking whenever something is said?)
  • Jamieson, Kathleen Hall. ELOQUENCE IN AN ELECTRONIC AGE: THE TRANSFORMATION OF POLITICAL SPEECHMAKING. Chapter 3 (The flame of oratory, the Fireside Chat.
  • Bizzell, P. & Herzberg, B. THE RHETORICAL TRADITION: READINGS FROM CLASSICAL TIMES TO THE PRESENT. Kenneth Burke, 989- 1041.
  • Conley, Thomas M. RHETORIC IN THE EUROPEAN TRADITION, Chapter 9: Burke, 268-276.
  • Foss, S., Foss, K, and R. Trapp. CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVES ON RHETORIC. Chapter 7 (Burke).
  • Hawhee, Debra. "Burke and Nietzche" QJS 85 (1999) 129-145.
  • Jamieson, Kathleen Hall. ELOQUENCE IN AN ELECTRONIC AGE: THE TRANSFORMATION OF POLITICAL SPEECHMAKING. Chapter 4 (The "effeminate" style).
  • Bizzell, P. & Herzberg, B. THE RHETORICAL TRADITION: READINGS FROM CLASSICAL TIMES TO THE PRESENT. Chaim Perelman, 1066-1103.
  • Conley, Thomas M. RHETORIC IN THE EUROPEAN TRADITION, Chapter 10: Perelman, 296-299; 307-310 (Outline of THE NEW RHETORIC)
  • Foss, S., Foss, K, and R. Trapp. CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVES ON RHETORIC. Chapter 5 (Perelman).
  • Jamieson, Kathleen Hall. ELOQUENCE IN AN ELECTRONIC AGE: THE TRANSFORMATION OF POLITICAL SPEECHMAKING. Chapter 5 (The memorable phrase, the memorable picture.
  • Bizzell, P. & Herzberg, B. THE RHETORICAL TRADITION: READINGS FROM CLASSICAL TIMES TO THE PRESENT. Stephen Toulmin, 1104-1125.
  • Conley, Thomas M. RHETORIC IN THE EUROPEAN TRADITION, Chapter 10: Toulmin, 291-296.
  • Foss, S., Foss, K, and R. Trapp. CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVES ON RHETORIC. Chapter 4 (Stephen Toulmin).
  • Gill, Ann. RHETORIC AND HUMAN UNDERSTANDING. Chapter Nine: The rational paradigm.
  • Bizzell, P. & Herzberg, B. THE RHETORICAL TRADITION: READINGS FROM CLASSICAL TIMES TO THE PRESENT. Michel Foucault, 1126-1164.
  • Foss, S., Foss, K, and R. Trapp. CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVES ON RHETORIC. Chapter 8 (Foucault).
  • Gill, Ann. RHETORIC AND HUMAN UNDERSTANDING. Chapter Ten: Structuralism, then Michel Foucault, 173-185.
  • Jamieson, Kathleen Hall. ELOQUENCE IN AN ELECTRONIC AGE: THE TRANSFORMATION OF POLITICAL SPEECHMAKING. Chapter 7 Conversation and self-revelation).
  • Bitzer, Lloyd. The Rhetorical Situation. PHILOSOPHY & RHETORIC Vol. 1, No. 1. (stacks or copy my copy)
  • Foss, S., Foss, K, and R. Trapp. CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVES ON RHETORIC. Chapter 11 An unending conversation 324-340.
  • Gill, Ann. RHETORIC AND HUMAN UNDERSTANDING. Chapter Eleven: Postmodernism.
  • Jamieson, Kathleen Hall. ELOQUENCE IN AN ELECTRONIC AGE: THE TRANSFORMATION OF POLITICAL SPEECHMAKING. Chapter 6 (Dramatizing and Story Telling).
  • Bizzell, P. & Herzberg, B. THE RHETORICAL TRADITION: READINGS FROM CLASSICAL TIMES TO THE PRESENT. Gates, 1185-1223; Cixous, 1224-1250; Kristeva, 1251-
  • Foss, S., Foss, K, and R. Trapp. CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVES ON RHETORIC. 10 (Challenges to the Rhetorical Tradition).
  • Gill, Ann. RHETORIC AND HUMAN UNDERSTANDING. Chapter Twelve Voice.
  • Jamieson, Kathleen Hall. ELOQUENCE IN AN ELECTRONIC AGE: THE TRANSFORMATION OF POLITICAL SPEECHMAKING. Chapters 8 (The divorce between speech and thought) and 9 (Mating the best of the old and new).
  • Lu, Xing and David Frank.(1993) On the study of anchient Chinese Rhetoric/Bian. WESTERN JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION 57 (4): 445-463
  • Combs, Steven C.(2000) Sunzi and the Art of War: The Rhetoric of Parsimony. Quarterly Journal of Speech 86 (3): 276-294.

    COM 303 Theory and Literature of Rhetoric
    Fall 2003
    9-10:15 TT GCC 202
    (full syllabus: http://hilltop.bradley.edu/~ell/30303syl.html)
    Ed Lamoureux, Ph. D.
    Associate Professor, Speech Communication
    Interim Director, Multimedia
    GCC 315
    X2378
    ell@bradley.edu
    309-672-5878
    Office: T/T 10:30-12 and by appointment