SCHOOL OF COMMUNICATION
CMNS 332-4: COMMUNICATION AND RHETORIC
Prerequisites: 60 credit hours, including 2 of CMNS 220, 221, or 223.
During the past thirty years,
rhetoric has enjoyed something of a renaissance and found a welcome
audience in several formerly hostile academics fields. History,
philosophy, anthropology, and literary studies have changed their
respective views of rhetoric over the course of the last several
years, and have come to realize that the rhetorical enterprise –
identifying, addressing and persuading audiences – is actually
a central part of their intellectual heritage. In being revived,
rhetoric has come to occupy a central place in a number of academic
debates.
Examines rhetoric and
persuasion in the context of communication studies. We will begin
by considering several classical accounts of persuasion and rhetoric
in order to develop a fuller understanding of the promotional ethos
of the modern age. From there we will move on to look at how
different institutional modes of persuasive discourse have been
shaped by a variety of research agendas and underlying theories about
human nature. Required Text: Gladwell, Malcolm, The Tipping
Point (2002). New York: Little, Brown and Company. Several articles will be placed on
reserve in the library during the semester. Recommended Texts: Dillard, James Price, and Michael
Pfau, The Persuasion Handbook: Developments in Theory and Practice
(2002). SAGE Publications. Jasinski, James, Sourcebook on
Rhetoric: Key Concepts in Contemporary Rhetoric (2001).
This book
is available in the library reference section (for library use only).
PN 172J37. Marlin, Randal, Propaganda and the
Ethics of Persuasion (2002). Broadview Press. Evaluation: Mid-Term Exam 25% Project/Research Paper 30% Tutorial Participation 20% Final Exam 25% The School expects that the grades
awarded in this course will bear some reasonable relation to
established university-wide practices with respect to both levels and
distribution of grades. In addition, the School will follow Policy
T10.02 with respect to “Intellectual Honesty” and
“Academic Discipline” (see the current Calendar, General
Regulations section).