Refiguring fantasy: Imagination and its decline in US rhetorical studies

被引:23
|
作者
Gunn, J [1 ]
机构
[1] Louisiana State Univ, Dept Commun Studies, Baton Rouge, LA 70803 USA
关键词
imagination; imaginary; Marxism; materialism; psychoanalysis;
D O I
10.1080/00335630308168
中图分类号
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号
05 ; 0503 ;
摘要
This essay retells the history of U. S. rhetorical studies as a negotiation over the meaning of the concepts of invention and imagination. By providing a genealogical outline of the transformation of the imagination in rhetorical theory, a trend toward an increasingly contingent, "posthumanist" understanding of the rhetorical agent emerges, reaching its fullest elaboration in symbolic convergence theory. Instead of accepting the possibility that some rhetorical processes are primarily unconscious, however, U. S. rhetorical scholars, including Ernest Bormann, continued to defend the fully conscious, autonomous subject or elided the question of agency by advancing "ideological" and "materialist" theories focused on abstract populations, publics, or audiences. The essay concludes by urging a consideration of the "imaginary," a psychoanalytic understanding of the collective unconscious, as a concept that may help to reconcile disciplinary tensions regarding the status of the rhetorical agent.
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页码:41 / 59
页数:19
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