The design arts -- from the design of buildings and machines to software and interfaces -- are associated with types of knowledge and performance thought to be structured, modular, and systematic. Such arts have become increasingly prestigious in our technocratic society. Since Aristotle, the art of rhetoric was conceived as a loosely structured "practical" art thought to be limited in the extent to which it could mimic more precise subject matters. The art of rhetoric has been controversial since classical times, but its status has sunk even lower since the industrial revolution -- a point when civic cultures began to cede authority and control to the cultures of specialized experts. Many sympathizers of rhetoric have resisted its decline by calling for a civic art of public discourse to stand in opposition to a technocratic specialized discourse that has come, increasingly, to disenfranchise the ordinary citizen. This is the first book to question the rhetoric/technical knowledge split from a more fundamental perspective. To get some perspective on what is at stake in rhetoric's traditional classification as a "practical" art, the authors: * explore the distinction between practical and design arts; * enumerate the various criteria cited in the literature for qualifying a cluster of knowledge and performative skills to count as an art of design; * show how the knowledge and performative skills associated with the art of rhetoric meet the major requirements of design knowledge; * propose a general architecture of rhetorical design, one descriptive both of civic address and specialized academic argument; * turn to the Lincoln/Douglas debates to embody and provide some empirical support and illustration for their architecture; * demonstrate how Lincoln and Douglas can be thought of as expert designers whose rhetoric is highly structured and modular; and * explain how the rhetoric of both rhetorical agents can be represented in the layers and modules that one needs to display plans for buildings, software, or other design artifacts. These layers and modules are not just post hoc annotations of the debates; they also illuminate new and systematic ways for viewing the debates -- and by implication, other specimens of rhetoric -- in terms of strategies of artistic production. Kaufer and Butler conclude their presentation by citing some of the research and educational implications that follow from housing rhetoric within the family of design arts.
Rohrer-Vanzo, Valentina, Tobias Stern, Elisabeth Ponocny-Seliger, and Peter Schwarzbauer. “Technical Communication in Assembly Instructions: An Empirical Study to Bridge the Gap between Theoretical Gender Differences and Their Practical ...
Rhetoric, Theatre and the Arts of Design: Essays Presented to Roy Eriksen
The New Rhetoric : A Treatise on Argumentation . ... “ Rhetoric , Dialectic , and Syllogistic Argument : Aristotle's Position in Rhetoric I - II . ... In Amélie Rorty , ed . , Essays on Aristotle's Ethics , 267–84 .
In this book, Caroline van Eck examines how rhetoric and the arts interacted in early modern Europe.
Both Greek rhetoric and Roman rhetoric deal with questions and the impact of their answers upon a given audience, but not in the ... This does not mean we should restrict our understanding of rhetoric to either of these conceptions, ...
Rhetoric has been broadly defined as the art of persuasion.
Essays in Eloquent Design outline a method for teaching Rhetorical Vision as the inter-animation of words and pictures.
This book sets out to explore the way, with the onset of a new and integral relationship between text and image, the modern poster is able to evolve distinctive persuasive strategies that will transform modern advertising.
Sullivan explicitly connects Walter Ong's work in audience analysis to usability research and indelibly links rhetoric to design, as in Kaufer and Butler's Rhetoric and the Arts of Design ( 996). Our focus honors these rhetorical ...
Schütrumpf, E. (1994) 'Some Observations on the Introduction to Aristotle's Rhetoric', in D. J. Furley and A. Nehamas (eds), Aristotle's Rhetoric: Philosophical Essays, Princeton, NJ, Princeton University Press, pp. 99–116.