All in All (More or Less) - Jost, Walter; - Prospero Internet Bookshop

All in All (More or Less): Rhetorical Considerations in Poetry, Thought, and Experience
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9783031562990
ISBN10:3031562992
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:693 pages
Size:210x148 mm
Language:English
Illustrations: 1 Illustrations, black & white; 2 Illustrations, color
700
Category:

All in All (More or Less)

Rhetorical Considerations in Poetry, Thought, and Experience
 
Edition number: 2024
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Date of Publication:
Number of Volumes: 1 pieces, Book
 
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Short description:

This book reinvents aspects of the rhetorical tradition as part of a philosophical pluralism oriented to ?All-in-Allness.?  Its chapters unfold some of the ethical and intellectual responsibilities philosophy and rhetoric share, their commitments toward literature broadly conceived, the limited authority of their interpretations, and the kinds of judgments they issue in.  Part One, drawing chiefly on Ludwig Wittgenstein and Richard McKeon, leverages a central line of argument regarding ?Rationality? in the pragmatism of Robert Brandom.  Part Two pivots to specific instances of the range of rhetorical argument found in surprising places and in sophisticated arrangements.  The book as a whole culminates in Part Three, where the author demonstrates how ?ordinary language criticism? fruitfully bears on cultural models?film, drama, novels, poetry?belonging to ?American Low Modernism.?   



Walter Jost is Professor of English at the University of Virginia, USA, and author of Rhetorical Thought in John Henry Newman and Rhetorical Investigations.  He has edited or co-edited seven other books, among them Rhetoric and Hermeneutics in Our Time and Ordinary Language Criticism: Literary Thinking After Cavell After Wittgenstein.  



 



 



 

Long description:

This book reinvents aspects of the rhetorical tradition as part of a philosophical pluralism oriented to ?All-in-Allness?. Its chapters unfold some of the ethical and intellectual responsibilities philosophy and rhetoric share, their commitments toward literature broadly conceived, the limited authority of their interpretations, and the kinds of judgments they issue in. Part One, drawing chiefly on Ludwig Wittgenstein and Richard McKeon, leverages a central line of argument regarding ?Rationality? in the pragmatism of Robert Brandom. Part Two pivots to specific instances of the range of rhetorical argument found in surprising places and in sophisticated arrangements. The book as a whole culminates in Part Three, where the author demonstrates how ?ordinary language criticism? fruitfully bears on cultural models  ? film, drama, novels, poetry ? belonging to ?American Low Modernism.?

Table of Contents:
Part 1.- Chapter 1: This Way Please: Possibilities of Pluralism.- Chapter 2: The Linguistic Turn after Richard McKeon: Richard Rorty and Robert Brandom.- Chapter 3: Aspect Perception in Brandom and Wittgenstein.- Part 2.- Chapter 4: Topics, Tropes, Arguments I: Terms (including a Companion to Chapter Four).- Chapter 5: Topics, Tropes, Arguments II: Sequences.- Chapter 6: Topics, Tropes, Arguments III: Consequences: The Prism-House of Language.- Part 3.- Chapter 7: Judgment Calls: Sweating the Little Things in Reginald Rose?s and Stanley Lumet?s ?Twelve Angry Men?.- Chapter 8: Nothing Doing in Edith Wharton?s Ethan Frome: ?I had the sense that the deeper meaning of the story was in the gaps.?.- Chapter 9: Not Without Reason: Thinking Elizabeth Bishop?s Weak-Transcendental ?Crusoe in England?.- Chapter 10: Grammar School for the Aspect-blind and A-rhetorical: Elizabeth Bishop?s ?Over 2,000 Illustrations and a Complete Concordance? (or, Allin All More or Less).