Brooke Rollins

3 articles
University of South Carolina ORCID: 0000-0003-2646-0921
  1. Inessential Solidarity
    doi:10.5325/philrhet.45.4.0460
  2. Inheriting Deconstruction: Rhetoric and Composition's Missed Encounter with Jacques Derrida
    Abstract

    Against the backdrop of the passionate and conflicting assessments of Jacques Derrida that followed his 2004 death, this article reviews rhetoric and composition’s scholarly appropriation of deconstruction during the 1980s and early 1990s. Contending that the field primarily used deconstruction in the service of refutation, this article positions deconstruction as a style of inheritance that could allow for a more productive encounter with theory.

    doi:10.58680/ce20065830
  3. The ethics of epideictic rhetoric: Addressing the problem of presence through Derrida's funeral orations
    Abstract

    Abstract I identify three modern approaches used to theorize epideictic rhetoric and suggest that each approach has difficulty dealing with the category of presence assigned to the genre by Aristotle. Drawing on Thucydides and, through him, Pericles' funeral oration, I suggest that Jacques Derrida's funeral speeches provide a way of rethinking the epideictic genre's presence as rhetorical ethics. More specifically, I argue that the function of presence in epideictic rhetoric is to provide an ethical interruption, and that Derrida, as one of our most accomplished funeral orators, helps us clarify the category of presence as it is described in Aristotle's and Thucydides' discussions of epideictic oratory.

    doi:10.1080/02773940509391301