Rhetoric

University of California, Berkeley

This is an archived copy of the 2014-15 guide. To access the most recent version of the guide, please visit http://guide.berkeley.edu/.

Overview

The Department of Rhetoric is a leading center for interdisciplinary research and teaching in the humanities and social sciences. Linked by a common interest in the functions of discourse in all its forms, faculty and students engage the theoretical, historical, and cultural dimensions of interpretation and criticism, in fields as diverse as political theory, gender, law, media studies, philosophy, and literature. The Department is also committed to the study of rhetorical traditions, from the classical era to contemporary rhetorical theory. 

Undergraduate Program

Rhetoric : BA

Graduate Program

Rhetoric : PhD

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Courses

Rhetoric

RHETOR R1A The Craft of Writing 4 Units

Rhetorical approach to reading and writing argumentative discourse. Close reading of selected texts; written themes developed from class discussion and analysis of rhetorical strategies. Satisfies the first half of the Reading and Composition requirement.

RHETOR R1B The Craft of Writing 4 Units

Intensive argumentative writing drawn from controversy stimulated through selected readings and class discussion. Satisfies the second half of the Reading and Composition requirement.

RHETOR 2 Fundamentals of Public Speaking 2 Units

Basic principles of rhetoric as applied to the criticism and practice of public speaking.

RHETOR 10 Introduction to Practical Reasoning and Critical Analysis of Argument 4 Units

An introduction to practical reasoning and the critical analysis of argument. Topics treated will include: definition, the syllogism, the enthymeme, fallacies, as well as various non-logical appeals. Also, the course will treat in introductory fashion some ancient and modern attempts to relate rhetoric and logic.

RHETOR 20 Rhetorical Interpretation 4 Units

Introduction to the study of rhetorical interpretation, treating how the action of tropes, figures, and performance generates meaning in communication: from fiction and other forms of literature, to politics, to film, to visual and material culture generally.

RHETOR 22 Rhetoric of Shakespearean Drama 4 Units

This class examines the way in which a distinctively rhetorical concern with persuasion, tropes, topicality, and modes of appeal can be engaged in readings of Shakespearean texts. Using written documents from the period along with contemporary rhetorical criticism and theory, the class analyzes the importance of rhetoric in the production and performance of Shakespeare's plays, in their particular rendering of verbal conflict and the scene of persuasion, and in the analysis of their participation in larger cultural contests over the legitimacy of the prevailing political, legal, moral, or natural order.

RHETOR 24 Freshman Seminars 1 Unit

The Berkeley Seminar Program has been designed to provide new students with the opportunity to explore an intellectual topic with a faculty member in a small-seminar setting. Berkeley Seminars are offered in all campus departments, and topics vary from department to department and semester to semester.

RHETOR 39I Freshman/Sophomore Seminar 1.5 - 4 Units

Freshman and sophomore seminars offer lower division students the opportunity to explore an intellectual topic with a faculty member and a group of peers in a small-seminar setting. These seminars are offered in all campus departments; topics vary from department to department and from semester to semester.

RHETOR 98 Supervised Group Study 1 - 3 Units

Instruction for a small group of students on a topic initiated by those students.

RHETOR 103A Approaches and Paradigms in the History of Rhetorical Theory 4 Units

A broad consideration of the historical relationships between philosophy, literature, and rhetoric, with special emphasis on selected themes of the classical and medieval periods.

RHETOR 103B Approaches and Paradigms in the History of Rhetorical Theory II 4 Units

A broad consideration of the historical relationship between philosophy, literature, and rhetoric, with special emphasis on selected themes within the early modern and modern periods.

RHETOR 104 Rhetorical Theory and Practice in Historical Eras 4 Units

An examination of the relations between rhetoric, discourse, and knowledge in selected historical eras, for example the European Renaissance, the Atlantic Enlightenment, or Victorian Britain.

RHETOR 105T Rhetoric of Religious Discourse 4 Units

Consideration of the rhetoric of hermeneutics or biblical interpretation with special emphasis on the mythical, symbolic, and allegorical language as the bearer of persuasive intention.

RHETOR 106 Rhetoric of Historical Discourse 4 Units

A study of how historical knowledge is produced and interpreted. Topics might include narrative and representation, the uses of evidence, forms of historical argumentation, and historical controversies in the public realm.

RHETOR 107 Rhetoric of Scientific Discourse 4 Units

Examination of the characteristic functions of discourse in and about the natural sciences; with particular examination of the ways in which scientific language both guarantees, and at the same time, obscures the expression of social norms in scientific facts.

RHETOR 108 Rhetoric of Philosophical Discourse 4 Units

Introduction to theoretical issues involved in applying rhetorical analysis to philosophical discourse; intensive analysis of selected philosophical works.

RHETOR 109 Aesthetics and Rhetoric 4 Units

Study of the terms and means by which we make and defend judgments involving the exercise of aesthetic sensitivity or perceptiveness. Consideration of the relationship between aesthetic qualities and aesthetic value. Discussion of aesthetic criticism as the means by which the capacities and salience of works of art are called to our attention and brought into focus. Topics include questions of taste, expression, and affect.

RHETOR 110 Advanced Argumentative Writing 4 Units

Study and practice of advanced techniques of argumentation for students with well-developed writing skills. Ethical, logical and pathetic appeals; control of register and tone; assessment of a wide variety of real audiences; genre studies.

RHETOR 112 Rhetoric of Narrative Genres in Nonliterate Societies 4 Units

Investigation of the rhetorical and cultural principles common to various genres of narrative, both prose and poetic, in nonliterate societies. Mythic, epic and folk narratives considered as well as written works from cultures in transition.

RHETOR 114 Rhetoric of New Media 4 Units

This course examines a range of digital media practices including hypertext, interactive drama, videogames, literary interactive fiction, and socially constructed narratives in multi-user spaces. Through a mixture of readings, discussion, and project work, we will explore the theoretical positions, debates, and design issues arising from these different practices. Topics will include the rhetorical, ludic, theatrical, narrative political, and legal dimensions of digital media.

RHETOR 116 Rhetoric, Culture and Society 4 Units

Analysis of rhetorical practice in the context of social and cultural change with particular reference to the historical transition from pre-industrial to industrial society in the west.

RHETOR 117 Language, Truth and Dialogue 4 Units

Examination of philosophical dialogues from Plato to Heidegger. Focus on the interaction within the dialogue, the participation required of the reader/listener, and the relation of such interaction and participation to thinking, speaking and knowing.

RHETOR 118 Undergraduate Seminar on the Theory and Practice of Reading and Interpretation 4 Units

An introduction to contemporary modes of reading and interpretation in the humanities, from structuralism through psychoanalysis, with an emphasis on theories of the sign (semiotics). Examples drawn from such fields as contemporary literature, architecture, history, painting, film, and popular culture.

RHETOR 119 Rhetorical Places 4 Units

Studies in the history and theory of the rhetorics of place, space, and sites.

RHETOR 121 Rhetoric of Fiction 4 Units

Study of the form and content of fictional narratives. Definition and techniques including voice, point of view, and time orders. Attention to cultural and historical contexts of selected narratives to consider interplay of works, authors, and readerships.

RHETOR 122 Rhetoric of Drama 4 Units

Examination of the way character is created in drama by repetitive rhetorical patterns and the ways themes are defined by manipulation of such patterns.

RHETOR 123 Rhetoric of Performance 4 Units

This course introduces students to the interdisciplinary field of performance studies. While themes may vary, the course considers disciplinary genealogies from the performing arts, the social sciences, and speech act theory to investigate the many ways that humans constitute themselves and their world through performance.

RHETOR 124 Rhetoric of Poetry 4 Units

Consideration of the relationship between the texture of poetic discourse largely defined by figures of speech and overall poetic structures.

RHETOR 125 Poetics and Poetry 4 Units

Studies in the relationships between poetic theory and poetic practice from Aristotle's Poetics to the present day.

RHETOR 127 Novel, Society, and Politics 4 Units

This course examines the complex links between novelistic discourse, society, and politics. Topics to be studied may include the social and political vocation of the and the realist novel; autobiography and the rise of liberal individualism; political censorship; and the role of the novel in imagining the nation.

RHETOR 128T The Rhetoric and Politics of Interviews 4 Units

As a common form of interacting, documenting, and informing, the interview plays a central role in the process of social and cultural inquiry. The interview is here not only studied in its popularized use as a form of oral witnessing and of privileged access to personalities. It is also explored in its critical and potentially creative dimensions as part of a mise en scene or a setting in which interviewer and interviewees function as social actors.

RHETOR 129 Rhetoric of Autobiography 4 Units

Rhetorical analysis of autobiographical discourse, with specific attention to the evolution of the genre in relation to changing modes of human subjectivity.

RHETOR 129AC Autobiography and American Individualism 4 Units

Rhetorical analysis of autobiographical discourse in American cultures, with special attention to the ideology of individualism.

RHETOR 130 Novel into Film 4 Units

Close examination of the adaptation of written fiction to the cinema. Focus on the problems arising from the transformation of five novels, which will be read, into their filmed versions.

RHETOR 131T Genre in Film and Literature 4 Units

Study of a particular genre (e.g., detective/mystery, horror/thriller, melodrama) with attention to theories of genre in popular culture.

RHETOR 132T Auteur in Film 4 Units

The study of films from the perspective of directorial style, theme, or filmmaking career. This course may focus on a single or several directors.

RHETOR 133T Theories of Film 4 Units

Classical theories of film by Eisenstein, Arnheim, Kracauer, Bazin, Metz, and others. Only one or two films will be analyzed in great depth to test the power of various theories.

RHETOR 135T Selected Topics in Film 4 Units

A study of a film topic not covered by the other film categories. This course might focus on a particular cinematic "theme," or a nonhistoric and nongeneric category. Examples: Feminist Film Practice, Gay and Lesbian Cinema, Race and Cinematic Representation.

RHETOR 136 Art and Authorship 4 Units

Study of narratives and visual cultures of art and its authors, including questions of what is art, who authors it, the boundaries of works and artistic personae, and how aesthetic, economic, and legal regimes of artistic authorship are historicized.

RHETOR 138 Television Criticism 4 Units

An introduction to the close analysis and evaluation of television texts. Consideration of a range of examples drawn from classical television series, sitcoms, dramas, news programming, and contemporary reality television. Students learn the narrative, aesthetic, and stylistic aspects of television's story-telling modes and strategies through readings, screenings, short exercises, and a final project consisting of a substantial work of criticism and an oral presentation.

RHETOR 139 Rhetoric of Visual Witnessing 4 Units

Studies of the theory and practice of the rhetoric of visual evidence relating to catastrophe. Themes may include witnessing, testimony, the photographic record, news media, and archival knowledge around such subjects as genocide and crimes against humanity, war and other forms of political violence, the AIDS epidemic, natural disaster.

RHETOR 150 Rhetoric of Contemporary Politics 4 Units

Examination of the characteristic rhetoric of a variety of manifestations of modern politics. Emphasis on building a theoretical foundation for critically observing and participating in the contemporary political process.

RHETOR 151 Rhetoric of Contact and Conquest 4 Units

This course charts the discovery and conquest of the New World; it treats the ways in which New World peoples were understood--and exploited--by Europeans. It explores not only questions relating to the origins of New World peoples, but also climate and zonal theories of race, and racial ideas of degeneration and corruption. In examining Europe's multivalent relationship with the "other," the course investigates the legal, moral, and spiritual status of New World peoples.

RHETOR 152 Rhetoric of Constitutional Discourse 4 Units

The rhetorical context of . Examines the tradition of Anglo-American constitutional argumentation in the eighteenth century, its sources, and its implications. Readings include Locke, Hume, Montesquieu, pamphlets of the American Revolution, and Anti-Federalist writings.

RHETOR 152AC Race and Order in the New Republic 4 Units

This course will explore how the social issue of race in the new American republic shaped the political founding of the United States in 1787. We will investigate perceptions of race at the time of the founding, and try to understand the origins of those perceptions. We will examine how those same perceptions affected the founding and establishment of a new nation and how they have affected our contemporary social and political discourse.

RHETOR 153 American Political Rhetoric 4 Units

A survey of the ways in which Americans have discussed their existence as a distinct nation their rights and obligations, and the legitimate modes of political action open to them. Readings cover the 17th through the 20th centuries and may include discussion of sermons, novels, philosophy, social and political theory, autobiographies, declassified government planning documents, Congressional testimony, and films.

RHETOR 155 Discourses of Colonialism and Postcoloniality 4 Units

This course critically explores key concepts and figures used in the public discourse of European colonialism to justify territorial expansion in the 19th century such as "race," "culture," "civility," and "the Orient" and their disturbing legacies for the knowledges, practical projects, and problems of contemporary postcolonial societies in a globalizing world.

RHETOR 156 Rhetoric of the Political Novel 4 Units

Investigation of major 19th and 20th century works of fiction in which political stances are exploited as dominant themes; close reading of authorial viewpoints and rhetorical strategies.

RHETOR 157A Rhetoric of Modern Political Theory 4 Units

Study of the textual strategies of important works of modern European and American political theory from the 17th through the 19th centuries.

RHETOR 157B Rhetoric of Contemporary Political Theory 4 Units

Study of the textual strategies of important works of 20th century European and American political theory.

RHETOR 158 Advanced Problems in the Rhetoric of Political Theory 4 Units

Close study of selected works of modern political theory, including debates over the nature and interpretation of political theory and the role of the political theorist. Specific themes and readings vary from year to year.

RHETOR 159A Great Theorists in the Rhetoric of Political and Legal Theory 4 Units

This course explores the development of one or two theorists or an important theme or issue, with close readings of major texts as well as attention to important commentators.

RHETOR 159B Great Themes in the Rhetoric of Contemporary Political and Legal Theory 4 Units

This course concentrates on aspects of 20th century political, social, and legal theory that are too complex to be treated comprehensively as one section of the courses in modern theory.

RHETOR 160 Introduction to the Rhetoric of Legal Discourse 4 Units

The application of rhetorical methodology to all categories of legal texts.

RHETOR 162AC Rhetoric of American Culture 4 Units

This course explores the ways laws and regulations in the United States identify and classify--or fail to identify and classify--groups in American society. Readings include a wide array of theoretical and historical materials as well as legal and governmental documents.

RHETOR 164 Rhetoric of Legal Theory 4 Units

Rhetorical methodology applied to close analysis of the argumentative framework of important works in modern legal theory.

RHETOR 165 Rhetoric of Legal Philosophy 4 Units

Consideration of basic philosophical issues related to the political and moral foundations of the law.

RHETOR 166 Rhetoric in Law and Politics 4 Units

Examination of the role of rhetoric in the legal and political thought of a particular era or culture. Course may compare societies or periods. All foreign texts will be studied in English translation.

RHETOR 167 Advanced Themes in Legal Theory, Philosophy, Argumentation 4 Units

Thorough consideration of particular rhetorical themes in the field of legal theory, legal philosophy, and legal argumentation.

RHETOR 168 Advanced Topics in Contemporary Law and Legal Discourse 4 Units

Thorough consideration of particular rhetorical themes in the fields of contemporary law and legal discourse. Sample topics include entertainment law, First Amendment law, copyright law.

RHETOR 170 Rhetoric of Social Science 4 Units

Analysis of the ways in which political scientists, sociologists, anthropologists, economists and psychologists establish the authoritativeness of their claims. Focus is on the presentation of data as fact, the use of quantitative methods, and other "strategies" through which social knowledge is transformed into objective information.

RHETOR 171 The Problem of Mass Culture and the Rhetoric of Social Theory 4 Units

Study of the textual strategies whereby the masses and mass culture emerge as objects of anxiety, hope, and scrutiny for social theorists of the 19th and 20th centuries.

RHETOR 172 Rhetoric of Social Theory 4 Units

Rhetorical analysis of theorists from Durkheim and Weber, as well as Marx, Ricardo and Bentham, to contemporary representatives of social and economic thought.

RHETOR 176 Rhetoric of Material Culture 4 Units

Where did the first collections originate? Why did people begin to collect? How did--and do--museums and museum collections contribute to the definition of the cultural values/power of elite groups? How do we define ourselves--as citizens, as members of a discipline or tribe, as nations--with reference to collections? What values/ideologies structure the debates and conflicts over definition, meaning, and ownership of collections? These are questions we will try to answer in the class.

RHETOR 180 Critical Theories of Science 4 Units

This course will examine the foundation of science and technology studies. Our methodology will be borrowed from critical theory and the philosophical movements upon which critical theory itself depends. The reading will be directed toward understanding those texts which form the theoretical and methodological basis for a critical theory of science and technology. The great success of science in proliferating technology into the larger sphere of modern western society has for the most part legitimated its approach and claims to be the method of attaining knowledge, at least within our own techno-scientific culture. Along with science's accomplishments, however, have come new questions as to the potential of the knowledge it brings, the technology it engenders and the power it carries. Technology is one of the means by which science proceeds, but perhaps more importantly it is the juncture between science and society as well as theory and praxis. This course will investigate the means by which writers have reflected upon science and technology.

RHETOR 182 Rhetorics of Sexual Exchange and Sexual Difference 4 Units

This course examines the centrality of sexual difference and sexual exchange to the structuring of societies, cultures, and political life. Possible topics include theories of desire and corporeality; the figure of woman as object of exchange in historical and contemporary contexts such as Sati, prostitution, surrogacy and IVF, and the global traffic in female labor; and an examination of how sexual difference functions as a blind-spot in theories of culture, society, and economy.

RHETOR 189 Special Topics 4 Units

Group instruction and investigation of topics not accommodated in regular course offerings.

RHETOR H190A Honors Thesis 2 Units

Independent study under guidance of a faculty director culminating in a written thesis. Required of all rhetoric majors desiring to earn the A.B. degree with honors.

RHETOR H190B Honors Thesis 2 Units

Independent study under guidance of a faculty director culminating in a written thesis. Required of all rhetoric majors desiring to earn the A.B. degree with honors.

RHETOR 197 Field Studies 1 - 3 Units

Supervised field work in an off-campus organization or business. Field work should be relevant to themes or topics covered in the undergraduate curriculum studied in the department. Additional meetings with faculty sponsor required. Weekly journals and a final paper also required.

RHETOR 198 Supervised Group Study 1 - 3 Units

Instruction for a small group of students on a topic initiated by those students.

RHETOR 199 Supervised Independent Study 1 - 3 Units

For special projects that cannot be otherwise accommodated.

RHETOR 200 Classical Rhetorical Theory and Practice 4 Units

An introduction to the questions around which classical rhetorical theory and practice are organized. Through analysis of materials drawn principally from the Ancient Greek and Roman periods, possibly including later revivals of classical rhetoric, the course will examine the formation of rhetoric in the West as an intellectual stance from which to practice a range of related fields, including but not limited to philosophy, history, literature, politics, religion, law, science, and the arts.

RHETOR 205 Contemporary Rhetorical Theory and Practice 4 Units

An introduction to the questions around which contemporary rhetorical theory and practice are organized. Through an analysis of materials drawn principally from the 18th century to the present, the course will examine rhetorical inquiry in relation to critique as well as the disciplinary construction of knowledge-domains. The course will attend to rhetoric in relation to a range of fields, including but not limited to philosophy, history, literature, politics, religion, law, science, and the arts.

RHETOR C221 Aesthetics as Critique 4 Units

A close reading and discussion of the major texts of modern aesthetics, from the 18th century to the present, with emphasis on the Continental tradition of Kant, Adorno, and Derrida.

RHETOR 230 Rhetoric and History 4 Units

This course investigates both the concept of history and the practice of historiography, using an engagement with the literal and metaphoric archives of the past to consider their empirical and philosophical claims on the present. While the methods, themes, and historical reach may vary, the course requires Rhetoric graduate students to investigate pre-1900 material in some form and to consider both the pragmatics of conducting historical inquiry and the interpretive frameworks that structure them.

RHETOR 240D Rhetorical Theory and Criticism: Nonfictional Prose 4 Units

Advanced investigation of the rhetorical dimensions of various modes of discourse. Specific topics to be announced.

RHETOR 240E Rhetorical Theory and Criticism: Political Discourse 4 Units

Advanced investigation of the rhetorical dimensions of various modes of discourse. Specific topics to be announced.

RHETOR 240F Rhetorical Theory and Criticism: Legal Rhetoric and Philosophy 4 Units

Advanced investigation of the rhetorical dimensions of various modes of discourse. Specific topics to be announced.

RHETOR 240G Rhetorical Theory and Criticism: Rhetorical Theory 4 Units

Advanced investigation of the rhetorical dimensions of various modes of discourse. Specific topics to be announced.

RHETOR 243 Special Topics in Film 4 Units

A theoretical examination of a film topic which falls outside the purview of traditional categories of film analysis, such as "genre," "history," or "theory." Examples: Rainer Werner Fassbinder, The Essay Film, Feminist Film Practice, Cinema and the Phantasmagoria of History.

RHETOR 244 Special Topics in Rhetoric: Limited study 2 Units

This course studies various modes of rhetorical discourse. Specific topics to be announced.

RHETOR 250 Rhetoric of the Image 4 Units

A study of the visual image as a mode of discourse, together with an analysis of the terms in which images have been interpreted and criticized. Focus may be on the rhetoric of a particular image or set of images, or on more broadly theoretical writings about image.

RHETOR 295 Special Study 1 - 6 Units

Open to qualified graduate students wishing to pursue special topics under the direction of a member of the staff.

RHETOR 299 Directed Research 1 - 12 Units

Open to graduate students who have passed their Ph.D. qualifying examinations.

RHETOR 375 Teaching Rhetoric 2 Units

Instruction in teaching argumentative writing and rhetorical analysis.

RHETOR 601 Individual Study for Master's Students 1 - 6 Units

Individual study for degree or language examinations in consultation with staff member.

RHETOR 602 Individual Study for Doctoral Students 1 - 6 Units

Individual study in consultation with faculty director as preparation for degree examinations.

Faculty

Professors

David William Bates, Professor. Enlightenment, early Modern European intellectual history, 20th century European and American intellectual history, history and theory of media and technology, history of political thought.
Research Profile

Pheng Cheah, PhD, Professor. Nationalism, rhetoric, legal philosophy, feminism, 18th-20th century continental philosophy & contemporary critical theory, postcolonial theory & anglophone postcolonial literatures, cosmopolitanism & globalization, social & political thought.
Research Profile

Marianne Constable, Professor. Rhetoric, social and political thought, legal rhetoric and philosophy, theories of interpretation, Anglo-American legal traditions, contemporary law and society.
Research Profile

Linda Williams, Professor. New media, film theory, pornography, melodrama, sex in cinema, popular genres, surrealist cinema, serial television.
Research Profile

Associate Professors

Samera Esmeir, Associate Professor. Critical theory, Middle Eastern Studies, Legal and political thought, law and society, legal histories, colonialism and post-colonialism.
Research Profile

Michael James Mascuch, Associate Professor. Rhetoric, photography, autobiography, narrative and culture, media and society, documentation, early modern Britain.
Research Profile

Ramona Naddaff, Associate Professor. Rhetoric, aesthetics, theory of the novel, ancient Greek philosophy and literature, history of philosophy, contemporary French thought.
Research Profile

Michael Wintroub, Associate Professor. Religion, ritual, social change, rhetoric, history of science, early modern cultural history, travel, identity formation, alterity, cross-cultural contact, popular and court culture, state-building, humanism, vernacular consciousness and literature, mater.
Research Profile

Assistant Professors

Winnie Won Yin Wong, Assistant Professor.

Lecturers

Felipe Gutterriez, Lecturer.

Nancy A Weston, Lecturer.

Contact Information

Department of Rhetoric

7408 Dwinelle Hall

Phone: 510-642-1415

Fax: 510-642-8881

Visit Department Website

Department Chair

Marianne Constable, JD, PhD

7409 Dwinelle Hall

Phone: 510-642-2176

constable@berkeley.edu

Undergraduate Student Affairs Officer

Lisa Fox

7406 Dwinelle Hall

Phone: 510-642-3522

Graduate Student Affairs Officer

Marcus Norman

7407 Dwinelle Hall

Phone: 510-642-1416

mdn@berkeley.edu

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