Making Rhetorical Scents: an Olfactory Grammar of Motives Based on Kenneth Burke's Pentad - Janet Miller - Books - VDM Verlag Dr. Müller - 9783639344127 - March 30, 2011
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Making Rhetorical Scents: an Olfactory Grammar of Motives Based on Kenneth Burke's Pentad

Janet Miller

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Making Rhetorical Scents: an Olfactory Grammar of Motives Based on Kenneth Burke's Pentad

Scent is inherently persuasive, but the language of scent is largely missing from rhetoric's vocabulary. This is because language cannot express the ?truth? of an odor. Identification of odor as substance is dependent on consubstantiality between the author and reader. We instead describe smells using metaphorical language, or by invoking episodic memories and emotional reactions. In this way, scent is dramatistic. In order to consider the possibility of a grammar of scent beyond metaphor, the author develops an olfactory pentad (Sniff, Context, Emanation, Odor Object, and Response) by applying the framework of Kenneth Burke's dramatistic pentad. In this way, scent is exposed as a powerful rhetorical substance separate from human motive, but motivating in and of itself. The author then explores implications for a rhetoric of scent beyond the literate tradition.

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released March 30, 2011
ISBN13 9783639344127
Publishers VDM Verlag Dr. Müller
Pages 80
Dimensions 226 × 5 × 150 mm   ·   127 g
Language English  

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