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Summary of Political Rhetoric (Political Rhetoric - Bachelor Communication Sciences)

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Samenvatting Politieke Retoriek, Summary Political Rhetoric (English summary) Richting: Bachelor Communicatiewetenschappen Schooljaar: Universiteit Antwerpen Erg duidelijk, goed resultaat Lecture 1: Introduction to Political Rhetoric Lecture 2: Classical rhetoric, discovery and arrangement Lecture 3: Classical rhetoric, style and delivery and rhetorical political analysis Lecture 4: Mass media and rhetoric Lecture 5: Emotions and incivility Lecture 6: Populist rhetoric Lecture 7: Gender & rhetoric Lecture 8: The politics of climate children Lecture 9: Visual rhetoric Lecture 10: Deliberative democracy

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Table of Contents
Lecture 1 – Introduction of Political Rhetoric.........................................................................................3
1.1 The history of rhetoric..................................................................................................................4
1.2 Politics vs. the political..................................................................................................................6
Lecture 2 – Classical rhetoric, discovery and arrangement....................................................................8
2.1 What are the occasions, branches or genres of speech (Aristotle)...............................................8
2.2 Occasions of speech......................................................................................................................8
2.3 The issue.......................................................................................................................................8
Lecture 3 – Classical rhetoric, Style and delivery, and Rhetorical political analysis..............................12
3.1 Classical rhetoric.........................................................................................................................12
3.4 Delivery.......................................................................................................................................15
3.5 Rhetorical political analysis (RPA)...............................................................................................15
Lecture 4 - Mass media and rhetoric....................................................................................................17
4.1 The mediatization of politics.......................................................................................................17
4.2 The media’s ambiguous role.......................................................................................................17
4.3 What is news?.............................................................................................................................17
4.4 Why do politicians adapt?..........................................................................................................18
4.5 The rhetoric of politicians...........................................................................................................18
4.6 The rhetoric of mass media........................................................................................................19
4.7 Media: curse or blessing for political rhetoric............................................................................20
Lecture 5 – Emotions and incivility.......................................................................................................22
5.1 Democracy, an emotional business............................................................................................22
5.2 Deliberative democracy..............................................................................................................22
5.3 Neuroscience..............................................................................................................................23
5.4 Psychoanalysis (Sigmund Freud).................................................................................................24
5.5 Incivility in politics......................................................................................................................24
5.6 Is emotional rhetoric a curse or blessing?..................................................................................25
5.7 Exam question............................................................................................................................25
Lecture 6 – Populist rhetoric................................................................................................................26
6.1 What is populism?......................................................................................................................26
Lecture 7 – Gender & rhetoric..............................................................................................................31
7.1 History of gendered speech........................................................................................................31
7.2 Inequality in the media:..............................................................................................................31
7.3 Politics is not gender neutral?....................................................................................................31
7.4 Jacinda Ardern as an example for female politicians..................................................................32

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, 7.5 Feminism and rhetoric................................................................................................................33
7.6 Conclusions of gender roles as rhetorical means to persuade....................................................34
Lecture 8 – The politics of climate children..........................................................................................35
8.1 Child as a political subject...........................................................................................................35
8.2 Children as political object..........................................................................................................36
8.3 Other thinkers of children in politics..........................................................................................36
8.4 Comparison between the speech of Suzuki and Greta...............................................................36
Lecture 9 – Visual rhetoric....................................................................................................................38
9.2 The advantages of visuals for politicians....................................................................................38
9.3 Image as argument.....................................................................................................................39
9.4 The psychology of visuals............................................................................................................40
9.5 Journalistic bias in the visuals?...................................................................................................40
Lecture 10 – Deliberative democracy...................................................................................................41
10.1 What is politics?........................................................................................................................41
10.2 The problem of democratic practices.......................................................................................41
10.3 Issues with non-electoral participation.....................................................................................42
10.4 Deliberative democracy as a solution.......................................................................................43




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,Lecture 1 – Introduction of Political Rhetoric
The importance of political rhetoric:
There is no politics without persuasion:
- politicians try to persuade us
- we try to persuade politics
- we try to persuade each other

Why do we need to persuade others/ourselves?
 there is uncertainty in this world f.e.: inequality that needs to be changed, that needs to be in the
world?

Persuasion by speech vs persuasion by force:
By Perloff: “a symbolic process in which communicators try to convince other people to change their
own attitudes or behaviours regarding an issue through the transmission of a message in an
atmosphere of free choice”
 free choice is important
 het is vrijwilliger dan bij force: men kiest zelf of men overhaalt wilt worden
 men hecht meer belang aan het overhalen zonder kracht (ook als het ondemocratische landen
zijn)

By Mutz: “Democracy . . . is distinguished as a form of governance by the extent of persuasion
relative to coercion”

Dus: overtuiging met het spreken is de fundamentele politieke skill

What is rhetoric?
From Greek: retoriketekhne
with: rhetor = speaker
tekhne = art

Rhetoric
= learning the practical skills of persuasion
= studying the persuasiveness of speech (more an analysis of speech)

Rhetoric is not limited to the spoken word (oratory), but is also written words, visuals, the context…

Political rhetoric
= persuasion in the political realm
= not limited to politicians, but everyone who functions as political actors
f.e: Steven van Gucht als politieke actor die zeer overtuigend was tijdens de coronacrisis omdat hij
als enige wist hoe hij de situatie moest aanpakken

Main question: What makes a political speech persuasive (or not)?
f.e: the speech of Martin Luther King – I have a dream
Background: 100 years after the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation by Lincoln
Some persuasive elements: he has hope for the future, repetitions, powerful worlds, metaphors,
charisma, tries to create a group te reach out to others, addresses everyone (white, black, children,
Americans…), singing intonations…

Is political rhetoric a diverse research field?
 different backgrounds with different questions

3

, in: linguistics with rhetorical figures…
psychology with emotions vs the cognitive
political science with the questions of power
communication science with mass media
 each has their own terminology and research methods
!!! but they don’t always talk to each other, so a lot is different and mismatched
so: eclectic approach of this topic

Rhetoric as a contested notion:
Dus: rhetoric is vaak geassocieerd met de onwaarheid, een contrast met de werkelijkheid
 with empty promises
 everyone can be persuaded with misinformation, leads to violence….
But: there is no democracy without free speech

1.1 The history of rhetoric
Rhetoric in Greece 500 BC
 from aristocracy to democracy
with: demos = people
ekklesia = assembly
 only the rich people of people with a certain standing, but it comes with obligations (men moet
participeren in de samenleving)
 rhetorical skills were important: to defend yourself in court, so persuade people to vote…
with sophists as teachers like Gorgias, Protagoras….
- Sophos = wisdom
 culture of oral transmission
 different views of classical thinkers

Plato:
= had Socrates as a teacher who was reasonable and good and had to drink the poison
 rhetoric can persuade most people of anything it can do bad instead of good

Belief in one moral ‘truth’
- allegory of the cave
- only the ones who are wise enough can see the things and concepts in it’s pure form (only a small
elite)
 the society should be led by such man: philosopher-kings (other are guardians and traders)
 ideology comes for rhetoric
- dialectic method as a more sympathic reading:
 argument for alternative type of rhetoric: men heeft verschillende meningen en moet komen
naar de beste oplossing door of te overtuigen of samen te leggen

Criticism by Popper: men verdedigt enkel een kleine groep van mensen die iets kunnen zeggen
(kleine elite), de ander kunnen niks doen in de samenleving

Aristotle:
= student of Plato

More positive reading of rhetoric:
 a man is like a ‘political animal’
 ‘good life’ is life in accordance with the community


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