05500nam 2200685 450 991045344220332120200903223051.090-272-7048-1(CKB)2550000001272797(EBL)1673650(SSID)ssj0001181578(PQKBManifestationID)12553052(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001181578(PQKBWorkID)11144217(PQKB)10084791(MiAaPQ)EBC1673650(Au-PeEL)EBL1673650(CaPaEBR)ebr10858537(CaONFJC)MIL594916(OCoLC)876719050(EXLCZ)99255000000127279720131220h20142014 uy| 0engurcnu||||||||txtccrLet's talk politics new essays on deliberative rhetoric /edited by Hilde Van Belle, KU Leuven, Campus Antwerpen [and four others]Amsterdam :John Benjamins Publishing Company,[2014]©20141 online resource (216 p.)Argumentation in context,1877-6884 ;volume 6Description based upon print version of record.90-272-1123-X 1-306-63665-5 Includes bibliographical references and index.Let's talk politics; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; List of authors; Introduction; Let's talk politics: Introduction; References; Part I. Theory; 1. Aristotle on deliberation: Its place in ethics, politics and rhetoric; References; 2. More than a nice ritual: Official apologies as a rhetorical act in need of theoretical re-concept; 1. Introduction; 2. Official apology/apologia - what's the difference?; 3. Official apologies are not simply large-scale interpersonal apologies; 4. The need for a broader theoretical framework for understanding official apologies5. Official apologies defined and exemplified 6. Official apologies read as a form of politics and a means of civic (re)construction; 7. Rhetorical resources for re-conceptualizing official apologies; 8. Conclusion; References; 3. Cultural diversity, globalization, and political correctness: Rhetorical argumentation in multicu; 1. Introduction; 2. Cultural diversity and argumentation; 3. Effects of globalization; 4. Political correctness and its consequences; 5. A rhetorical solution?; 6. Conclusion; References; Part II. Cases4. Dialogic voices: A pragma-dialectical approach to R. G. Mugabe's ceremonial speeches Introduction; Aims and method; The pragmatic context; Extended pragma dialectic theory; 'Zimbabwe shall never be a colony again'; UN Summit on climate change; Conclusion; References; 5. Prosodic enhancers of humorous effect in political speeches; Introduction; Research methods; Humor and its functions in rhetoric; Types of humor used in political speeches; Phonological markers and enhancers of humor; Research results; Discussion and conclusion; References6. Correlative markers in eu-parliamentary French debate: The case of non seulement mais in compari1. Purpose; 2. Material; 3. Theoretical framework; 4. Shared semantic features; 5. Text-organizational differences; 6. Pragmatic value of et même; 7. Pragmatic value of non seulement mais; 8. Concluding remarks; References; 7. British Prime Minister David Cameron's apology for Bloody Sunday; The rhetoric of collective apology; Prime Minister David Cameron's Bloody Sunday apology; Conclusions; References; 8. Entropa: Rhetoric of parody and provocationConsensus or conflict as the goal of public debate The rhetorical potential of ambiguity; Analysis of Entropa as an ambiguous vehicle of public debate; An ambiguous potential for public debate; References; 9. US National Security Strategy: Different presidencies, different rhetoric?; 1. Introduction; 2. The National Security Strategy report; 3. Materials and method; 4. Analysis; 5. Discussion and conclusions; Bibliographic references; 10. The Bridge: The rhetorical construction of Barack Obama's biography by David Remnick; A piece of biographical journalismTraditional rhetoric and the three types of rhetorical proofThe essay describes how Polish members of parliament (MPs) reinvented the institution of parliament (conceived of in its essentially discursive character as parleyment) in the course of the political transition of 1989. The reinvention of "parliamentary democracy" and deliberation in the chamber involved four interrelated developments: rearticulation of the "people" and thereby providing new basis for parliamentary "representation" and for the rhetorical agency of MPs; redefinition and rearticulation of the relationship between parliament and other organs of state power, especially government;Argumentation in context ;volume 6.RhetoricPolitical aspectsPersuasion (Rhetoric)Political aspectsCommunicationPolitical aspectsElectronic books.RhetoricPolitical aspects.Persuasion (Rhetoric)Political aspects.CommunicationPolitical aspects.320.01/4Belle Hilde vanMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910453442203321Let's talk politics1946932UNINA