ENGL 564 -- Quarter 2007

Current Rhetorical Theory Dillon MW 3:30-5:20

Visual Rhetoric

Beginning with the basic theory of rhetoric drawn from Perelman and Olbrects-Tyteca's New Rhetoric, we will extend it to writing which combines image, text, and sometimes sound (“imagetext”). Such writing has long been a staple of advertising, network news, and propaganda, but our focus will be on its use in making arguments and addressing issues in the public sphere. Guiding questions include:
--What are the strengths and limitations of such writing?
--Are the signifiers slipperier in multimodal writing?
--How can we teach it, respond to it, grade it?
--How to describe the arrangement of parts in multimodal writing? Is juxtaposition enough?
--What is the rhetoric of bullet points? Of PowerPoints™? Of sans-serif fonts?
In addition to readings from the texts listed above, seminar members should plan some time for serious on-line viewing and reviewing. Paper topics may discuss a point of theory or a pedagogical issue or issues about writing multimodally.

Texts:

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