Commonplace Witnessing examines how citizens, politicians, and civic institutions have adopted idioms of witnessing in recent decades to serve a variety of social, political, and moral ends. The book encourages us to continue expanding and diversifying our normative assumptions about which historical subjects bear witness and how they do so. Commonplace Witnessing presupposes that witnessing in modern public culture is a broad and inclusive rhetorical act; that many different types of historical subjects now think and speak of themselves as witnesses; and that the rhetoric of witnessing can be mundane, formulaic, or popular instead of rare and refined. This study builds upon previous literary, philosophical, psychoanalytic, and theological studies of its subject matter in order to analyze witnessing, instead, as a commonplace form of communication and as a prevalent mode of influence regarding the putative realities and lessons of historical injustice or tragedy. It thus weighs both the uses and disadvantages of witnessing as an ordinary feature of modern public life.
Bradford Vivian
Commonplace Witnessing [PDF ebook]
Rhetorical Invention, Historical Remembrance, and Public Culture
Commonplace Witnessing [PDF ebook]
Rhetorical Invention, Historical Remembrance, and Public Culture
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Idioma Inglés ● Formato PDF ● Páginas 224 ● ISBN 9780190611095 ● Editorial Oxford University Press ● Publicado 2017 ● Descargable 3 veces ● Divisa EUR ● ID 5279602 ● Protección de copia Adobe DRM
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