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2.2: The Critical-Cultural Approach

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    199288
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    Some of the assumptions of the Western, Eurocentric approach to rhetoric posit that we, as human communicators, are rational beings – that we will be presented with evidence that will aid us in making a “good” decision; when presented with the “truth”, we, as rational beings, will be convinced of the truth. This assumption is reflected in Aristotle’s approach to persuasion, which is grounded in the idea of the ethical integrity of the persuader and the ethical integrity of the message. Much of Aristotelian rhetorical practice emphasizes development of an argument and expression of that argument through oration. Prior to 1970, much of the rhetorical analysis of persuasive messages explored the influence and impact of oration on public, civic life (McKerrow 198).

    However, in the 1970s, with the growing influence of the critical paradigm, a shift started to occur. One shift questioned the assumption that persuasion is based upon the “truth” that humans are rational beings. First, Walter Fisher’s narrative paradigm argued that humans are storytellers and are more convinced, or persuaded, by a “good story” (Fisher 1) . Fisher also called out inequities in academe, stating:

    I was concerned with the concept of technical reason and the way it rendered the public unreasonable; with the idea of rationality being a matter of argumentative competence in specialized fields, leaving the public and its discourse irrational; with the apparent impossibility of bridging the gaps between experts and the public and between segments of the public; and with the necessity to learn what was supposed to be of the essence of persons–rationality–so that one class of citizens can always be superior to another" (Fisher 15).

    Then, in the early 1990’s, communication scholars Sonja Foss and Nancy Griffin proposed a new approach to examining rhetoric from a distinctly feminist perspective: invitational rhetoric. More recently, in the last couple of decades, there is more access and attention to the larger global community of rhetorical scholars, past and present, who have taken the opportunity to challenge ethnocentric Western approaches to rhetoric and persuasion. These approaches amplify non-Western approaches to rhetoric in persuasion. Let’s take a closer look at some of these approaches, starting from the past and working our way to the present.


    This page titled 2.2: The Critical-Cultural Approach is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Larissa Flavela (ASCCC Open Educational Resources Initiative (OERI)) .