Abstract

In his Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles Lettres, Hugh Blair works within the tradition of Isocrates, Cicero, and Quintilian in presenting rhetoric as a school subject that forms character and educates in citizenship. But by the terms of his title, “Rhetoric” and “Belles Lettres,” Blair signals a commitment to two different ideals of character—the ideal of civic republicanism of Roman rhetoric, on the one hand, and that of a middleclass, polite culture, on the other. As Blair wrestles with the tensions inherent in his program to reconcile the two in lectures 25–34, he inadvertently dramatizes the transformation from a rhetorical culture to a modern, bourgeois one.

Journal
Rhetorica
Published
2007-08-01
DOI
10.1525/rh.2007.25.3.269
CompPile
Open Access
Closed
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Citation Context

Cited by in this index (2)

  1. Advances in the History of Rhetoric
  2. Rhetoric Society Quarterly

References (8) · 1 in this index

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