Rhetoric, Romance, and Technology
Title | Rhetoric, Romance, and Technology PDF eBook |
Author | Walter J. Ong (s.j.) |
Publisher | |
Pages | 339 |
Release | 1980 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Rhetoric, Romance, and Technology
Title | Rhetoric, Romance, and Technology PDF eBook |
Author | Walter Jackson Ong |
Publisher | |
Pages | 348 |
Release | 1980 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Rhetoric, romance, and technology. Studies in the interaction of expression and culture. (1. publ.)
Title | Rhetoric, romance, and technology. Studies in the interaction of expression and culture. (1. publ.) PDF eBook |
Author | Walter Jackson Ong (SJ.) |
Publisher | |
Pages | 348 |
Release | 1971 |
Genre | Expression |
ISBN |
Rhetoric, Romance, and Technology
Title | Rhetoric, Romance, and Technology PDF eBook |
Author | Walter J. Ong |
Publisher | Cornell University Press |
Pages | 363 |
Release | 2013-02-14 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0801466326 |
This collection of essays by Walter J. Ong focuses on the complex and dynamic relationship between verbal performance and cultural evolution. By studying the history of rhetoric and related arts from classical antiquity through the age of romanticism to the modern period, Ong both illuminates the past and helps explain late-twentieth-century modes of expression. Elegantly written and wide ranging, Rhetoric, Romance, and Technology traces the evolution of devices used to store, retrieve, and communicate knowledge. Ong discusses diverse topics including memory as art, associationist critical theory, the close relationship between romanticism and technology, and the popular culture of the 1970s. This book also contains essays about Tudor writings in English on rhetoric and literary theory, the study of Latin as a Renaissance puberty rite, Ramism in the classroom and in commerce, Jonathan Swift's notion of the mind, and John Stuart Mill's politics.
Rhetoric, Romance, and Technology
Title | Rhetoric, Romance, and Technology PDF eBook |
Author | Walter J. Ong |
Publisher | |
Pages | 348 |
Release | 1971 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Interactions between Orality and Writing in Early Modern Italian Culture
Title | Interactions between Orality and Writing in Early Modern Italian Culture PDF eBook |
Author | Luca Degl’Innocenti |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 175 |
Release | 2016-03-02 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1317114752 |
Investigating the interrelationships between orality and writing in elite and popular textual culture in early modern Italy, this volume shows how the spoken or sung word on the one hand, and manuscript or print on the other hand, could have interdependent or complementary roles to play in the creation and circulation of texts. The first part of the book centres on performances, ranging from realizations of written texts to improvisations or semi-improvisations that might draw on written sources and might later be committed to paper. Case studies examine the poems sung in the piazza that narrated contemporary warfare, commedia dell'arte scenarios, and the performative representation of the diverse spoken languages of Italy. The second group of essays studies the influence of speech on the written word and reveals that, as fourteenth-century Tuscan became accepted as a literary standard, contemporary non-standard spoken languages were seen to possess an immediacy that made them an effective resource within certain kinds of written communication. The third part considers the roles of orality in the worlds of the learned and of learning. The book as a whole demonstrates that the borderline between orality and writing was highly permeable and that the culture of the period, with its continued reliance on orality alongside writing, was often hybrid in nature.
The Return of Oral Hermeneutics
Title | The Return of Oral Hermeneutics PDF eBook |
Author | Tom Steffen |
Publisher | Wipf and Stock Publishers |
Pages | 392 |
Release | 2020-05-01 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 1532684800 |
Have Western exegetes turned an Eastern book into a Western one? Has our fondness for a fixed printed text capable of being analyzed with precision and exactitude blinded us to other hermeneutic possibilities? Does God require all people to be able to analyze grammar to interpret Scripture? Does God assume all people can interpret Scripture through oral means? The authors recognize the effects of centuries of literacy socialization that produced a blind spot in the Western Christian world—the neglect by most in the academies, agencies, and assemblies of the foundational and forceful role orality had on the biblical text and teaching. From the inspired spoken word of the prophets, including Jesus (pre-text), to the elite literate scribes who painstakingly hand-printed the sacred text, to post-text interpretation and teaching, the footprint of orality throughout the entire process is acutely visible to those having the oral-aural influenced eyes of the Mediterranean ancients. Could oral hermeneutics be the “mother of relational theology”?