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Hart -- The Functions of Rhetoric |
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The Functions of Rhetoric by Rod Hart from Modern Rhetorical Criticism, Glenview, IL: Scott Foresman, 1990.
We have discussed what rhetoric is and what it is not, where it can be found,
and what shapes it takes. It now remains for us to examine what rhetoric does,
how it functions in human society. Of course, we will be studying the uses of
rhetoric throughout this book, but here, briefly, we can examine some of its
less frequently noticed uses. 1. Rhetoric unburdens. People who make rhetoric do so because they
must get something off their chests, because the cause they champion overwhelms
their natural reticence. Such people refuse to let history take its slow,
evolutionary course and instead try to become part of history themselves. The
history they make may be quite local in character (for example, picketing a
neighborhood abortion clinic), but rhetorical people typically do not hang back.
They sense that the world around them is not yet set, and so they approach it
aggressively, often convinced that they can make a difference, always convinced
that they must try. On occasion, however, the need to speak produces ambivalence. For example,
Charles Manson, who in 1969 engineered a series of horrible crimes in California
(known as the Tate-LaBianca murders) and who is currently serving a life
sentence in prison, seems especially conflicted about such matters. Manson
recently consented to an interview with journalist Keven Kennedy, and his
remarks tell us much about his rhetorical mindset: Kennedy: Do you want to be released from prison? Manson: Released? I just want to be left alone. You see, I dismissed the
world a long time ago. Really I did. I dismissed it. It's gone from my mind. It
comes over and says, "You pay me some attention." I say,
"No." "Will you accept our God as being the God?" I say,
"All right. I'11 accept anything. Now, can I get on with my business?" [Manson,1985:28] At this stage in his life at least, Manson appears to have quit the business
of leadership. He seems unwilling to make the sorts of adjustments communication
requires. But less than two minutes later in the interview Manson had this to
say: Manson: I just learn to reflect people back at themselves. Because man is
not working--why tell anybody? If you start informing people that are
misinformed, you'd spend the rest of your life informing people that are
misinformed. I would feel that I had achieved something if we could stop the
misinforming of people and inform them properly [Manson, 1985:29, italics mine]. In this latter statement, Manson captures the rhetorical person's basic
instinct: to step out of the shadows of anonymity and make a difference by
"informing them properly." Although his years in prison have no doubt
quelled his ardor for social contact, Manson's desire to lead lurks just beneath
the surface of his consciousness. While he seems to have lost a bit of heart
over the years (for which we may all be thankful), even the fifty-year-old
Charles Manson harbors the persuasive instinct. In a sense, then, communication
is a kind of arrogant imposition on other people. When A tries to persuade B,
for example, A affirms (1) that something is wrong in B's world and (2) that A
can fix it. Thus, if it is true that the poet is an escapist, it is also true
that the rhetor is an infiltrator. Naturally, the arrogance of the rhetorical
act is normally well disguised by the practicing persuader, who is, after all,
only there to "help" ("You owe it to yourself to sign this
contract," "The handicapped do indeed appreciate your
contribution," "Do this for the Lord's sake"). Still, a
rhetorical engagement is no less intrusive just because its intrusions have been
camouflaged. 2. Rhetoric distracts. A speaker wants to have all, not just some, of
our attention. To get that attention, the speaker must so fill up our minds that
we forget, temporarily at least, the other ideas, people, and policies usually
important to us. Naturally, we do not just give away our attention, so it takes
rhetoric at its best to sidetrack us. One way of doing so is for the speaker to
control the premises of a discussion. As McCombs and Shaw [1972] have
demonstrated, the power of the mass media derives not so much from their ability
to tell us what to think but from their ability to get us to think about the
topics they favor. When choosing to report on industrial lead poisoning, for
example, a local TV station simultaneously chooses not to cover the crowning of
the Apple Queen or the win-loss record of the local Double-A farm club. By
"setting the agenda" in this fashion, by controlling the premises
pertaining to newsworthiness, the media can influence any conclusions drawn from
the premises they have set in place. So the rhetor constantly requests listeners to think about this topic, not
that one; to consider this problem, not those they are currently thinking about;
to try out this solution, not that endorsed by the opposing speaker. In this
sense, rhetoric operates like a good map. Maps, after all, have a distinctive
point of view: They "favor" interstate highways
(by coloring them a bright red) over rural roads (often a pale blue); they
emphasize urban areas (blotched in yellow) over small towns (a small dot); they
adapt their appeals to vacationers (by high-lighting Yosemite) rather than to
truckers (no diners are listed). Like the rhetor, the road map bristles with
integrity, implying by the precision of its drawings that it provides the
complete story: all the high way news that's fit to print. Rhetoric, too, tries
to narrow our latitudes of choice without giving us the feeling that we are
being thereby hemmed in. Rhetoric tries to control the definition we provide for
a given activity ("Your church offering isn't a monetary loss; it's a
downpayment on heaven") as well as the criteria we employ to solve a
problem ("Abortion is not a religious issue; it's a legal one"). By
also emphasizing one speaker category over another (for example, George Bush as
commander-in-chief of the armed forces versus George Bush as the Republican
legatee of Richard Nixon), persuaders invite us to focus on this and not that,
on here and not there, on now and not then. 3. Rhetoric enlarges. In some senses, modern persuaders are like the
heralds of old. They move among us singing the siren song of change, asking us
to open our worlds a bit and to study a new way of looking at things, to
consider a new solution to an old problem (or an old solution to a problem we
did not know we had). Rhetoric operates like a kind of intellectual algebra,
asking us to equate things we had never before considered equitable. Thus, for
example, Adolph Hitler rose to fame (and infamy) by linking German nationalism
with increased militarism and Germany's economic woes with Jewish clannishness.
Corrupt equations, but, for him, useful ones. Often, the associations encouraged by rhetoric are no less sophisticated, or
honorable, than those created by Adolph Hitler. Nevertheless, these linkages are
the workhorses of persuasion, devices suitable for asking listeners to expand
their horizons. For example, manufacturers of personal computers are now
virtually assuring unwary parents that computing skills will translate instantly
into educational achievement for their children. It is interesting to note that
persuaders rarely ask for major expansion of their listeners' world views. They imply that only a slight modification is in order.
Persuasion moves by increments of inches. Often, persuaders disassociate ideas
in order to expand the viewpoints of their listeners. For example, Bankamericard
changed its name to Visa in the early 1970s so that the more international
flavor of the new name would offset the growing anti-Americanism found in
Western Europe at the time. Similarly, during the neophyte's first meeting at
Alcoholics Anonymous, an attempt is made to break the intimate connection
between the person's self-image and the use of stimulants. Naturally, the alcoholic, like all listeners, initially resists such
"enlarging" perspectives. It becomes the persuader's task to
demonstrate that any such alterations are a natural extension of thoughts and
feelings the listener already possesses and that any such new notions can be
easily accommodated within the listener's existing repertoire of ideas. Thus,
for example, patently unnatural cosmetic products are sold to American women as
devices for enhancing their natural beauty. That is why rhetoric is called an
art. 4. Rhetoric names: To understand the power of rhetoric we must
remember that creatures and noncreatures alike (people, frogs, rocks, bicycles)
are born without labels. People are, as best we know, nature's only namers. And
they name things with a vengeance: Orville Reddenbacher's Popcorn, Sri Lanka,
the Children of God, black holes, the Utah Jazz, McCarthyism. People take their
naming seriously: Newly enfranchised Americans anglicize their names to ward off
discrimination; professional women often retain their maiden names to avoid
being seen as the captives of their mates; fights sometimes erupt when black
youngsters play a name-calling game known as "the Dozens." No doubt, naming is as important as it is because meaning is such a variable
thing. A tornado-ravaged town, after all, is but wind and torment until it is
publicly labeled by appropriate people ("The clear will of the Lord"
or "an obvious candidate for Federal disaster assistance"). Some
executions spawn massive religious movements (for example, the death of Jesus
Christ) or excite political passions (for example, the Rosenbergs during the
1950s), while other executions are met with mere curiosity (for example, that of
Gary Gillmore, the first person to be executed in recent times). The facts in
each of these cases were different, of course, but so too was the rhetorical
skill of the executed's namers and the aggressiveness with which they pursued
the naming. The naming function of rhetoric helps listeners become comfortable with new
ideas and provides listeners with an acceptable vocabulary for talking about
these ideas. Through rhetoric, "white flight schools" are transformed
into "independent academies"; "labor-baiting" becomes the
"right-to-work"; a "fetus" is seen as an "unborn
child"; "suicide" is replaced by "death with dignity";
and a vague assemblage of disconnected thoughts and random social trends is
decried as "secular humanism." A major challenge for the rhetorical
critic, then, is to study how namers name things and how audiences respond to
the names they hear. 5. Rhetoric empowers. Those who decry the art of rhetoric often do so
because its users embrace many truths, not just one. Traditionally, teachers of
rhetoric have encouraged speakers to consider alternative modes of saying things
and not to just utter the first thought that comes to mind. This attitude, too,
brings censure to the rhetorical arts. Those who embrace absolute standards of
right and wrong or totalistic systems of thought have always had problems with
rhetoric, because, above all, rhetoric permits and encourages flexibility.
Flexibility, in turn, provides options: to address one listener or several; to
mention an idea or not to mention it at all; to say something this way and not
that way; to tell all one knows or only just a bit; to repeat oneself or to vary
one's response. Rhetoric encourages flexibility, because it is based on a kind
of symbolic Darwinism: (1) speakers who do not adapt to their surroundings
quickly become irrelevant; (2) ideas that become frozen soon die for want of
social usefulness. Such flexibility, in turn, permits continual growth, for the individual as
well as for society. Rhetorical theorists contend that there are as many ways of
making an idea clear to listeners as there are listeners [Hart and Burks, 19723.
Moreover, because it encourages adaptability, rhetoric permits personal
evolution for speakers as well. Nineteen fifties racist George Wallace, 1960s
arch-conservative Barry Goldwater, and 1970s radical Tom Hayden all continued to
be prominent political spokespersons in the 1980s, not because they changed
their beliefs fundamentally, but because they found new ways of telling their
truths as they matured politically (and rhetorically). And when people's
fundamental beliefs do change over time, rhetoric can also accommodate such
reincarnations: of Pat Boone from a rock 'n roll idol to a religious evangelist,
of Gerry Rubin from a social revolutionary to a corporate yuppie, of Dan Quayle
from a campus playboy to a stodgy conservative. Social power, then, often derives from rhetorical strength. Grand ideas,
deeply felt beliefs, and unsullied ideologies are sources of power too, but, as
Plate has told us, none of these factors can be influential without a delivery
system, without rhetoric. Purity of heart, honest intentions, and a spotless
record of integrity are assets to a political speaker, but they are hardly
enough to sustain a campaign unless they are shared with the voters. As Bryant
[1972:23] remarks, if they are to be used with confidence "a bridge or an
automobile or a clothes-line must not only be strong but must appear to
be." 6. Rhetoric elongates. What does rhetoric make longer? Time. Time,
that most precious of all substances, can be extended--or, more accurately, seem
to be extended--when rhetoric is put to use. Consider the Reverend Martin Luther
King, Jr. When he came on the scene in the 1950s, King no doubt knew that civil
rights laws would not be enacted just because he mounted the public platform.
But King succeeded in making the future seem to be the present, because his
appeals reached so deeply into people's souls and because his futuristic images
were painted so vividly: "I have a dream ... that one day, right here in
Alabama, little black boys and black girls will be able to join hands with
little white boys and white girls as sisters and brothers. I have a dream
today!" [King, 1964:374]. Naturally, King's speeches did not immediately
change the legal and social landscapes. But for his followers, the devastations
of the past commanded less of their attention when they listened to him describe
a future of genuine possibility. In his presence, listeners lingered in the
future and felt better because of it. As Hart [1984a:764] says, rhetoric can
become a "way station for the patient." Most persuaders sell the future, to move listeners to a better place, a
better time, a happier circumstance. Whether it is more robust health through
Herbalife, a slimmer figure with Lean Cuisine, or fewer taxes with Bob Dole,
rhetoric transports us, momentarily at least, across the boundaries of time.
Admittedly, this is a kind of surrogate, or false, reality. But genuinely
effective rhetoric makes such criticisms of literal falseness seem small-minded.
When tempted with visions of untold wealth via Amway or a glorious afterlife via
Jesus, many people relax their guards. It is also true that rhetoric can be used
to appropriate the past. When doing so, most skilled persuaders use the
opportunity to do some historical housecleaning. Thus, as Warner [1976] tells
us, most patriotic celebrations in the United States omit from their oratory
stories of racial, ethnic, or religious persecution. The Fourth of July speaker
steers clear of these unquestionable historical facts, because ceremonial
rhetoric has its own, more up-beat, story to tell. Rhetoric tells a selective
history, taking us back in time for a brief, heavily edited, tour of history.
But as the good eulogist knows, not everything about the dearly departed need to
be told at the funeral. The eulogist reminds us of the deceased's grandest
virtues, his or her most endearing qualities, because only the best of the past
can make the present seem less tragic. So, while rhetoric often tells literal
lies, most of us would have it no other way.
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