Edwin Black (rhetorician)

This article is about the American rhetorical scholar and critic. For the American journalist, see Edwin Black.
Edwin Benjamin Black
Born October 26, 1929
Houston, Texas
Died January 13, 2007(2007-01-13) (aged 77)
League City, Texas[1]
Nationality American
Occupation Rhetorician, university professor
Known for Rhetorical criticism

Edwin Benjamin Black (October 26, 1929 - January 13, 2007) was one of the leading scholars of rhetorical criticism. He criticized "Neo-Aristotelianism" for its lacking a larger historical, social, political, and cultural understanding of the text and for its concentrating only on certain limited methods and aspects, such as the Aristotelian modes of rhetoric: ethos, pathos, and logos. He urged critics to analyze both the motives and goals within situated cultural norms and ideologies.[2]

Biography

Born in Houston, Texas on October 26, 1929, Edwin Benjamin Black attended the University of Houston and graduated with a Degree of Philosophy in 1951. He earned his Master of Arts in Rhetoric and Public Address in Cornell University in 1953, and then he continued his Ph.D. study in Cornell University with a minor in philosophy and social psychology. He had a long teaching career started from Washington University in St. Louis (1956-1961). He then moved to the University of Pittsburgh as assistant professor in English Department (1961-1967) and finally to the University of Wisconsin Madison (1967-1994). He earned the Cornell doctorate in 1962.[3]

Black’s major intervention can be summarized into three parts:

Black’s main publications include: Rhetorical Criticism: A Study in Method (1965) and The Second Persona (1970).

Black died on January 13, 2007.[1]

Rhetorical Criticism: A Study in Method

This book was developed as a continuous project for Black’s Doctoral dissertation in 1962 from Cornell University.[5] The book focused on the examination of fifteen essays from A History and Criticism of American Public Address and discussed the limitation of Neo-Aristotelianism's theories on rhetorical criticism. Black concluded that Neo-Aristotelian criticism is “founded upon a restricted view of human behavior, that there are discourses, which function in ways not dreamed of in Aristotle’s Rhetoric, and that there are discourses not designed for rational judges, but for men as they are.”[6]

Black argued that neo-Aristotelianism placed disproportionate emphasis on the rationality of audience and limited the room for the development of “psychological criticism” and the study of social movements.[7] The book also accused Neo-Aristotelians of seeing historical facts in an artificial mode, which eliminated the possibility of recreative criticism.[8] This approach “paid no attention to the techniques of argument independent of their content; and circumscribed the assessment of effects to a discourse's impact on its immediate audience.”[8]

In addition to critique on traditional rhetorical criticism approach, this book also constructed an alternative approach, which he called the “rhetorical transaction.”[9] This alternative approach portrayed speeches under a continuum from “calm deliberation” to “extreme demagoguery,” using genre to classify and criticize based on situation.[10] This book opened the field of rhetorical criticism and freed scholars from constraints of single critical paradigm.[11]

The Second Persona

Black also wrote The Second Persona, which concentrated on a “constitutive" perspective, (Constitutive rhetoric) emphasizing the evaluation of the worldview contained in a text rather than the text’s spatio-temporally located effects.[12] The book opened the field to defining concepts of agency and identity.[12] This shift also encouraged critics to bring the study of ideology into rhetorical analysis, as critics could analyze the intended audience (as they were and as the speaker wanted them to be) as the “Second Persona” beyond the speaker's persona. These ideas were later extended into the analysis of “Third Persona” by Philip Wander and “Fourth Persona” by Charles Morris.[13]

Other publications

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 Lucas, Stephen E.; C. David Mortensen; Susan Zaeske (7 May 2007). "MEMORIAL RESOLUTION OF THE FACULTY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON ON THE DEATH OF PROFESSOR EMERITUS EDWIN BLACK" (PDF). University of Wisconsin Madison. Retrieved 27 July 2013.
  2. Jennifer Dewinter, A Bibliographic Synthesis of Rhetorical Criticism, Western Speech 29, no. 4: 227-231.
  3. Thomas W.Benson, 2007. "Edwin Black’s Cornell University”, Rhetoric & Public Affairs 10, no. 3: 481-488.>
  4. Theresa Enos, “Encyclopedia of Rhetoric and Composition: Communication from Ancient Times to the Information Age”, Garland Reference Library of the Humanities, no.1389: 77
  5. Thomas W.Benson, 2007. "Edwin Black’s Cornell University”, Rhetoric & Public Affairs 10, no. 3: 481-488.
  6. Edwin Black, Rhetorical Criticism: A Study in Method (New York: Macmillan, 1965) p131
  7. Stephen E. Lucas, 2007. "The Legacy Of Edwin Black." Rhetoric & Public Affairs 10, no. 3: 509-519.
  8. 1 2 Thomas W. Benson, 2001. "Edwin Black: A Tribute." Rhetoric & Public Affairs 4, no. 3: 535-539.
  9. Millard F. Eiland, Book Review Essay: Rhetorical Criticism,,Review Of Professional Resources, 179-180.
  10. Wayne E.Brockriede, Rhetorical Criticism, New Books In Review, 2003, v13 p2-13.
  11. Celeste M. Condit (2013): Pathos in Criticism: Edwin Black's Communism-As Cancer Metaphor, Quarterly Journal of Speech, 99:1, 1-26.
  12. 1 2 Celeste M. Condit (2013): Pathos in Criticism: Edwin Black's Communism-As Cancer Metaphor, Quarterly Journal of Speech, 99:1, 1-26.
  13. Charles E. Morris III, Pink Herring and the Fourth Persona: J. Edgar Hoover’s Sex Crime Panic.” The Quarterly Journal of Speech 88 (May 2002): 228-244.

Further reading

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