At home here and abroad the rhetoric of presence and narratives of place

Successful nature and travel writing evokes a sense of place, allowing a reader to "see" what he or she has not yet seen or cannot witness. This success depends on a writer's facility with the rhetoric of presence, the ability to develop language that evokes unseen, or as yet unimagin...

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Main Author: Doyle, William C.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/6010
https://trace.tennessee.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7943&context=utk_graddiss
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spelling ftunivtennknox:oai:trace.tennessee.edu:utk_graddiss-7943 2023-05-15T13:58:21+02:00 At home here and abroad the rhetoric of presence and narratives of place Doyle, William C. 2008-12-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/6010 https://trace.tennessee.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7943&context=utk_graddiss unknown TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/6010 https://trace.tennessee.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7943&context=utk_graddiss Doctoral Dissertations English text 2008 ftunivtennknox 2022-03-02T20:10:57Z Successful nature and travel writing evokes a sense of place, allowing a reader to "see" what he or she has not yet seen or cannot witness. This success depends on a writer's facility with the rhetoric of presence, the ability to develop language that evokes unseen, or as yet unimagined, places. My dissertation analyzes the specific ways that contemporary narratives of place develop presence. While critics have examined presence in narrative nonfiction (Anderson, Winterowd), travel writing (Pratt, O'Loughlin), speech (Mader), and material rhetoric (Jorgensen-Earp, Gross), few--if any--have offered book-length studies on the importance of the rhetoric of presence in place-based narrative nonfiction. This project argues that presence is a central figure in place-based narratives, integral not just for calling forth unseen or as-yet-imagined places but also for developing an author's ethical position.Chapter One links the rhetoric of presence to Chaim Perelman and Olbrecths-Tyteca's theory of presence, Quintilian's theory of enargeia, and Chris Anderson's analysis of creative nonfiction. In Chapter Two, I examine Richard Nelson's The Island Within to describe and analyze the catalog of techniques that bioregionalists use to develop the rhetoric of presence. In Chapter Three, I scrutinize work by Pico Iyer to explore whether "global soul" rootlessness necessitates a modified rhetoric of presence. The chapter also examines travel writers' ethical responsibility. Chapter Four considers narrative framing in creative nonfiction and discusses the ways that a writer's presence within a text can facilitate the recreation of material presence.Chapter Five examines writing about Antarctica in order to answer the following question: How does the rhetoric of presence change to accommodate the peculiar nature of extreme environments in ways that allow readers to experience these places? Additionally, this chapter considers how Antarctic tourism brochures use verbal and visual rhetorics of presence. Chapter Six argues for continued examination of the ways creative nonfiction uses the rhetoric of presence, calls for the continued inclusion of nonfiction narratives of place within composition classes, discusses several class assignments linked to the rhetoric of presence, and offers suggestions for further research. Text Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica University of Tennessee, Knoxville: Trace Antarctic Mader ENVELOPE(19.026,19.026,65.787,65.787) Pratt ENVELOPE(176.683,176.683,-85.400,-85.400)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Tennessee, Knoxville: Trace
op_collection_id ftunivtennknox
language unknown
topic English
spellingShingle English
Doyle, William C.
At home here and abroad the rhetoric of presence and narratives of place
topic_facet English
description Successful nature and travel writing evokes a sense of place, allowing a reader to "see" what he or she has not yet seen or cannot witness. This success depends on a writer's facility with the rhetoric of presence, the ability to develop language that evokes unseen, or as yet unimagined, places. My dissertation analyzes the specific ways that contemporary narratives of place develop presence. While critics have examined presence in narrative nonfiction (Anderson, Winterowd), travel writing (Pratt, O'Loughlin), speech (Mader), and material rhetoric (Jorgensen-Earp, Gross), few--if any--have offered book-length studies on the importance of the rhetoric of presence in place-based narrative nonfiction. This project argues that presence is a central figure in place-based narratives, integral not just for calling forth unseen or as-yet-imagined places but also for developing an author's ethical position.Chapter One links the rhetoric of presence to Chaim Perelman and Olbrecths-Tyteca's theory of presence, Quintilian's theory of enargeia, and Chris Anderson's analysis of creative nonfiction. In Chapter Two, I examine Richard Nelson's The Island Within to describe and analyze the catalog of techniques that bioregionalists use to develop the rhetoric of presence. In Chapter Three, I scrutinize work by Pico Iyer to explore whether "global soul" rootlessness necessitates a modified rhetoric of presence. The chapter also examines travel writers' ethical responsibility. Chapter Four considers narrative framing in creative nonfiction and discusses the ways that a writer's presence within a text can facilitate the recreation of material presence.Chapter Five examines writing about Antarctica in order to answer the following question: How does the rhetoric of presence change to accommodate the peculiar nature of extreme environments in ways that allow readers to experience these places? Additionally, this chapter considers how Antarctic tourism brochures use verbal and visual rhetorics of presence. Chapter Six argues for continued examination of the ways creative nonfiction uses the rhetoric of presence, calls for the continued inclusion of nonfiction narratives of place within composition classes, discusses several class assignments linked to the rhetoric of presence, and offers suggestions for further research.
format Text
author Doyle, William C.
author_facet Doyle, William C.
author_sort Doyle, William C.
title At home here and abroad the rhetoric of presence and narratives of place
title_short At home here and abroad the rhetoric of presence and narratives of place
title_full At home here and abroad the rhetoric of presence and narratives of place
title_fullStr At home here and abroad the rhetoric of presence and narratives of place
title_full_unstemmed At home here and abroad the rhetoric of presence and narratives of place
title_sort at home here and abroad the rhetoric of presence and narratives of place
publisher TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange
publishDate 2008
url https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/6010
https://trace.tennessee.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7943&context=utk_graddiss
long_lat ENVELOPE(19.026,19.026,65.787,65.787)
ENVELOPE(176.683,176.683,-85.400,-85.400)
geographic Antarctic
Mader
Pratt
geographic_facet Antarctic
Mader
Pratt
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
op_source Doctoral Dissertations
op_relation https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/6010
https://trace.tennessee.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7943&context=utk_graddiss
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