An edition of The lost cause of rhetoric (1995)

The lost cause of rhetoric

the relation of rhetoric and geometry in Aristotle and Lacan

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Last edited by MARC Bot
July 15, 2024 | History
An edition of The lost cause of rhetoric (1995)

The lost cause of rhetoric

the relation of rhetoric and geometry in Aristotle and Lacan

  • 1 Want to read

In this study of the relationship between rhetoric and geometry, David Metzger poses and answers questions of major significance to the field of rhetorical studies. By asking what rhetoric is, he examines why it has always been difficult to define and to determine its purpose and value. He seeks to ascertain how rhetoric can be more clearly valued and therefore better understood, both on its own and as a set of tools with which to write and think.

Metzger explores the nature of knowledge in terms of what is created in the relationship between rhetoric and geometry, noting how rhetoric is eliminated in the epistemology of Western culture and how it can be replaced through geometry in the places vacated by philosophy.

He argues that the dismissal of rhetoric (and thus the dismissal of the "here and now" itself) takes the form of two basic philosophical moves: the onomastic (which dismisses rhetoric because it is not philosophic, not geometry) and the genealogical (which dismisses rhetoric because it is philosophic, not geometry). Using Descartes's cogito and Derrida's discussion of genre as examples of these two philosophical moves, Metzger introduces the work of Aristotle and Lacan as their counter-examples. He then argues that rhetoric is about the present. For Aristotle, rhetoric is a dunamis, a faculty and potentiality, but not a potentiality with reference to the future.

For Lacan, rhetoric is a means of delineating, through the laws of metaphor and metonymy, the instance of the letter, the instant(s) or "nowness" of the unconscious understood as a zeitloss, a tireless worker. For both Lacan and Aristotle, the formal properties of rhetoric appear in rhetoric's relation to geometry.

  1. Metzger points out that contemporary researchers in rhetoric often assume a definition of rhetoric for the purpose of classification; distinguishing, for instance, among a medieval rhetoric, a feminist rhetoric, or a phenomenological rhetoric. This kind of research, he believes, examines rhetoric in terms of what it was or might be, but not in terms of what it actually is.

As the first postmodern discussion of the relation of rhetoric and time, Metzger's book examines rhetoric as it is, breaking new ground as a study of Aristotle's notion of faculty (dunamis), of Lacanian rhetoric, and of the relation of rhetoric and geometry as it does so.

It is a book for all theorists (particularly poststructuralist theorists and others eager to know more about Lacan), Lacanians who have ignored Lacan's relevance to rhetoric, and historians critical of the division, in modern rhetorical studies, between theory and history.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
135

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Edition Availability
Cover of: The lost cause of rhetoric
The lost cause of rhetoric: the relation of rhetoric and geometry in Aristotle and Lacan
1995, Southern Illinois University Press
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. 125-130) and index.

Published in
Carbondale

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
808
Library of Congress
PN212 .M48 1995, PN212.M48 1995, PN212 .M48 1994

The Physical Object

Pagination
xvi, 135 p. :
Number of pages
135

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL1427116M
ISBN 10
0809318555
LCCN
93038231
OCLC/WorldCat
29259097
Library Thing
318501
Goodreads
434685

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