The ethos of drama : rhetorical theory and dramatic worth
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The work The ethos of drama : rhetorical theory and dramatic worth represents a distinct intellectual or artistic creation found in University of San Diego Libraries. This resource is a combination of several types including: Work, Language Material, Books.
The Resource
The ethos of drama : rhetorical theory and dramatic worth
Resource Information
The work The ethos of drama : rhetorical theory and dramatic worth represents a distinct intellectual or artistic creation found in University of San Diego Libraries. This resource is a combination of several types including: Work, Language Material, Books.
- Label
- The ethos of drama : rhetorical theory and dramatic worth
- Title remainder
- rhetorical theory and dramatic worth
- Statement of responsibility
- Robert L. King
- Subject
-
- DRAMA -- English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
- Electronic books
- English drama -- History and criticism | Theory, etc
- Ethics in literature
- Ethics in literature
- LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES -- Rhetoric
- Literature and morals
- Literature and morals
- Persuasion (Rhetoric)
- Persuasion (Rhetoric)
- Criticism, interpretation, etc
- Rhetoric -- Moral and ethical aspects
- Theater -- Philosophy
- Theater -- Philosophy
- Theater audiences
- Theater audiences
- Values in literature
- Values in literature
- Rhetoric -- Moral and ethical aspects
- Language
- eng
- Summary
-
- "This book is at once deeply conservative and surprisingly revolutionary: conservative because it grounds drama in a traditional study of rhetoric; revolutionary because it argues that drama can have an ethos, a quality of moral authority ... The quality of King's prose is simply superb: lucid and crisp, with just the right blend of theory, contextual matter, and close textual analysis. King himself is clearly a master of rhetoric." James C. Bulman, Henry B. and Patricia Bush Tippie Professor of English, Allegheny College
- For the first time in the history of drama criticism this book uses traditional rhetorical theory to evaluate moral values in plays from Shakespeare's time to the present. In an accessible style free of jargon, Robert King first reviews other theories and critiques of drama to show that they ignore or minimize the argument from moral worth (ethos), the rhetorical proof that earns a speaker or work its credibility. As the literary genre most dependent on an audience for its full realization, drama in performance, he argues, offers rich opportunities for rhetorical criticism while those plays of social or political relevance virtually demand an ethically grounded approach
- Proceeding from this premise, this innovative book insists on the continuing relevance of traditional rhetoric as crucial to an appreciation of aesthetic strategy and moral worth in plays from the Early Modern to contemporary periods. Guided by the steps of stasis theory, the author's analysis moves from matters of fact ("Is it?") to judgment ("What is it?") to the question of ultimate ethical weight: "What is it worth?" Ethos is applied as a standard for discovering a play's worth in its control of syntax, diction, and stylistic devices; likewise it is used to judge character and persuasive argument. Among the artists discussed: Shakespeare, Chekhov, Arthur Miller, David Mamet, Eugene O'Neill, Tennessee Williams, John Dryden, Thomas Otway, David Hare, Tom Stoppard, and Bernard Shaw
- Commenting in general on plays he has seen in performance, King applies ethical theory to the values of various dramatic techniques like costume, staging, action, and role playing. As an ultimate test of the theory, his concluding chapters study plays that respond to questions of overriding moral concern: the Holocaust, apartheid, and nuclear weaponry. --Book Jacket
- Cataloging source
- N$T
- Index
- index present
- Literary form
- non fiction
- Nature of contents
-
- dictionaries
- bibliography
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