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Hardback

Novels and Arguments: Inventing Rhetorical Criticism

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In this absorbing study–the first comprehensive exploration of the rhetoric of the novel–Zahava Karl McKeon investigates the complex interrelations of critical poetics, grammars, dialectics, and rhetorics to devise a systematic means of dealing with the structure of prose works as communicative objects. Using the vocabulary and conceptual resources of Aristotle and Cicero, she pursues this exploration to discover the kinds of arguments that characterize novels, to find a way of distinguishing novels from other discursive wholes, and to discriminate different genres of the novel. McKeon’s arguments are supplemented by readings of a variety of texts, including the novels and stories of Gunter Grass, John Fowles, Robert Coover, and Flannery O'Connor.

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
The University of Chicago Press
Country
United States
Date
1 September 1982
Pages
270
ISBN
9780226560342

In this absorbing study–the first comprehensive exploration of the rhetoric of the novel–Zahava Karl McKeon investigates the complex interrelations of critical poetics, grammars, dialectics, and rhetorics to devise a systematic means of dealing with the structure of prose works as communicative objects. Using the vocabulary and conceptual resources of Aristotle and Cicero, she pursues this exploration to discover the kinds of arguments that characterize novels, to find a way of distinguishing novels from other discursive wholes, and to discriminate different genres of the novel. McKeon’s arguments are supplemented by readings of a variety of texts, including the novels and stories of Gunter Grass, John Fowles, Robert Coover, and Flannery O'Connor.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
The University of Chicago Press
Country
United States
Date
1 September 1982
Pages
270
ISBN
9780226560342