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An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

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Title: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric


1
An Outline of Classical Rhetoric
  • Frank DAngelo
  • Adapted from
  • English 523 Classical Rhetoric and Written
    Composition
  • Arizona State University

2
Rhetoric The Three Branches
  • 1.      Deliberative (political)
  • 2.      Judicial (forensic or legal)
  • 3.      Epideictic (Ceremonial)

3
Deliberative (political)
  1. Aimto exhort or dissuade
  2. Endsexpediency or inexpediency
  3. Timefuture
  4. Audiencechooses between alternative courses of
    civic action.

4
Judicial (forensic or legal)
  • Aimto accuse or defend
  • Endsjustice and injustice
  • Timepast
  • Audiencejudges the innocence or guilt of someone
    accused of a crime.

5
Epideictic (ceremonial)
  1. Aimto praise or blame
  2. Endshonor and dishonor
  3. Timepresent
  4. Audience praises the speech and the skill of
    the orator.

6
RhetoricThe Five Parts
  1. Invention
  2. Arrangement
  3. Style
  4. Memory
  5. Delivery

7
Invention
  • Stasisthe main points at issue

8
Invention
  • Prooftwo kinds
  • Inartistic
  • Artistic

9
Invention
  • Proof
  • a. Inartistic
  • 1) sworn testimony
  • 2) documents
  • 3) laws
  • 4) torture

10
Invention
  • b. artistic
  • 1) ethicalspeakers character ethos
  • 2) emotionalaudiences mood pathos
  • 3) logicalrational argument logos
  • i) deductivetopoi and enthymemes
  • ii) inductiveexample

11
Arrangement
  • Aristotle4 essential parts
  • proem
  • statement of facts
  • proof
  • epilogue

12
Arrangement
  • Cicero7 part structure
  • exhortation
  • narration
  • proposition
  • confirmation
  • refutation
  • digression
  • conclusion

13
Style The 3 Types
  • Low or plain (unornamented)
  • Middle (somewhere in between)
  • Grand (ornamented)

14
Style the 4 Virtues
  1. Purity (correctness)
  2. Clarity
  3. Decorum (appropriateness)
  4. Ornament

15
Style Sources of Ornament
  1. Schemes
  2. Tropes

16
StasisDefinition of Stasis
  • 1. The first conflict of two sides of a case,
    resulting from the rejection of an accusation
    You did it, / I did not do it.
  • 2. The starting point of a case.
  • 3. The circumstances that give rise to a case.
  • 4. The point at issue in a legal argument.

17
Stasis Four Kinds of Issues
  1. Conjecturaldispute over a fact.
  2. Definitionaldispute over a definition.
  3. Qualitativedispute over the value, quality, or
    nature of an act.
  4. Translativedispute over moving the issue from
    one court or jurisdiction to another.

18
Stasis Central Question of the Case
  1. Based on an analysis of the issues
  2. Coming from the conflict of pleas I was
    justified in doing it. / You were not. Was
    he justified in doing it?

19
StasisThe Reason or Excuse
  1. That which holds the case together
  2. He was justified in doing it because she killed
    my father.

20
StasisPoint for Judges Decision
  1. That which arises from denial of the reason or
    excuse.
  2. That which arises from assertion of the reason or
    excuse.

21
StasisFoundation of the Defense
  1. Strongest argument.
  2. Argument most relevant to the point for the
    judges decision.

22
StasisAdvancing the Argument
  1. Investigating the topoi.
  2. Inductive and deductive reasoning.

23
CLASSICAL INVENTIONCommon Topics of Invention
  • Process
  • Comparison
  • Contrast
  • Classification
  • Narration
  • Exemplification
  • Causes
  • Effects
  • Definition
  • Description
  • Negation
  • Analysis

24
An Outline of Classical Rhetoric
  • Frank DAngelo
  • Adapted from
  • English 523 Classical Rhetoric and Written
    Composition
  • Arizona State University
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