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Voices in the Wilderness
Patricia Roberts-Miller
其他書名
Public Discourse and the Paradox of Puritan Rhetoric
出版
University of Alabama Press
, 1999-03-11
主題
Language Arts & Disciplines / General
Language Arts & Disciplines / Rhetoric
Literary Criticism / American / General
ISBN
081730939X
9780817309398
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=-8RZAAAAMAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋
What has gone wrong with discourse and deliberation in the United States? It remains monologic, argues Patricia Roberts-Miller in
Voices in the Wilderness
, which traces America’s dominant form of argumentation back to its roots in the rhetorical tradition of 17th-century American Puritans. A work of composition theory, rhetorical theory, and cultural criticism, this volume ultimately provides not only new approaches to argumentation and the teaching of rhetoric, composition, and communication but also an original perspective on the current debate over public discourse
Both Jürgen Habermas and Wayne Booth—two of the most influential theorists in the domain of public discourse and good citizenry—argue for an inclusive public deliberation that involves people who are willing to listen to one another, to identify points of agreement and disagreement, and to make good faith attempts to validate any disputed claims. The Puritan voice crying in the wilderness, Roberts-Miller shows, does none of these things. To this individual of conscience engaged in a ceaseless battle of right and wrong against greedy philistines, all inclusion, mediation, and reciprocity are seen as evil, corrupting, and unnecessary. Hence, the voice in the wilderness does not in any real sense participate in public deliberation, only in public pronouncement.
Arguing that our culture’s continuing affection for the ethos of the voice crying in the wilderness is one of our more troubling inheritances from the early American ambivalence to public discourse—including the Puritan denigration of rhetoric—Roberts-Miller contends that the monologic discourse of the Puritans in fact contains within it arguments for dialogism. Thus, the history of rhetoric can provide much richer fields for reimagining discourse than heretofore credited. Roberts-Miller concludes by extending her findings into their practical applications for argumentation in the public sphere and in the composition classroom.