Debuting in its first edition, this book is offers readers an advanced approach to public speaking. It covers the basics through the lens of rhetorical theory– and progresses into a sophisticated outline of understanding, constructing and delivering artful rhetoric. It details some of the most influential and progressive acts of public speaking in history, including Martin Luther King, Jr. and Rosa Parks. It encourages readers to be engaged citizens of society.
Provides the student with both principles and applications. Includes sppeches of Cicero, Pitt, Lincoln, Churchill.
A Speaker’s Guidebook with The Essential Guide to Rhetoric includes a full tabbed section that provides brief yet comprehensive coverage of rhetorical theory — from the classical to the contemporary — and its practical applications.
Public Speaking: A Rhetorical Approach
... Montgomery College Michael Butterworth, College of Lake County Mina Casmir, Pepperdine University Rick Casper, ... State University of New York College–Cortland Rhonda Parker, University of San Francisco David Payne, University of ...
A Rhetoric of Public Speaking
According to star staff writer Ruth Holladay Stephen J. Pearson is one of the new adult comic book readers . Pearson is 30 and an assistant actuary ( you know , he deals with how long we're going to live ) with the American United Life ...
A practical and up-to-date public speaking text based on rhetorical theory, with the theme of the role of choices and civic engagement/responsibility integrated throughout in narrative, features, and examples; features a description of the ...
1. Belinda Luscombe, “The Myth of the Slippery Bachelor,” Time, February 14, 2011, 51–53. 2. You can find Lisa Kudrow's 2010 speech online at: http://commencement.vassar.edu/ceremony/archive/2010/ kudrow.html. 3.
This handbook integrates the principles of classical rhetoric with those of contemporary public speaking and provides examples of how to apply these principles to various speaking situations. ...
A Leader's Guide Michael J. Hostetler, Mary L. Kahl ... Bollinger«s speech does not follow some of the guidelines given in this chapter. Why not? What orientation in regard to speaker, audience, and sponsor did Bollinger adopt?