an outline of classical rhetoric

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An Outline of Classical Rhetoric Frank D’Angelo Adapted from English 523 Classical Rhetoric and Written Composition Arizona State University

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An Outline of Classical Rhetoric. Frank D’Angelo Adapted from English 523 Classical Rhetoric and Written Composition Arizona State University. Rhetoric: The Three Branches:. 1.      Deliberative (political) 2.      Judicial (forensic or legal) 3.      Epideictic (Ceremonial). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Frank D’Angelo

Adapted from

English 523 Classical Rhetoric and Written Composition

Arizona State University

Page 2: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Rhetoric: The Three Branches:

1.      Deliberative (political)

2.      Judicial (forensic or legal)

3.      Epideictic (Ceremonial)

Page 3: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Deliberative (political)

1. Aim–to exhort or dissuade

2. Ends–expediency or inexpediency

3. Time–future

4. Audience–chooses between alternative courses of civic action.

Page 4: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Judicial (forensic or legal)

1. Aim–to accuse or defend

2. Ends–justice and injustice

3. Time–past

4. Audience–judges the innocence or guilt of someone accused of a crime.

Page 5: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Epideictic (ceremonial)

1. Aim–to praise or blame

2. Ends–honor and dishonor

3. Time–present

4. Audience – praises the speech and the skill of the orator.

Page 6: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Rhetoric–The Five Parts

1. Invention

2. Arrangement

3. Style

4. Memory

5. Delivery

Page 7: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Invention

Stasis–the main points at issue

Page 8: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Invention

Proof–two kinds

Inartistic

Artistic

Page 9: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Invention

Proof:

a. Inartistic

1) sworn testimony

2) documents

3) laws

4) torture

Page 10: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Invention

b.artistic

1) ethical—speaker’s character ethos

2) emotional—audience’s mood pathos

3) logical—rational argument logos

i) deductive—topoi and enthymemes

ii) inductive—example

Page 11: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Arrangement

Aristotle—4 essential parts

1. proem

2. statement of facts

3. proof

4. epilogue

Page 12: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

ArrangementCicero—7 part structure

1.exhortation2.narration3.proposition4.confirmation5.refutation6.digression7.conclusion

Page 13: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Style: The 3 Types

Low or plain (unornamented)

Middle (somewhere in between)

Grand (ornamented)

Page 14: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Style: the 4 Virtues

1. Purity (correctness)

2. Clarity

3. Decorum (appropriateness)

4. Ornament

Page 15: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Style: Sources of Ornament

1. Schemes

2. Tropes

Page 16: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

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.

Page 17: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Stasis: Four Kinds of Issues

1. Conjectural—dispute over a fact.

2. Definitional—dispute over a definition.

3. Qualitative—dispute over the value, quality, or nature of an act.

4. Translative—dispute over moving the issue from one court or jurisdiction to another.

Page 18: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

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?”

Page 19: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Stasis:The Reason or Excuse

1. That which holds the case together

2. “He was justified in doing it because she killed my father.”

Page 20: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Stasis:Point for Judge’s Decision

1. That which arises from denial of the reason or excuse.

2. That which arises from assertion of the reason or excuse.

Page 21: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Stasis:Foundation of the Defense

1. Strongest argument.

2. Argument most relevant to the point for the judge’s decision.

Page 22: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Stasis:Advancing the Argument

1. Investigating the topoi.

2. Inductive and deductive reasoning.

Page 23: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

CLASSICAL INVENTIONCommon Topics of Invention

Process

Comparison

Contrast

Classification

Narration

Exemplification

Causes

Effects

Definition

Description

Negation

Analysis

Page 24: An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

An Outline of Classical Rhetoric

Frank D’Angelo

Adapted from

English 523 Classical Rhetoric and Written Composition

Arizona State University