This collection offers the first comprehensive discussion of the history, theory, and pedagogical applications of kairos, a seminal and recently revised concept of classical rhetoric. Augusto Rostagni, James L. Kinneavy, Richard Leo Enos, John Poulakos, and John E. Smith are among the international list of scholars who explore the Homeric and literary origins of kairos, the technologies of time-keeping in antiquity, the role of ‘right-timing’ in Hippocratic medicine, the improvisations of Gorgias, as well as the uses of kairos in Isocrates, Plato, Aristotle, Cicero, and the New Testament. Broad in its scope, the book also examines the distinctive philosophies of time reflected in Renaissance Humanism, Nineteenth-Century American Transcendentalism, Oriental art and ritual, and the application of kairos to contemporary philosophy, ethics, literary criticism, rhetorical theory, and composition pedagogy.
Daftar Isi
Acknowledgments
Foreword
Carolyn R. Miller
Introduction: The Ancient Concept of Kairos
Phillip Sipiora
1. A New Chapter in the History of Rhetoric and Sophistry
Augusto Rostagni
translated by Phillip Sipiora
2. Time and Qualitative Time
John E. Smith
3. Kairos in Classical and Modern Rhetorical Theory
James L. Kinneavy
4. Inventional Constraints on the Technographers of Ancient Athens: A Study of Kairos/ Richard Leo Enos
5. Kairos in Gorgias’ Rhetorical Compositions
John Poulakos
6. Hippocrates, Kairos, and Writing in the Sciences
Catherine R. Eskin
7. Kairos: The Rhetoric of Time and Timing in the New Testament
Phillip Sipiora
8. Kairos and Decorum: Crassus Orator’s Speech de lege Servilia
Joseph J. Hughes
9. Ciceronian Decorum and the Temporalities of Renaissance Rhetoric
James S. Baumlin
10. Chronos, Kairos, Aion: Failures of Decorum, Right-Timing, and Revenge in Shakespeare’s Hamlet
James S. Baumlin and Tita French Baumlin
11. Ralph Waldo Emerson and the American Kairos
Roger Thompson
12. In Praise of Kairos in the Arts: Critical Time, East and West
Gregory Mason
13. Changing Times in Composition Classics: Kairos, Resonance, and the Pythagorean Connection
Carolyn Eriksen Hill
14. On Doing the Right Thing at the Right Time: Toward an Ethics of Kairos
Amélie Frost Benedikt
15. A Bibliography on Kairos and Related Concepts
Tanya Zhelezcheva and James S. Baumlin
Contributors
Index
Tentang Penulis
Phillip Sipiora is Professor and Associate Chair of English at The University of South Florida. He is the coeditor, with Fredric G. Gale and James L. Kinneavy, of
Ethical Issues in College Writing.
James S. Baumlin is Professor of English at Southwest Missouri State University. He is the author of
John Donne and the Rhetorics of Renaissance Discourse and coeditor, with Tita F. Baumlin, of
Ethos: New Essays in Rhetorical and Critical Theory.