The World and How We Describe It: Rhetorics of Reality, Representation, Simulation
By (Author) Barry Brummett
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th May 2003
United States
General
Non Fiction
Language teaching and learning material and coursework
Semantics, discourse analysis, stylistics
808
Hardback
168
Brummett explores the ways people use three key termsreality, representation, and simulationas rhetorical devices with political and social effect. Human perception, language, and aesthetics experiences are the bases for the fluidity among these terms. Each term's rhetoric is illustrated in an analysis of texts in popular culture: William Gibson's novels, the usenet group rec.motorcycles, and the film Groundhog Day. Brummett explores the ways people use three key termsreality, representation, and simulationas rhetorical devices with political and social effect. People write and speak as if there were such things as reality, representation, and simulation. People treat the terms as if they were clearly referential and as if those referents were clearly distinct. But what kind of political, social work do people do when they write and speak in those terms What kind of claim is being made, or accusation leveled when such a term is used How do the dimensions and parameters of meaning facilitated by each term work in the management and distribution of power These are questions of rhetoric, the manipulation of signs and symbols for influence and effect. Brummett illustates the rhetoric of reality in a critical analysis of William Gibson's science fiction novels. The rhetoric of representation is shown in discusions on the usenet group rec.motorcyles. The rhetoric of simulation is explained through the film Groundhog Day. Of particular interest to scholars, students, and researchers involved with rhetoric and popular culture, media, communication, and technology, and the literature of science and science fiction.
[p]resent the reader with complementary perspectives on the current theoretical problems of rhetorical studies....[p]resents us with a number of ways to think about our floating city and, in the end, how to negociate the many problems we face in here, in discourse. When we are no longer looking for the ground or fighting over who has the better view, we can focus on how to take better care of one an other on our speaking and writing.-Rhetoric Review
Brummett offers a philosophical discussion of how individuals unconsciously and sometimes mistakenly describe the world. He uses three key terms--reality, representation, and simulation--as they relate to the rhetorical strategies people employ in their fuzzy descriptions....Most valuable for those interested in the intersection of rhetoric and philosophy. Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.-Choice
"present the reader with complementary perspectives on the current theoretical problems of rhetorical studies....presents us with a number of ways to think about our floating city and, in the end, how to negociate the many problems we face in here, in discourse. When we are no longer looking for the ground or fighting over who has the better view, we can focus on how to take better care of one an other on our speaking and writing."-Rhetoric Review
"Brummett offers a philosophical discussion of how individuals unconsciously and sometimes mistakenly describe the world. He uses three key terms--reality, representation, and simulation--as they relate to the rhetorical strategies people employ in their fuzzy descriptions....Most valuable for those interested in the intersection of rhetoric and philosophy. Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty."-Choice
"[p]resent the reader with complementary perspectives on the current theoretical problems of rhetorical studies....[p]resents us with a number of ways to think about our floating city and, in the end, how to negociate the many problems we face in here, in discourse. When we are no longer looking for the ground or fighting over who has the better view, we can focus on how to take better care of one an other on our speaking and writing."-Rhetoric Review
BARRY BRUMMETT is Charles Sapp Centennial Professor in Communication and Chair of the Communications Studies Department, University of Texas, Austin. He has published extensively in the fields of rhetoric and communication. Among his earlier books are Rhetoric of Machine Aesthetics (Praeger, 1999) and Contemporary Apocalyptic Rhetoric (Praeger, 1991).