Atnaujinkite slapukų nuostatas

You Talkin' To Me?: Rhetoric from Aristotle to Obama Main [Kietas viršelis]

3.75/5 (2150 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 304 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 222x144x29 mm, weight: 427 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Oct-2011
  • Leidėjas: Profile Books Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1846683157
  • ISBN-13: 9781846683152
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 304 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 222x144x29 mm, weight: 427 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Oct-2011
  • Leidėjas: Profile Books Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1846683157
  • ISBN-13: 9781846683152
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Rhetoric is what gives words power. It's nothing to be afraid of. It isn't the exclusive preserve of politicians: it's everywhere, from your argument with the insurance company to your plea to the waitress for a table near the window. It convicts criminals (and then frees them on appeal). It causes governments to rise and fall, best men to be shunned by brides, and people to march with steady purpose towards machine guns.

In this highly entertaining (and persuasive) book, Sam Leith examines how people have taught, practised and thought about rhetoric from its Attic origins to its twenty-first century apotheosis. Along the way, he tells the stories of its heroes and villains, from Cicero and Erasmus, to Hitler, Obama - and Gyles Brandreth.

Recenzijos

Highly entertaining and erudite ... He handles the important ancient texts, which can be rebarbative in their raw form, with a deliciously light touch, without sacrificing seriousness or finesse ... Reading this book is the equivalent of lounging in a leather club armchair, wreathed in cigar smoke and a couple of whiskies down, alongside a companion who's being funny and clever about Homer and Hello! magazine by turns. -- Charlotte Higgins * Guardian * Entertaining ... You finish this book more than ready to rock a first in rhetoric. -- Hermione Eyre * Evening Standard * Witty and revealing ... the chapter on Arrangement alone would probably bump up most student degrees by a class, not to mention the average oration -- James McConnachie * Sunday Times * Leith gives modern relevance to an ancient practice. Though he is rigorous in his analysis of rhetoric, he is no dull pedagogue; his language is demotic, vernacular, colloquial ... Read this entertaining and instructive book and you will never again mistake an occultatio for an occupatio. -- Ian Finlayson * The Times * Genius ... Leith's great gift is the ability to plunder the everyday to illustrate the rarefied ... even after the most cursory dip into this, you begin to hear the world in a completely different, illuminated way. * Telegraph * this is the best available analysis, by a sensitive literary critic, of what rhetoric is, and how it works -- Boris Johnson * Mail on Sunday * A work of both form and substance, sizzle and sausage - to use metonymy - and full of practical tips for any speaker or writer, this is a model of its kind -- Ross Leckie * Country Life * irresistibly accessible...if you want to recreate the effects of Obama or Churchill, either by speaking in public or down the pub, this is the book for you * Metro Books of the Year * highly entertaining...written with such charm and persuasion...if you like words and enjoy language you will love this book * Avanti! Magazine * a sprightly, erudite and often very funny book about rhetoric...also an exceptionally astute examination of how politics works. I relished every page of it -- Christopher Hart * Literary Review * elegant, concise and frequently very funny -- John Preston * Spectator * entertaining -- Peter Carty * Independent * Erudite loopiness of the highest order...sure to enlighten -- George Pendle * FT * entertaining...winning humour and charm * Metro Non-Fiction Book of the Week * Engaging -- Ian Birrell * Observer *

Daugiau informacijos

A witty, elegant enquiry into the art of persuasion
Introduction 1(16)
Rhetoric Then and Now 17(24)
THE FIVE PARTS OF RHETORIC
41(144)
The First Part of Rhetoric: Invention
45(29)
Ethos
47(10)
Logos
57(9)
Pathos
66(8)
Champions of Rhetoric I: Satan -- The Original Silver-tongued Devil
74(7)
The Second Part of Rhetoric: Arrangement
81(26)
Exordium
84(2)
Narration
86(4)
Division
90(2)
Proof
92(6)
Refutation
98(6)
Peroration
104(3)
Champions of Rhetoric II: Marcus lulUus Cicero -- The Attack Dog of the Roman Forum
107(10)
The Third Part of Rhetoric: Style
117(17)
Decorum
117(7)
Jokes
124(1)
Sound Effects
125(3)
Controlling the Tense
128(2)
The Figures
130(4)
Champions of Rhetoric III: Abraham Lincoln -- `A few appropriate remarks'
134(9)
The Fourth Part of Rhetoric: Memory
143(15)
Champions of Rhetoric IV: Hitler and Churchill
158(14)
The Fifth Part of Rhetoric: Delivery
172(13)
THE THREE BRANCHES OF ORATORY
185(76)
The First Branch of Oratory: Deliberative Rhetoric
189(10)
Champions of Rhetoric V: Martin Luther King, Jr -- Daydream Believer
199(9)
The Second Branch of Oratory: Judicial Rhetoric
208(10)
Champions of Rhetoric VI: Barack Obama -- The Audacity of Trope
218(17)
The Third Branch of Oratory: Epideictic Rhetoric
235(13)
Champions of Rhetoric VII: The Unknown Speechwriter
248(13)
Thus It Can Be Shown ... 261(2)
Appendix: Glossary and Key Concepts 263(18)
Notes 281(7)
Index 288
Sam Leith is a former Literary Editor of the Daily Telegraph, and contributes regularly to the Evening Standard, Guardian, Wall Street Journal, Spectator and Prospect. He's the author of two nonfiction books: Dead Pets and Sod's Law and a novel, The Coincidence Engine.