In:Dialogue and Rhetoric
Edited by Edda Weigand
[Dialogue Studies 2] 2008
► pp. v–viii
Get fulltext
This article is available free of charge.
Published online: 9 October 2008
https://doi.org/10.1075/ds.2.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/ds.2.toc
Table of contents
Introduction: Rhetoric or how to integrate the different voices
Part I. Rhetorical Paradigms1
Rhetoric in the Mixed Game
The selection of agency as a rhetorical device: Opening up the scene of dialogue through ventriloquism
Dialogic rhetoric, coauthorship, and moments of meeting
The rhetoric of 'dialogue' in metadiscourse: Possibility/impossibility arguments and critical events
Rhetoric and ethic of dialog: Can conditions of performance serve as excluding criteria?
Common ground and (re)defanging the antagonistic: A paradigm for argumentation as shared inquiry and responsibility
What is the role of arguments? Fundamental human rights in the age of spin
Logical and rhetorical rules of debate
Rhetoric in a dialectical framework: Fallacies as derailments of strategic manoeuvring
Part II. Rhetoric in the Mixed Game: Communicative means, cultural values, and institutional games153
Strategic use of Korean honorifics: Functions of 'partner-deference sangdae-nopim'
Irony as a rhetorical device in dialogic interaction
Political rhetoric in visual images
Sociological concepts and their impact on rhetoric: Japanese language concepts
The rhetorical component of dialogic communication in Banks' annual reports
Attention-influencing as a rhetorical strategy in German and Turkish Parliamentary debates
Diatexts of media dilemmas: The rhetorical construction of euthanasia
Recontextualization of concepts in European legal discourse
A court judgment as dialogue
Part III. Round table discussion: Concepts of rhetoric, dialogue and argumentation283
Round table discussion
General Index
List of Contributors
