Introduction: 'Just Words'; Part 1. Eloquence and the Ancients: 1. 'I Tremble with My Whole Heart': Cicero on the Anxieties of Eloquence; 2. The Parthenon and the Outhouse: Cicero's Demosthenes and the Uses of Style; Part 2. Eloquence and the Moderns: 3. Edmund Burke and the Deliberative Sublime; 4. Debatable Land: Macaulay, Tocqueville, and the Art of Judgment; 5. Speaking 'As If': Carl Schmitt and Rhetoric as Ritual; Conclusion: On Not Listening.
Ranging from Cicero's Rome to contemporary politics, Words on Fire is a provocative rethinking of political eloquence for our time.
Rob Goodman is Assistant Professor of Politics and Public Administration at Ryerson University and a former US House and Senate speechwriter.
'A beautiful, complex, and powerful book about the beauty,
complexity, and power of words. This is a major scholarly
contribution to the rhetorical turn in political theory that offers
an original and at times startling reading of eloquence, its long
history as an object of study and practice, and its political
potential for contemporary democracy. Impeccably researched,
masterfully argued, but above all employing its own form of
captivating eloquence, this book is a delight to read from
beginning to end.' Simone Chambers, University of California,
Irvine
'An urgent and historically informed diagnosis of a contemporary
ill: the public breakdown of the rhetorical bargain between
speakers and listeners. Goodman's own eloquence in exploring its
conditions is wondrous. He reminds us that to open oneself up to
persuasion - much like seeking to persuade - is risky. But these
risks are essential in a free and democratic way of life.' Teresa
M. Bejan, University of Oxford
'This book identifies a lost intellectual history of the rhetorical
tradition, in which the speaker and audience strike bargains over
exposure to risks: the speaker confronts the risk of rejection, the
audience the risk of persuasion. Beginning with Cicero, orators
grappled with the challenge of eloquence before an unpredictable
public. In contemporary political life, however, rhetoricians have
the upper hand, as political speakers insulate themselves from
vulnerability, and the public bears all the risk. A remarkable
contribution to political theory's 'rhetorical revival,' Goodman's
work sheds new light on contemporary pathologies of political
persuasion.' Melissa Schwartzberg, New York University
'This beautifully-written, timely book draws our attention to the
importance of rhetorical relationships. Today, we face a false
choice between the spontaneous rhetoric of the demagogue and the
self-protective rhetoric of elites. The rhetorical relationship
between speaker and hearer has been all but forgotten. Goodman
offers an alternative vision of rhetoric as a bargain - a
relationship of mutual risk-taking in which everyone puts something
on the line. While Goodman makes a valuable contribution to the
history of classical and modern political thought, he also keeps
one eye firmly focused on today's troubles. It's a fine balance and
a rare achievement.' Alison McQueen, Stanford University
'A wide-ranging and incisive study of the role of eloquence in
public life. In an era marked by heated political exchanges and
driven by new technologies in communication, controversies are in
danger of increasing in intensity as opinions become embittered.
This book offers a broad perspective on rhetoric extending back
into classical antiquity to encourage reflection on the
responsibilities and possibilities of speech. With compelling
chapters on Cicero, Burke, Macaulay, Tocqueville and Schmitt, the
book directs our attention to the dynamics as well as the costs of
polarisation, indicating how we might better manage the role of
rhetoric in politics.' Richard Bourke, Professor of the History of
Political Thought, University of Cambridge
'We live in a moment characterized by increasingly sophisticated
political communications, in which elites deploy technology to
refine and target their desired and polarized audiences. This
tendency has real costs, as Goodman shows in this fine book. In
addition to shielding political elites from the risky give and take
of persuasion, Goodman argues that it creates a rhetorical opening
for self-designated outsiders - demagogues who purport to tell it
like it is. Goodman turns to the tradition of rhetoric to develop a
timely - and important - account of how we might reimagine the
nature of political rhetoric, and how this reconceived rhetoric
might address one of the fundamental problems American politics
faces today: political polarization.' Daniel J. Kapust, University
of Wisconsin-Madison
'This book stands at the intersection of the current revivals of
rhetoric in political theory, of Roman political thought, and of
civic republicanism. Although many books and essays are worthy
additions to these burgeoning fields, Goodman's Words on Fire is a
'must read' for both students and scholars who are at all
interested in the renaissance of these studies. For Goodman, the
Ciceronian rhetorical tradition offers itself as a critique of the
'technologization of politics,' which has come to include the use
of an 'algorithmic' rhetoric to deny agency to both
orator/politician and audience/citizenry. In opposition to this
undermining of political choice, Goodman shows how Cicero and his
successors present us with a rhetorical alternative, in which
political speakers exercise the virtues of risk and in which
democratic citizens make themselves vulnerable to altering their
opinions in response to the persuasive abilities of political
rhetors.' Gary Remer, Tulane University
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