Report on the 1984 conference on gender and communication research |
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Authors: | Julia T. Wood Gerald M. Phillips |
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Affiliation: | Professor and Acting Chair in the Department of Communication Arts and Sciences, Queens College , City University of New York , Flushing, NY, 11367 |
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Abstract: | This essay maintains that a major shift has occurred in how Kenneth Burke explains symbol‐using. While previously viewing rhetoric as predominantly epistemic, since 1968 Burke has examined human communication as both ontological and epistemic. It is further posited that Burke's conception of symbol‐using is now dialectical, with both ontological and epistemic perspectives simultaneously cast as governing the symbol‐using process. Implications of this epistemic‐ontological view of symbol‐using are outlined for the functions of rhetoric, understanding of Burke's theory of communication, the long‐term effectiveness of Burke's concepts and methods, the literal functions of symbol‐using, the study of mediated communication, reconceiving the definition of a symbol, and for ideological and postmodern criticism. |
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Keywords: | Kenneth Burke epistemology ontology symbol‐using rhetoric |
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