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EP9: Nathan Stormer: Rhetoric by Accident

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Manage episode 345294754 series 3270223
Content provided by Ryan Leack & Ellen Wayland-Smith, Ryan Leack, and Ellen Wayland-Smith. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ryan Leack & Ellen Wayland-Smith, Ryan Leack, and Ellen Wayland-Smith or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Nathan Stormer, Professor of Rhetoric in the Communication and Journalism Department at the University of Maine, discusses with us his article “Rhetoric by Accident,” published in Volume 53.4 of the journal Philosophy & Rhetoric. Here, he articulates a view of accidents that shape rhetorical work, but which themselves are not purposive, motive-driven, directed, or ethical. As extra-moral events and material and/or discursive happenings, accidents are indifferent to purpose. Staying with accidents and our material openness and vulnerability to them, Stormer sustains a space in which to think about accidents, and the accidental, apart from their agential and ethical usefulness, thereby disentangling the accidental from core rhetorical formulations that orbit intentionality on the human stage. In doing so, Stormer illuminates the power of accidents beyond our responses to and appropriations of them.

  continue reading

12 episodes

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Manage episode 345294754 series 3270223
Content provided by Ryan Leack & Ellen Wayland-Smith, Ryan Leack, and Ellen Wayland-Smith. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ryan Leack & Ellen Wayland-Smith, Ryan Leack, and Ellen Wayland-Smith or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Nathan Stormer, Professor of Rhetoric in the Communication and Journalism Department at the University of Maine, discusses with us his article “Rhetoric by Accident,” published in Volume 53.4 of the journal Philosophy & Rhetoric. Here, he articulates a view of accidents that shape rhetorical work, but which themselves are not purposive, motive-driven, directed, or ethical. As extra-moral events and material and/or discursive happenings, accidents are indifferent to purpose. Staying with accidents and our material openness and vulnerability to them, Stormer sustains a space in which to think about accidents, and the accidental, apart from their agential and ethical usefulness, thereby disentangling the accidental from core rhetorical formulations that orbit intentionality on the human stage. In doing so, Stormer illuminates the power of accidents beyond our responses to and appropriations of them.

  continue reading

12 episodes

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