Intentions: Negotiated, Contested, and IgnoredPenn State Press |
Contents
Literary Rhetorics Ethics and Cultural Orthodoxies | 27 |
Kenneth Burke on Form Motive and Purpose | 81 |
HingeAcknowledging Prejudices | 105 |
Desiring Less and Accruing More | 143 |
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Common terms and phrases
acknowledges action aesthetic agency agent analytic philosophy analyze argues argument Aristotle articulate aspects audience authorial intention belief Booth Burke's Burkean Cambridge Carnap claim communication concept concerned context create criteria critique cultural motives defines definition deliberation deliberative demonstrate describe desire despite develop discipline discourse discussion effect emphasizes engage enthymeme ethics feminist G. E. M. Anscombe Gadamer Gadamer's Garver historical human I. A. Richards interactions interlocutors interpretation interpretive community Kenneth Burke language language-games limited linguistic logic Mailloux Malcolm meaning metanarrative metaphor mysticism nature negation negativity negotiation negotiation of meaning nonsense paradox persuasion philosophy philosophy of mind poetic political position potential practices prejudices problem purposes reader reading recognize relationship response rhetoric and hermeneutics rhetoric's rhetorical theory rhetoricians Richards Russell Russell's sense shared social speaking speech acts stories textual thinking tion Tractatus tradition translation understanding University Press Vienna Circle Wittgen Wittgenstein Wittgenstein's intentions writes