This book presents a selective, introductory reading of key texts in the history of magic from antiquity forward, in order to construct a suggestive conceptual framework for disrupting our conventional notions about rhetoric and literacy. Offering an overarching, pointed synthesis of the interpenetration of magic, rhetoric, and literacy, William A. Covino draws from theorists ranging from Plato and Cornelius Agrippa to Paulo Freire and Mary Daly, and analyzes the different magics that operate in Renaissance occult philosophy and Romantic literature, as well as in popular indicators of mass literacy such as The Oprah Winfrey Show and The National Enquirer. Magic, Rhetoric, and Literacy distinguishes two kinds of magic-rhetoric that continue to affect our psychological and cultural life today. Generative magic-rhetoric creates novel possibilities for action, within a broad sympathetic universe of signs and symbols. Arresting magic-rhetoric attempts to induce automatistic behavior, by inculcating rules and maxims that function like magic ritual formulas: JUST SAY NO. In this connection, the literate individual is one who can interrogate arresting language, and generate counter-spells.
He is the author of Writing and Reading Mental Health Records: Issues and Analysis (Sage, 1993); also Rhetorical Memory and Delivery: Classical Concepts for Contemporary Composition and Communication (1994) and Professional Writing in ...
The book examines the complex and sophisticated efforts of American Indian writers and orators to constructively engage an often hostile and resistant white audience through language and other symbol systems.
Serendipity in Rhetoric, Writing, and Literacy Research reveals the different kinds of work scholars, particularly those in rhetoric, writing, and literacy, need to do in order to recognize a serendipitous discovery or a missed opportunity.
Exploring the rhetoric of legal interpretation, this book answers that citizens must be so educated as to have an intellectual awareness of the inherently rhetorical nature of language.
" By practical art, they mean methods tested in practice, by trial and error, with a goal of offering something useful and teachable. This volume presents just such an account of rhetoric.
Ancient Non-Greek Rhetorics contributes to the recovery and understanding of ancient rhetorics in non-Western cultures and other cultures that developed independently of classical Greco-Roman models.
... Magic, Rhetoric, and Literacy, 5. 6. Covino's book ultimately explains how literacy and all of the structures of dominance that are associated with it developed and changed alongside the shift from magic to the more scientific techne we ...
David Zarefsky has described surrogate arguments in the Lincoln-Douglas debates of 1858. Zarefsky argues that both debaters employed the surrogate argumentative themes oflaw, history, and political conspiracy as a way of suggesting ...
our lives worth studying - or no departments of economics , mathematics , physics , or biology . These disciplines address fundamental issues in the constitution of our physical and social worlds . Yet , writing is also a fundamental ...
... Rhetoric ' " WC 11 ( 1994 ) : 131-42 . KITZHABER , ALBERT ( a ) History of Rhetoric and / or Composition , Rhetoric and / or Composition Theory ( b ) Kitzhaber's 1953 dissertation , Rhetoric in American Colleges , 1850–1900 , is the ...