Rhetoric Reclaimed: Aristotle and the Liberal Arts Tradition

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Cornell University Press, 1998 - Education - 235 pages

Thoroughly embedded in postmodern theory, this book offers a critique of traditional conceptions of the liberal arts, exploring the challenges posed by cultural diversity to the aims and methods of a humanist education. Janet M. Atwill investigates a neglected tradition of rhetoric, exemplified by Protagoras and Isocorates, and preserved in Aristotle's Rhetoric.

This tradition was rooted in the ancient sophistic and platonic conceptions of techné, or productive knowledge, that appears both in literary texts from the seventh century B.C.E. and in medical and technical treatises from the fifth century B.C.E. Atwill examines these traditions, together with sophistic and platonic conceptions, and considers the commentaries on Aristotle's Rhetoric by E. M. Cope and William S. J. Grimaldi, where the concepts of techné and productive knowledge disappear in the modern opposition between theory and practice.

Since models of knowledge are closely tied to models of subjectivity, Atwill's examination of techné also explores the role of political, economic, and educational institutions in standardizing a specific model for subjectivity. She argues that the liberal arts traditions largely eclipsed the social and political functions of rhetoric, transforming it from an art of disrupting and reinventing lines of power to a discipline of producing a normative subject, defined by virtue but modeled on a specific gender and class type.

 

Contents

Rhetoric Humanism and the Liberal Arts
4
Techně and the Transformation of Limits
47
Arts of Invention and Intervention
70
Prometheus and the Boundaries of Art ΙΟΙ
101
Plato and the Boundaries of
120
Aristotle and the Boundaries of the Good Life
162
Aristotles Rhetoric and the TheoryPractice Binary
190
Arts of Virtue and Democracy
207
Bibliography
213
Index
224
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About the author (1998)

Janet M. Atwill is Professor of English at University of Tennessee at Knoxville. She is the coeditor of The Viability of the Rhetorical Tradition.

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