Rhetoric and Stylistics
Instance: 2010/2011 - 1S
Cycles of Study/Courses
Teaching language
English
Objectives
The seminar aims at, in the general context of the Course, providing a more systematic knowledge of disciplines often related to indistinct or vague notions, or marked by the feelings of mistrust associated with a formalistic aesthetics without any qualified import, either in the realm of everyday language or at the level of literary studies. Understanding literature will, therefore, find support in the consideration of textual strategies of persuasion or in the attempt to clarify an 'intimate consciousness' open to meaning or ironically elusive in face of interpretation and criticism. Form and content in literary discourse meet in a close association given 'a local habitation and a name' by rhetorical operations, composition techniques, and style modulation. Students are expected to understand Rhetoric in history and in our time, and to achieve some experience and skill in rhetorical textual analysis and in the examination of meaning and form of rhetorical and stylistic devices.
Program
The definition of meaning and relevance given to Rhetoric today does not go without the consideration of strategic moments disseminated in a long way of a discipline with such an enduring tradition in western culture. Platonic rejection of the arbitrary doxa of Sophism, allegedly the enemy of wisdom and truth, the reaction against the rigidity of thought in the prison of the written word, the inscription of Logics and Dialectics in the Aristotelian view, the crucial moral matrix of Isocrates and the stress on eloquence as a central role in the formation of active citizens to be found in Cicero, the comprehensive approach of Quintilian, or even the structure and organization of argument, in some decisive versions that reveal themselves in the subtlety and ubiquity of their existence in our time, document this progression. Then, the discrimination of our discipline in the amalgamate domain of neighbouring areas, or the clarification of the present status justify the importance of such factors in this context. Along the same lines, Stylistics, always to be considered in alliance with Rhetoric and in a similar field of research, will be examined in its wide range of definition, in the centrifugal movements in relation to the dominanat range in the use of language, as a crucial tool in literary translation, in the devices and figures that, through irony, metaphor and formal and semantic recreation of the linguistic corpus, modulate writing and speech, subvert orthodoxies and conventional codes and reshape their rhetorical contexts.
Mandatory literature
Renato Barilli; Rhetoric, University of Minnesota Press, 1989. ISBN: 0-8166-1729-5
Geoffrey Shepherd; Sir Philip Sidney - An Apology for Poetry, Manchester University Press, 1973
Richard Bradfoot; Stylistics, Routledge, 1997. ISBN: 0-415-09768-1
D. A. Russell/M. Winterbottom; Classical Literary Criticism, Oxford University Press, 1989. ISBN: 0-19-281830-9
Walter Nash; Rhetoric - The Wit of Persuasion, Blackwell Publishers, 1989. ISBN: 0-631-18625-5
Richard Bradfoot; Stylistics, Routledge, 1997. ISBN: 0-415-09768-1
D. A. Russell/M. Winterbottom; Classical Literary Criticism, Oxford University Press, 1989. ISBN: 0-19-281830-9
D. J. Enright and Ernst de Chickera, eds.; English Critical Texts - 16th Century to 20th Century, Clarendon Press, 1962. ISBN: 4167127
C. Jan Swearingen; Rhetoric & Irony - Western Literature & Western Lies, Oxford University Press, 1991. ISBN: 0-19-506362-7
Richard Andrews, ed.; Rebirth of Rhetoric - Essays in Language, Culture & Education, Routledge, 1992. ISBN: 0-415-06262-4
Wendy Olmsted; Rhetoric - An historical introduction, Blackwell, 2006. ISBN: 1-4051-1773-7
J. A. Cuddon; The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory, Penguin Books, 1991. ISBN: 0-14-051227-6
Teaching methods and learning activities
Seminar.
keywords
Humanities
Humanities
Humanities > Literature > European literature > Germanic literature > English literature
Humanities > Literature > European literature > Germanic literature > English literature
Evaluation Type
Distributed evaluation without final exam
Assessment Components
| Description |
Type |
Time (hours) |
Weight (%) |
End date |
| Attendance (estimated) |
Participação presencial |
0,00 |
|
|
|
Trabalho escrito |
98,50 |
|
2010-05-04 |
|
Total: |
- |
0,00 |
|
Amount of time allocated to each course unit
| Description |
Type |
Time (hours) |
End date |
|
Frequência das aulas |
30 |
2010-05-04 |
|
Estudo autónomo |
20 |
2010-05-04 |
|
Total: |
50,00 |
|
Eligibility for exams
Students should attend 75% of the scheduled sessions.
Calculation formula of final grade
Cooperation in classes - 50%; final work - 50%.
Examinations or Special Assignments
Not applicable.
Special assessment (TE, DA, ...)
Not applicable.
Classification improvement
Not applicable.