Rhetorical Agency as Emergent and Enacted

Abstract

Individual agency is necessary for the possibility of rhetoric, and especially for deliberative rhetoric, which enables the composition of what Latour calls a good common world. Drawing on neurophenomenology, this essay defines individual agency as the process through which organisms create meanings through acting into the world and changing their structure in response to the perceived consequences of their actions. Conceiving of agency in this way enables writers to recognize their rhetorical acts, whether conscious or nonconscious, as acts that make them who they are, that affect others, and that can contribute to the common good. Responsible rhetorical agency entails being open to and responsive to the meanings of concrete others, and thus seeing persuasion as an invitation to listeners as also always agents in persuasion.

Journal
College Composition and Communication
Published
2011-02-01
DOI
10.58680/ccc201113455
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Citation Context

Cited by in this index (45)

  1. Rhetoric Society Quarterly
  2. Rhetoric Review
  3. Computers and Composition
  4. Computers and Composition
  5. Computers and Composition
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  1. College Composition and Communication
  2. Rhetoric Review
  3. Rhetoric Review
  4. Philosophy & Rhetoric
  5. Rhetoric Society Quarterly
  6. College Composition and Communication
  7. Technical Communication Quarterly
  8. Rhetoric Society Quarterly
  9. Rhetoric Society Quarterly
  10. Research in the Teaching of English
  11. College Composition and Communication
  12. Rhetoric Review
  13. Rhetoric Society Quarterly
  14. Rhetoric Review
  15. Rhetoric Review
  16. Technical Communication Quarterly
  17. College Composition and Communication
  18. Rhetoric Review
  19. Rhetoric Review
  20. Technical Communication Quarterly
  21. Computers and Composition
  22. Communication Design Quarterly
  23. College Composition and Communication
  24. College Composition and Communication
  25. Computers and Composition
  26. Journal of Business and Technical Communication
  27. College Composition and Communication
  28. Literacy in Composition Studies
  29. Written Communication
  30. Rhetoric Society Quarterly
  31. Rhetoric Review
  32. Rhetoric Society Quarterly
  33. Computers and Composition
  34. Philosophy & Rhetoric
  35. Literacy in Composition Studies
  36. Rhetoric Review
  37. Technical Communication Quarterly
  38. Technical Communication Quarterly
  39. Rhetoric Review
  40. Advances in the History of Rhetoric

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