Abstract

Women's rhetoric in the Middle Ages reflects their participation in the deliberative rhetorical genre inherited from classical antiquity. The deliberative tradition, which was often theorized by medieval rhetoricians as existing in consular practice, can thus serve as an example of women's rhetoric which, as Christine Mason Sutherland has noted, could take place in sermo. Women's letters were often hortatory, civic, and sometimes agonistic in tone. These rhetorical artifacts demonstrate that women operated in the rhetorical tradition as eloquent, powerful agents of persuasion in the civic arena, and they also show that, although unmoored from traditional spaces and practices associated with deliberation in antiquity, deliberative rhetoric was a more viable form of rhetoric in the Middle Ages than previously believed.

Journal
Rhetoric Society Quarterly
Published
2012-10-01
DOI
10.1080/02773945.2012.724513
Open Access
Closed
Topics

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Also cites 11 works outside this index ↓
  1. 10.1080/10417949409372947
  2. Composition-Rhetoric: Backgrounds, Theory, Pedagogy
  3. 10.2307/2903613
  4. 10.1080/00335630802210344
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  6. Fiefs and Vassals:The Medieval Evidence Reinterpreted
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  8. The Changing Tradition: Women in the History of Rhetoric
  9. 10.4135/9781412982795.d5
  10. 10.1525/RH.2012.30.1.1
  11. The Changing Tradition: Women in the History of Rhetoric
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