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Rhetorical Categories Research Articles

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Overview
136 Articles

Published in last 50 years

Related Topics

  • Rhetorical Structure
  • Rhetorical Structure
  • Rhetorical Figures
  • Rhetorical Figures
  • Rhetorical Devices
  • Rhetorical Devices
  • Text Genres
  • Text Genres
  • Textual Functions
  • Textual Functions

Articles published on Rhetorical Categories

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Patterns of Religious, Cultural, and Literary Rhetorical Elements Usage Among Non-Native Arabic Learners: A Case Study at Mohamed bin Zayed University for Humanities

This study investigated how non-native Arabic learners incorporate traditional rhetorical elements in their daily communication. An analysis of 20 international students at Mohamed bin Zayed University for Humanities examined Quranic verses, religious expressions, cultural proverbs, poetry, and modern colloquial expressions. Through interviews and focus groups, the study revealed that students' competency levels varied significantly across different rhetorical categories. Students demonstrated the strongest performance with common religious expressions in formal settings and basic cultural sayings in academic environments. The study found that modern poetry was used more frequently than classical verses. Colloquial expressions showed clear patterns based on social contexts. Students carefully considered cultural expressions in their communication. The analysis concluded that cultural understanding played a more crucial role than linguistic ability in successful rhetorical usage. These findings emphasize the need to integrate cultural context in Arabic language instruction and provide structured opportunities for authentic practice. The study recommends the development of specialized teaching materials that combine rhetorical elements with appropriate cultural contexts for academic settings.

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  • Journal IconTheory and Practice in Language Studies
  • Publication Date IconMar 6, 2025
  • Author Icon Naji M Alqbailat + 3
Open Access Icon Open Access
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Morze Czarne w nazwach pociągów

The article is devoted to the names of passenger trains referring to the Black Sea in Bulgaria, Romania, Turkey, the USSR, Ukraine, Georgia and Russia. The author presents an onomastic and cultural analysis of the collected names of passenger connections. The conclusion is that a significant number of excerpted names meet the requirements of the rhetorical category of loci amoenus, and many names of international train connections allow them to be included in the group of loci communes.

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  • Journal IconPoznańskie Studia Slawistyczne
  • Publication Date IconDec 11, 2024
  • Author Icon Piotr Tomasik
Open Access Icon Open Access
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Can Translation Alter Political Persona? The Case of the Rhetorical Repertoire of Obama and Trump Translated From English to Indonesian

As rhetoric in political speeches represents a particular persona that political figures strive to cultivate, that rhetoric should project the same image as the original when translated. Therefore, this study aims to explore the shifts in rhetorical strategy categories as seen in the translation of the political speeches of former U.S. Presidents Barack Obama and Donald Trump from English to Indonesian, how they affect message correctness, and how they may change the orator's political character. In multiple case studies covering the acceptance and inauguration speeches of both Obama and Trump, some rhetoric maintains their original identities. Moreover, there are five different shifts found in the rhetoric of their speeches: 1.) a shift from rhetoric to non-rhetoric; 2.) a shift from rhetoric to lost or deleted rhetoric; 3.) a shift from a particular type of rhetoric strategy to another; 4.) lessening rhetorical power or degree of the same strategy; and 5.) a shift of propositional message. Furthermore, the study reveals that retaining rhetorical categories in the translation results in higher accuracy, whereas any shift has the opposite effect, as it changes the original rhetorical message. As a result, this raises the possibility that a particularly rhetorical-style political identity may change if a large number of alterations occur.

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  • Journal IconTheory and Practice in Language Studies
  • Publication Date IconNov 12, 2024
  • Author Icon Rida Nurlatifasari + 3
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Przejawy dziedzictwa oralno-retorycznego w zasobach biblizmów języka polskiego

The article inquires into the possibilities of ethno-cultural description of the Biblical heritage in Polish, comprising established linguistic units of multiple genetic and formal status. The proposal is put forward to include, in this kind of linguistic reflection, theoretical assumptions and descriptive methods hitherto scarcely used in Polish research, deriving from Hellenistic and Semitic oral and rhetorical tradition. The article consists of two parts. The first part outlines previous approaches to describing conventionalized units of language, both in the context of Polish and contrastive analysis. It also concerns the categories of orality and rhetoric in the contexts of describing the biblical linguistic heritage, as well as the definition of the concept of Biblicism. The second part considers the possibilities of describing selected Polish Biblicisms (merism, hyperbole, and chiasm) through references to the oral and rhetorical Biblical tradition.

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  • Journal IconEtnolingwistyka. Problemy Języka i Kultury
  • Publication Date IconAug 9, 2024
  • Author Icon Stanisław Koziara
Open Access Icon Open Access
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Philosophical Protreptic and the Preface to Luke’s Gospel

Abstract This article compares the preface of Luke’s Gospel to Philo’s preface to De Abrahamo and Arrian’s preface to his arrangement of the sayings of Epictetus. Scholars have usually sought ancient comparanda to Luke’s preface in order to identify the Gospel’s genre. This study moves beyond this traditional question of form (‘What ancient works bear the closest resemblance to the structure of Luke 1:1–4?’) and on to the question of function. The selected works of Philo and Arrian participate in different genres, but both belong to the rhetorical category of ‘philosophical protreptic’, a piece of writing intended to compel the reader towards a particular moral vision. I argue that Luke’s preface exhibits unexplored similarities with the prefaces of Arrian and Philo and can itself be fruitfully read as a kind of philosophical protreptic. This has implications for how we theorize about Luke’s audience and social situation.

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  • Journal IconThe Journal of Theological Studies
  • Publication Date IconFeb 25, 2024
  • Author Icon Jeffrey M Hubbard
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Conflation between ‘Public Good’ and ‘Greater Good’ in the Context of Research Impact

Abstract This study sets out to conceptually distinguish between ‘public’ and ‘greater good’ in respect to research impact claims. We argue that the former is a category reflective of genuine benefit for the wider public, while the latter merely represents a rhetorical category to pursue the ends of a select few. Methodologically, we showcase that only within the actual research conduct is it possible to distinguish between these two categories. Likewise, without acknowledging methodological limitations, researchers may contribute to post-truth predicaments in the sense that the interaction ritual chains they are using constitute a mere rhetorical flourish rather than a rigorous argument for genuine benefit. We conclude with an appeal to future scrutiny for how researchers can retain their integrity in this new research impact discourse. We argue that an uncritical use of impact arguments may undermine the very social fabric that makes scientific pursuits possible.

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  • Journal IconPhilosophy and Theory in Higher Education
  • Publication Date IconJan 1, 2024
  • Author Icon René Brauer + 1
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Backwoods of Language. The Modernist Prose of Djuna Barnes in Polish Translation

Only eighty years after the original publication of Djuna Barnes’s Nightwood was the Polish literary market enriched by a translation of one of the strangest novels of Euro- American modernism. Marcin Szuster’s translation, with the Polish title Ostępy nocy, has already garnered praise as well as prizes, leading to the first Polish discussion concerning the work of the eccentric American writer. The focus of this article is to analyze the Polish translation of Nightwood with a special interest in Barnes’s style, which itself becomes a central character in the novel and which connects, according to feminist critics (K. Kaivola, S. Benstock), to its emancipatory potential. In this article I discuss the claim that the complex style of such prose is the (conscious) manifestation of a woman’s voice (as an affect), behind which one can discover a body – one that experiences and is experienced (J. Taylor). The body, both a structural and a rhetorical category in feminist criticism, can be seen in Barnes’s prose as an element which organizes both time and space – therefore, the ambiguity of her terms and the complexity of style make for a real translation challenge. Marcin Szuster as a translator needs to follow Barnes’s “distinctive point of view,” which is a “feminine” one, distanced by gender, experience and time.

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  • Journal IconPrzekładaniec
  • Publication Date IconSep 5, 2023
  • Author Icon Izabela Sobczak
Open Access Icon Open Access
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Nacherzählen. Versuch über eine Kulturtechnik

Abstract The article discusses the position of retelling in literary studies. Retelling does neither play a role in narratology, nor raises further questions for text theory. In the focus of literary didactics retelling is often limited to the pragmatics of use. ›Retelling‹, however, is not a term used in literary studies. Although the term denotes a widespread cultural technique, which is used in schools and is accordingly also discussed in the didactics of literature, it has not yet been able to be acknowledged in the discipline. The greatest obstacle standing in the way of a conceptual version of retelling probably lies in its distinction from narrative. Narratology has not found any specifics in retelling that fundamentally distinguish it from narration. And the tools of trans-textuality and intertextuality developed especially in structuralism to describe textual relations are available for narrative texts anyway. Thus, literary studies already apply theories and tools that are useful for analyses of retelling: narratology, text theory and classification of a second-order literature, the theory of trans-textuality and intertextuality, and material history, as well as research on media transposition and adaptation. Defining retelling as a second-order narrative, or meta-narrative, inevitably raises the question of what is being repeated at all, and how, by means of narrative. Medieval studies particularly emphasize the aspect of repetition (›re-telling‹), which precedes a specific mediality of narration. Retelling as a variety of repetition neither presupposes a pre-text nor requires that a narrative be repeated. Rather, in retelling, the narrative procedure enters into the service of repetition. On the one hand, it is a variety of repetition, but not every repetition is also a narrative. On the other hand, one and the same text can be described from the point of view of narration or that of repetition. Literary studies that focus on the uses of retelling will pay attention to the varieties of repetition and should look at the relationship between the act of narration and repetition. Obviously, in retelling, the modes and ways, but also the degrees of reference to the pre-text can vary, so that it remains to be discussed which varieties of reference count as valid repetitions. In addition, there is the fundamental question of what falls under the concept of narrative and what components constitute it. Is narrative to be understood as a turning back with linguistic means? As an organization of events, which in turn are to be understood as displacements of actors across semantic or even physical boundaries? As little as a repetition by means of narration is linked to a preceding narrative text, it is equally questionable where and how a boundary between narrative and non-narrative representation could be drawn. In this respect, the following discussion of retelling touches, on the one hand, on the distinction between describing and narrating, which itself required its own discussion in literary theory and history. On the other hand, the distinction between retelling and paraphrasing raises the question of the suitability of linguistic and rhetorical categories of analysis for an analysis of narrative. The article will not address such fundamental questions, but only selected examples will be presented to discuss ways of retelling. The article shifts the broad question of what a retelling is into a smaller, more manageable question of how retelling is done. This shift in the problem leads to specific examples and puts the spotlight on the uses of retelling. The selection of examples presents extreme cases that lie at the edges of a normal range where research has mostly focused its attention. The discussion of examples, which comes from Thomas Bernhard/Peter Handke, Wilhelm Termeer/Herman Melville and Clemens J. Setz, is intended to show that retelling allows both an integration, appropriation or fusion of narrative voices as well as an entanglement of narrative discourse and narrative histoire. The ambiguity of the retelling, which, by retelling a histoire, always carries its own discours, contrasts with forms of use such as summary. Although content summary and retelling can be distinguished as text types according to pragmatic criteria, summarizing a narrative text and retelling a histoire can also be mixed and merge into each other. The ease with which the practice of retelling can be understood should not obscure the fact that it is not easily grasped in terms of literary theory or narratology, and brings into play fundamental questions and problems.

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  • Journal IconJournal of Literary Theory
  • Publication Date IconJul 18, 2023
  • Author Icon Armin Schäfer
Open Access Icon Open Access
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Improvisation at Rhetoric Workshops as a Way of Teaching Communication Skills

The paper describes an educational project on teaching rhetoric at the university level as part of practical rhetoric workshops. What makes this didactic proposal innovative and unique is the incorporation of improvisation tools in rhetoric classes. The aim of the article is to demonstrate how techniques from contemporary improvisational theatre help students improve their communication skills. The article begins with a brief overview of rhetorical education at Polish universities and a description of basic rhetorical competences related to the creation and analysis of texts. An introduction to improvisational theatre and the specifics of improvisation workshops are presented. Then, a proposal is made to combine these different approaches to the development of communicative competences in a series of workshops. Two exercises are presented, representative of the entire workshop series and devoted to the categories of ethos and narration. The benefits of using this method are discussed by showing the learning outcomes as a specific connection between communicative competences and the mechanisms of understanding rhetorical categories.

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  • Journal IconMultidisciplinary Journal of School Education
  • Publication Date IconJun 30, 2023
  • Author Icon Agnieszka Budzyńska-Daca + 1
Open Access Icon Open Access
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Persuasion through people: The rhetorical categories of documentary subjects in Michael Moore’s films

ABSTRACT Michael Moore’s documentaries have been central to the development of the contemporary political documentary and have served as an instrument of political activism or, as some argue, even propaganda. Delving into the underlying mechanisms, in this article, I examine the ways in which documentary subjects are persuasively deployed in Moore’s documentaries. An analysis combining close reading, qualitative content analysis, and rhetorical analysis points to key rhetorical categories of documentary subjects. These subjects’ embodiment of six main rhetorical categories displays a correlation with Aristotle’s cornerstones of rhetoric: ethos, logos, and pathos. Further, the categories demonstrate how moral emotions are utilised in constructing the ethos of documentary subjects. In addition, the article addresses the significance of identification in Moore’s persuasive rhetoric. This research participates in deconstructing the mechanics of persuasive mediated communication and contributes to outlining a theory of audiovisual rhetoric.

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  • Journal IconNordic Journal of Media Studies
  • Publication Date IconJun 1, 2023
  • Author Icon Ilari Kellokoski
Open Access Icon Open Access
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Music and the Sonorous Sublime in European Culture, 1680–1880 Sarah Hibberd and Miranda Stanyon

‘Scholars in other fields have called for a moratorium on studies of the sublime, yet there are remarkably few books dedicated to the sublime and music’ (p. 1). Editors Sarah Hibberd and Miranda Stanyon thus introduce Music and the Sonorous Sublime in European Culture, 1680–1888, suggesting that music scholars have some catching up to do. In fact, books or not, the sublime has become a well-established musicological topic, especially in studies of the style formerly known as Classical. Yet the range and diversity of this new collection adds much to the existing literature, tapping new sources and repertories to explore the grand, lofty, and overwhelming experience of the musical sublime. Refreshingly, the authors do not fixate on the aesthetic-ethical theory of Immanuel Kant’s Critique of Judgment (1790), the privileged source for both postmodern critics and musicologists; they engage closely with pre-Kantian empiricist accounts of the sublime, as well as the sources perhaps closest to practical musicians—libretti and music journals. The interdisciplinary teamwork of Hibberd and Stanyon, respectively a musicologist and literary scholar, is reflected in the close attention to the uneasy translation of the sublime, originally a rhetorical category, into music. And while accounts of the musical sublime have tended to focus on instrumental music, especially the symphony, the present volume devotes generous space to opera and vocal music. With a modish focus on performance and sound, Music and the Sonorous Sublime offers fresh variations on a familiar theme, reconstructing the meaning, experience, and uses of an elusive aesthetic category.

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  • Journal IconMusic & Letters
  • Publication Date IconMay 10, 2023
  • Author Icon Stephen Rumph
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The notion of « white working class » in British political discourse, fro

Brexit has been considered as the vote of a « white working class » by a significant part of the media, politicians, and academics. This expression became rapidly mainstream despite its atypical construction. One can reflect upon this new rhetorical category, different from the traditional notion of “working class”, and is implicitly but clearly construed first and foremost in opposition to non-white workers, and not to the « bourgeoisie » or the middle-class. Brexit is also largely presented as the expression of strong Eurosceptic and anti-immigration opinions supposedly prevalent in the « white working class ». This paper aims at understanding how these assumptions about the « white working class » and its claims developed in British political discourse to the point of being a crucial topic during the Brexit discussions. The focus of this paper is a discursive analysis of the British traditional parties in power, in the context of what has been called a « white Vincent LATOUR2022-09-01T22:56:00VLbacklash », triggered by multiculturalism1. The period considered starts in 1997 with the election of New Labour on a multiculturalist agenda. The second term of Tony Blair in 2001 Vincent LATOUR2022-09-01T22:57:00VLwas a watershed moment, because it was then that he clearly turned against the previously multiculturalist agenda of his party. Since then, both the Labour and the Conservative parties have nurtured the theme of the « white working class »2 as left behind Vincent LATOUR2022-09-01T23:02:00VLby multiculturalism. This idea reached its pinnacle with Brexit in 2016, with lasting effects until 2019, when the Conservatives won by a landslide on an agenda focused on restoring the place of the « white working class ». This paper aims at showing the convergence of both parties around the rejection of multiculturalism and the defence of this newly construced section of the population, which led to the shift of British political discourse towards the right, with the promotion of the British identity as essentially « white ».

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  • Journal IconObservatoire de la société britannique
  • Publication Date IconDec 1, 2022
  • Author Icon Emilie De Witte
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Boschini, Tintoretto, der ›malerische Akt‹ (atto pittoresco) und die ›Erfindung‹ des ästhetischen Genusses in Venedig

Abstract The ‘painterly act’, which becomes quasi-visible and relivable in the impasto brushstrokes of Tintoretto and his contemporaries, is reflected in a terminologically concise and theoretically ambitious way only about a hundred years after their works were created – i.e., in the Carta del navegar pitoresco of 1660. Its author, Marco Boschini, not only coined the term ‘atto pittoresco’ but also programmatically embedded it in his dialogical speech about art, in which the importance of rhetorical categories recedes in favor of aesthetic maxims. ‘Pleasure’ and ‘joy’ of the beauty of painting and the act of painting incorporated in it are enhanced by the perception of the beauty of the lagoon city, which offers the viewer multiple views (viste) of the water with light reflections against a blue sky, shapes their good taste (buon gusto) and even promises recreation (recreazione).

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  • Journal IconZeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte
  • Publication Date IconNov 23, 2022
  • Author Icon Valeska Von Rosen
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The Aural-Visual Rhetoric in Video Game Tutorials

ABSTRACT This article asserts that auditory cues can be categorized by rhetorical function into the categories of visual rhetoric, defined by Amare and Manning under Peirce’s Ten Classes of Sign, understanding visual rhetoric to include both images and text. This article expands this definition to aural-visual rhetoric, including auditory elements as visual rhetoric to analyze multimodal Technical and Professional Communication (TPC), demonstrating this method using the opening tutorial scene from Portal 2.

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  • Journal IconTechnical Communication Quarterly
  • Publication Date IconJan 9, 2022
  • Author Icon Emily K Johnson
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Death of a genre?

Summary Taking as its starting point the scholarly discussion about the possible death of the Aesopic fable towards the end of the eighteenth century, this article proposes a broadening of perspective, arguing for a thorough examination of the impact of modernity on some of the basic contexts and conditions of the genre. Four contextual factors are, subsequently, placed under scrutiny: the ethics of virtue, the rhetorical category of exemplum, the anthro­po­morphi­zation of animals, and the poetological principle of prodesse et delectare. All of these factors may be considered as vigorous and interrelated components of premodern culture, and all four of them, moreover, constituted fundamental prerequisites for the conceptualization and functioning of the Aesopic genre. By analysing how the emerging paradigm of modernity diminished the position and importance of these contextual factors, the article seeks to demonstrate the existence of an undeniable dividing line in European fable history somewhere around 1800.

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  • Journal IconReinardus
  • Publication Date IconDec 31, 2021
  • Author Icon Erik Zillén
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Ostępy języka. Modernistyczna proza Djuny Barnes w polskim tłumaczeniu

Backwoods of Language. The Modernist Prose of Djuna Barnes in Polish Translation No sooner than after eighty years since the moment of the original publication of Djuna Barnes’s Nightwood was Polish literary market enriched by a translation of one of the most peculiar novels of the Euro-American modernism. Marcin Szuster’s translation under Polish title Ostępy nocy has already managed to earn much praise and also some prizes and open a first Polish discussion about the work of the eccentric American writer. The paper’s focus is to analyze the Polish translation of Nightwood with a special interest in Barnes’s style as it becomes a central character in the novel which connects, according to feminist critics (K. Kaivola, S. Benstock), to its emancipatory potential. In my paper I follow a claim that the complex style of this prose writing is a (conscious) manifestation of a woman’s voice (as an affect), behind which one can discover a body – one that experiences and is experienced (J. Taylor). The body, both a structural and a rhetorical category in feminist criticism, in Barnes’s prose can be seen as an element organizing time and space – therefore, ambiguity of her terms and complexity of style are forming a true translation challenge. Marcin Szuster as a translator needs to follow Barnes’s “distinctive point of view,” which is a “feminine” one and distanced by the length of gender, experience and time.

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  • Journal IconPrzekładaniec
  • Publication Date IconDec 29, 2021
  • Author Icon Izabela Sobczak
Open Access Icon Open Access
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Pandemijos retorika: argumentavimo strategijos socialinio tinklo „Facebook“ komentaruose

An analysis of the public COVID-19 discourse reveals how the public responds to the crisis and what kind of communication is actualized during a pandemic. The object of this research is the argumentation strategies in the comments of the articles about coronavirus on social media “Facebook”. The aim of the research is to expand the argumentative level of discourse: to analyze rhetorical and eristic arguments. The comments were collected from the accounts of the most popular Lithuanian news portals on “Facebook” (alfa.lt, Delfi, 15min, lrytas.lt). The analyzed comments were published during the first and second pandemic waves (from March 2020 to January 2021). The research material was analyzed by means of the rhetorical discourse analysis method to isolate and define the categories of rhetoric characteristic to rhetorical appeals models. The chosen method of rhetorical analysis was combined with content analysis. During the research, the respective rhetorical categories of the researched phenomenon were identified and classified, and the content of these categories was expanded – a rhetorical content analysis was performed. The COVID-19 pandemic is an unprecedented situation in which the rhetorical analysis of the communication element is a whole new area of research. The identified dominant models of rhetorical and eristic reasoning not only reveal the regularities of media “consumption” but also help to understand the tendencies of choosing communication strategies in critical situations.

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  • Journal IconVārds un tā pētīšanas aspekti: rakstu krājums = The Word: Aspects of Research: conference proceedings
  • Publication Date IconNov 23, 2021
  • Author Icon Eglė Gabrėnaitė + 2
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Expert Writers’ Recommendations in Economics Research Articles: Implications for the Teaching of English for Academic Purposes

The presentation of economics research results often constitutes the climax of data-driven research articles in the discipline, but how writers make recommendations based on their results remains a fertile area for an in-depth investigation. To date, no research has been conducted to ascertain the extent to which economics researchers incorporate such recommendations, and how they use language resources to perform the communicative functions involved. Our genre-based study employed the Swalesian move-step analytical framework to examine the occurrence of this pivotal rhetorical category, which makes suggestions based on research findings in economics. This largely qualitative analysis was triangulated via interviews with specialist informants in the field. Our results have shown that recommendations, being a quasi-obligatory move that comprises two noteworthy optional steps, are strategically linked with not only research results but also limitations of the research being reported. The expert writers employ a wide spectrum of language resources, particularly adjectives depicting indeterminacy and noun phrases denoting industrial and policy implications, to tacitly accentuate the value of their results. In regard to pedagogical implications, it is suggested that instructors devise exercises requiring novice writers to construct sentences involving suggestion indicators and verb phrases signalling epistemic modality while guiding learners to make recommendations for future research. With respect to recommendations for practical applications, text-completion exercises may be designed to familiarise learners with the use of active clauses containing nominalisations, which are largely intended to minimise self-mentions and increase objectivity while proposing actions to be taken in real-life settings. Keywords : English for academic purposes; discourse analysis; genre analysis; academic writing; recommendations

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  • Journal Icon3L The Southeast Asian Journal of English Language Studies
  • Publication Date IconSep 28, 2021
  • Author Icon May Siaw-Mei Liu + 1
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El culto a Juárez: La construcción retórica del héroe (1872–1976)

El culto a Juárez: La construcción retórica del héroe (1872–1976)

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  • Journal IconHispanic American Historical Review
  • Publication Date IconAug 1, 2021
  • Author Icon Samuel Brunk
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Post-truth Politics and Collective Gaslighting

AbstractPost-truth politics has been diagnosed as harmful to both knowledge and democracy. I argue that it can also fundamentally undermine epistemic autonomy in a way that is similar to the manipulative technique known as gaslighting. Using examples from contemporary politics, I identify three categories of post-truth rhetoric: the introduction of counternarratives, the discrediting of critics, and the denial of more or less plain facts. These strategies tend to isolate people epistemically, leaving them disoriented and unable to distinguish between reliable and unreliable sources. Like gaslighting, post-truth politics aims to undermine epistemic autonomy by eroding someone's self-trust, in order to consolidate power. Shifting the focus to the effects on the victim allows for new insights into the specific harms of post-truth politics. Applying the concept of gaslighting to this domain may also help people recognize a pernicious dynamic that was invisible to them before, giving them an important tool to resist it.

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  • Journal IconEpisteme
  • Publication Date IconJul 27, 2021
  • Author Icon Natascha Rietdijk
Open Access Icon Open Access
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