At the Rhetoric Garage, we put current political and cultural texts up on the lift and check them out with a variety of rhetorical tools and discourse diagnostics. And don't forget to have your ethos changed and your tropes rotated every 30,000 words!
Friday, April 27, 2007
Rush Limbaugh, Part Duh
Yesterday, we saw that he tried to write it off as a joke and/or an experiment on how liberals (e.g., Media Matters for America) take things "out of context."
The problem with that explanation is A) MMFA quoted him in context, providing a transcript an audio version of his remarks, and B) Limbaugh said that he really believed what he said.
Yesterday, he repeated the idea that he was simply "baiting" MMFA. As we noted yesterday, however, the motivation behind his comments are immaterial insofar as they are offensive no matter what the context is.
Limbaugh went further by saying that MMFA (and others) should learn to "stop being baited when I am baiting you."
He also claimed that "everyone who listens to me agrees with what I said, so where's the controvesy?"
Such shabby argument barely warrants a response, but just for giggles, let's point out that this argument is akin to saying to an African American "You should learn to stop being baited when I call you a n****r" or saying that as long as David Duke is speaking to a rally of fellow clansmen (even if it's in the public sphere, as is the case with anything broadcast on the citizen-owned airwaves), no one should object to his racist rantings.
tjr
Thursday, April 26, 2007
Monday, April 23, 2007
Rhetoric on the Radio

It's worth a listen.
Some questions:
What do you think about the characterization of ancient Athens in the piece, particularly in its alleged difference from contemporary America vis-a-vis rhetoric?
Republican pollster and spinmeister Frank Luntz is interviewed in the piece. Is what he does "rhetoric?" If so, is it good rhetoric? Bad rhetoric? Good rhetoric used for bad purposes?
At times, it seemed to me the piece suggested that "rhetoric" as it was defined in this context is a practice of putting style before substance and persuading people in at least as semi-underhanded way. How do you think rhetoric came across in this piece?
Friday, April 20, 2007
Dissemination of a Failure

Perhaps more accurately, it’s a description of a failure.
At first, I didn’t think there would be much to say about the horror at Virginia Tech from a communication/rhetorical perspective. Perhaps down the line, some sort of analysis of the media coverate might be interesting and important. Already, some have discussed how new forms of media like Facebook and Myspace played a role in disseminating information during and after the murders. But nothing substantive came to my mind.
As the week has worn on, though, certain bits and pieces suggest that ideas of communication, and its limitations play a role.
I’ve tried to formulate coherent thoughts on this, but I’ve failed. I’ve started this post in a number of ways, and deleted them all. All I have are fragments of ideas, loose threads that I can’t tie up, at least not yet.
If I was able to, I’d want to say something about how the killer’s, Cho Seung-hui’s, unwillingness or inability to communicate played a role in the tragedy. If one believes the scraps of reporting that people have put together on him, he didn’t speak much even as a child.
Classmates, roommates, and teachers all describe attempting to enter into dialog with him, only to be met by silence.
When asked to write his name, he wrote a question mark.
He majored in English, wrote plays, and used instant messaging, but rarely spoke directly to anyone.
A roommate described getting called on his cellphone by him, who insisted on referring to himself as “Question Mark.” While on the phone, the roommate tracked him down in a dorm lounge. When faced with a physical presence, Cho denied that he had been talking to his roommate on the phone at all.
If I had the ability, I’d say something about all of this, suggesting something about Cho’s relationship to communication and what it might say about what he did.
I’d say something about how the plays he wrote for class (made available on the internet—itself an ironic communication-related event), as execrable as they are in all sorts of ways, both turn on the malignant use of the spoken word—the ways language can be used to misrepresent the truth to attack or punish someone.
I’d note that the description of Cho turns him into an odd, malignant version of Bartleby from Melville’s story “Bartleby the Scrivener.” Bartleby, a copyist for a financial company, refuses to take direction from his employer, simply saying “I prefer not to” to any request. His apparent lack of life (he actually sleeps at the office) and unwillingness to express himself in any meaningful way makes him an object of both frustration and pity to his employer, who remains helpless to get Bartleby to engage with him, or anyone else, in even the most rudimentary ways.
Cho seems to have caused similar feelings in those around him. They attempted to engage with him, help him, understand him, but were ignored. Unwilling or unable to participate in dialog, he became a cipher, an absence of meaning. Yet, unlike Bartleby, his refusal to engage in dialog turned into an act of unspeakable violence, turning Bartleby’s “I prefer not” with the ultimate “You will not.” Rather than simply keeping his silence, he silenced others.
I’d try to use this comparison to make some sort of sense of things, but I can’t.
Bartleby brings to mind a work by one of my mentors, John Durham Peters, who notes in his wonderfully humane work on communication theory, Speaking Into the Air, that Bartleby represents the way in which imagining communication in terms of dialog is limited. To engage someone in dialog, you implicitly make a demand of them that they return the favor. It is an exchange. Bartley is unwilling or unable to participate in this exchange.
Peters suggests “dissemination” is a better model: spreading the seed of words without necessarily asking for or expecting anything in return.
Could this explain Cho’s angst in any way? Could the attempt by others to engage him in dialog, no matter how well intentioned, have reinforced the notion of being demanded to speak, of being asked—even commanded—to perform? For someone unable or unwilling to perform, did this simply deepen his alienation? And what would communicative “dissemination” looked like in this case? Would it have mattered? Or was Cho simply broken in mind and spirit from the very beginning? Is it accurate to write him off as a malevolent psychopath? Is it morally correct to do so? Or do we deaden ourselves to something important if we deny his humanity, no matter how twisted a form it took?
And what of Cho’s multimedia suicide note, sent to a broadcast network? Is this the dark side of dissemination? Is the suicide note the ultimate form of dissemination—of speaking into the air without hope or expectation of a reply? And is the package Cho sent, complete with video and audio, and broadcast across the airwaves of the world, the ultimate example of the ultimate form of dissemination?
I don’t know. I don’t have answers to any of these questions. If I were a more able thinker, I’d be able to assemble these shards of meaning into a coherent whole of some sort and make an argument for a way of illuminating at least one small part of the abyss last Monday opened in front of us. But I’m not able to do that. Certainly not yet.
If there is a more archetypal form of dissemination than the suicide note, perhaps it is prayer—a speaking into the air, this time with hope but still no assurance, that our words will find an audience.
And it is all I have to offer.
Thursday, April 19, 2007
Britain Ditches "War" Talk
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article1660976.ece
Thursday, April 12, 2007
The Duke Lacrosse Case: An Idelogical Critique
Such critical approaches would include feminist, Marxist, and postcolonial criticism, although ideological criticism need not fall into any of these categories.
Part of the role of the ideological critic is to use criticism to advance a social or political cause through questioning and investigating how language is used by power structures to conceal and maintain themselves. In other words, ideological critics tend to wear their policial hearts on their sleeve.
Sounds good to me.
One of the odd things about the discourse surrounding the Duke Lacrosse case that struck me early on was the extent to which conservative public voices came to the defense of the accused. Over a year ago, Rush Limbaugh referred to the alleged victim as (wait for it) a “ho,” adding:
I just, I'm looking at this case down there at Duke, [caller], and it's --
there's some things about it, some inconsistencies. You've got some timeline
differentiations and matriculations and, and so forth.
Several months ago, Glenn Beck referred to what was happening to the accused as a “lynching without the rope.”
With the announcement that all charges were dropped, many conservative voices in the blogosphere spoke almost jubilantly about this as if it were a political victory, and added to this personal attacks on the alleged victim.
Posting a photo of the accuser, the blog “Insignificant Thoughts” opined:
Make sure you make note of the woman in the picture. You’ll never see her again.
She’ll never be questioned. She’ll never be criticized. We’ll never hear from
her again. She wasted more than a year with her lies and almost destroyed three
innocent lives. I seriously doubt anyone will press charges, and we’ll now be
subjected to numerous lectures on how this lying piece of garbage being called
out for what she is will stop women who really are victims of sexual assaults
from coming forward, the assumption being that if these three guys were
convicted, innocent or not, we’d be better off.
The sentiment was similar over at “SisterToldjah”:
I’m hoping that the three accused players will sue the state and/or Mike Nifong
for the hardships they’ve suffered since being falsely accused and made out to
be guilty by Nifong himself in the early days of the ‘investigation.’ Because
it’s my feeling that in this case, justice has not been served - for the real
victims here: the three lacrosse players, whose names were dragged through the
mud thanks to a lying stripper and a deceptive attorney who wanted to get
re-elected even if it meant ruining three young lives in the process.
And at “Betsy’s Page,” the accused were lauded for their character:
We often mouth aphorisms about learning from adversity, but these three young
men have really demonstrated that they have indeed done so. Sadly, I expect that
we won't see any such demonstration of character from all those in the media and
among those in academia, particularly at Duke University itself, for their rush to judgment. A distressingly large number of professors at the university acted as if the players were guilty simply because an accusation had been made and the accuser
was a poor black woman and they were white well-to-do athletes.
This is just a smattering of what the celebratory mood seen in much of the conservative prattle-sphere.
In and of itself, there’s nothing wrong with these sentiments. When the system works to correct a wrong—even (and perhaps especially) one it’s implicated in itself—that’s something we should celebrate, to say nothing of being thankful that our justice system puts the burden on the state to prove guilt. Yes, it’s a terrible thing when innocent people are unjustly accused, and it’s a wonderful thing when the system works and undoes that wrong.
So, what’s at issue? For me, it’s best summed up in another post from a popular conservative blog, “Mr. Minority”. MM poses the rhetorical question:
As Fred Barnes said on Brit Humes show last night, how many other times has this
type of action against the innocent happened?
Well, MM, a great many times. Is it common for this to happen to affluent, white, educated men? Probably not. But unjust accusations against the innocent? All the time, my man.
Exhibit A: Guantanamo Bay.
And this is where the issue becomes interesting from a rhetorical point of view. The conservative concern with the rights of the accused, outrage at false accusations, and glee at the dropping of unjust charges is a jarringly juxtaposed with the rhetoric from many of these same mouths when it comes to the legal system for all.
How many times are liberal groups (e.g., the ACLU) lambasted for “coddling criminals” or putting “the rights of the crook ahead of the rights of victims” for raising the same issues that conservatives did in the Duke case? When people were getting tortured at Abu Ghraib, many of them completely innocent of any crime, how often did conservatives attack anyone who voiced the least concern about issues of justice as “anti-American” or “terrorist sympathizers?”
In short, conservative concern for the rights of the accused seems oddly sporadic, depending more on who the accused is than the principle itself.
Now, the reverse can be said of liberal/progressives. Many on the left were quick to support the accuser in this case and bemoaned the culture of privilege that they felt led a gang of simian preppies to sexually maul this poor woman.
If we just wanted to throw stones, we could just say “a plague on both your houses” and move on. But there are some important issues here.
First, why would those on the left tend to side with the accused when they (as those on the right observe) profess a deep concern with the rights of individuals who are accused by the state of wrongdoing?
The answer, I think, lies in the fact that what underlies liberal concern with the rights of the accused is a broader concern with the right of individuals in the face of power structures. Such powers are most obviously seen in the government (given its unique ability to punish individual citizens legally), but it doesn’t end there. Among other power structures are the “holy trinity” of social forces: race, class, and gender inequalities.
Seen in this light, the liberal tendency to side with the accuser seems less out of character. Yes, as the accuser, she is on the side of the state and is invoking its might to punish individuals. But she herself exists at the business end of the hegemonic stick, as a poor woman of color.
A radical feminist critique of the situation might suggest that, regardless of what did or didn’t happen at that lacrosse party, the woman in question *had been* violated. Wasn’t it her position in society that drove her to trade on her sexuality for monetary survival? In terms of power relations, how different is what happened at Durham different from the plantation master using his chattel to satisfy his libidinal longings?
I wouldn’t go that far because it dehumanizes everyone involved, making them into allegorical characters. From what I’ve heard, the guys on the lacrosse team tended to be assholes, but that doesn’t mean they deserve to be saddled with the guilt of all oppressors past and present.
On the other hand, one needn’t use hyperbole to understand that the woman in this case is someone who stood in an inferior power relation to those whom she accused in many ways. If a hallmark of liberalism is concern for protecting the individual from unfair consequences of arbitrary power, then one can understand the tendency of those on the left to find their sympathies inclined toward the accuser.
There’s actually a fair amount of overlap between liberals and conservatives (at least those of a certain stripe) on this issue. In their more libertarian incarnations, conservatives look on government’s ability to victimize and control the individual with suspicion. As a result, you find alliances among those on the left and right on issues such as the Patriot Act, which both groups see as a potentially dangerous abuse of hegemonic power structures against the individual.
Where conservatives and liberals part ways is on the question of what constitutes a “hegemonic power structure.” Liberals see these at work in the machinations of racism, sexism, class, and unchecked corporate power. All are examples of unwarranted power held by some citizens at the expense of others.
Conservatives, on the other hand, largely dismiss these, or at least rate them as of little concern compared with governmental power. For example, they tend to see class as a side effect of the free market—a result of choices made by the individual. In a free market, the individual can make choices that allow her or him recreate their class identity. To suggest that an individual is victimized by such a power structure is anathema. Worse, it is an open challenge to what they see as a valid and legitimate method of dispersing power and wealth.
And this is why we have conservatives so clearly taking the side of the accused in this case. If the apparent liberal flip-flop in this particular instance is based on the deeper philosophical concerns liberals have about power relationships and the individual, so is the conservative flip-flop.
What I mean is that conservatives are generally supportive of existing power structures and suspicious of those who challenge their legitimacy. Just as liberals sided with the accuser largely because of the fact that she is, in many ways, at the low end of the power hierarchies, conservatives side with the accused largely because of the fact that they are, in many ways, at the top of the power hierarchies—power hierarchies that in general benefit conservatives, or which are at least philosophically endorsed by them.
So the accuser and accused *do* end up becoming allegorical characters in a socio-political drama in the rhetoric of both sides, with the accuser standing in for those forces thought to challenge or subvert what conservatives consider the natural and rightful order of things, while the accused represent those who’ve justly reached the top of that order through their (or their ancestors’) abilities.
Liberals see it the other way, with the accuser representing those who have long been silenced, abused, violated, and kept down through the self-interested exercise of power by those who don’t necessarily deserve it (e.g., rich white-boy lacrosse players).
Both ways of framing the situation risk jettisoning the specific facts in favor of ideology, and confusing the outcome of a specific case with a win or loss for their particular set of values.
But to put my own ideological cards on the table (and that comes with the territory of doing ideological criticism), if one is faced with a choice of a political philosophy that seeks to constantly question how and why those with power exercise it over those who don’t, and one that seeks to defend those power structures to such an extent that it only recognizes the dangers of such structures when they turn on themselves, I think the choice is clear.
Questions:
Why did Limbaugh get away with calling the accuser a “ho” over a year ago, but Imus, in a less venomous use of the term, got his hat handed to him?
Should the accuser’s name/photo be used openly by the press (as it has on the web already)? Does this depend on whether it can be proved that her accusations were knowingly false and malicious? (The authorities in Durham claim that it’s possible that she in fact believed the various versions she told them, despite the fact that they weren’t consistent).
What other reasons are there for the politicization of this issue along liberal/conservative lines? What am I missing or wrong about? What else can be said?
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
Semiotic Clouds
Thursday, April 5, 2007
Limbaughtomy

There must be a technical term for a figure of speech that violates the very precept on which it’s based. Irony is sort of close, but that’s when the speaker knowingly says something at odds with the intended meaning. I’m looking for something that’s done without knowing it.
Hypocrisy is closer, but it’s a bit too broad. It refers to saying something that’s at odds with what the speaker does, thinks, or says in other circumstances. What I’m talking about is when the very statement is at odds with itself.
Paradox sort of captures it, but not quite. It suggests more of a puzzling quandary than a straightforward violation of a statement’s own content.
With the litany of Greek-based terms for rhetorical figures, you’d think that there’d be one that would label this phenomenon clearly. Perhaps there is, but I’m not aware of it.
Maybe one could be invented. To dust off my knowledge of Greek, maybe it would be called something like “autoparabaistis”— which would translate to something like “self violation” or “self transgression.”
Or maybe we could simply call such phrases examples of “Limbaughtomy.” It has a Greek ring to it, and the similarities with “lobotomy” add a nice touch.
This question came up after seeing reports of a recent example of such self-violation by Rush Limbaugh.
Commenting on the recent announcement by John and Elizabeth Edwards that her cancer has returned and that they still plan to go ahead with the presidential campaign, Limbaugh vomited forth the following:
Political people are different than you and I. And, you know, most people when
told a family member's been diagnosed with the kind of cancer Elizabeth
Edwards has, they turn to God. The Edwards turned to the campaign. Their
religion is politics and the quest for the White House.
Normally, taking Limbaugh's banal rhetoric apart would be beneath the dignity of this website, but the ugliness of this particular remark deserves a riposte. So, let the flensing begin.
To paraphrase Limbaugh, most people, when told that someone has incurable cancer, show compassion; Rush showed malignance (play on words intended). Putting political point-scoring (and relatively meaningless point-scoring at that) ahead of basic decency, Limbaugh attacked people he doesn’t know as Godless power-grubbers, and he does so for no other reason than the pleasure of doing it. This kind of vituperative rhetoric is, dare I say it, an addiction for El Rushbo.
It would be nice to simply write him off, as Keith Olbermann does, as a “comedian.” But to many millions of Americans, he’s not a comedian—he’s their primary connection to the public sphere.
Yet how do even Limbaugh’s fans not recognize the inherent idiocy of politicizing a woman’s cancer by attacking her and her husband of politicizing it?
The answer, I suppose, lies in the question itself: they’re Rush Limbaugh fans.
Some issues to discuss:
Do you think Limbaugh actually believes what he’s saying, or is this truly empty political rhetoric for its own sake?
To any Limbaugh listeners, do *you* really believe what Limbaugh said?
Disregarding the morally bankrupt and logically self-destructing comments of Limbaugh, to what extent does Elizabeth Edwards’s diagnosis affect what can and can’t be said of John Edwards?