Submit an Article
Become a reviewer
Vol 160 Iss. 1
Pages:
18-19
Download volume:
RUS
Article

The subject of political rhetoric

Authors:
V. V. Danilina
About authors
  • Lomonosov Moscow State University
Date submitted:
2004-06-04
Date accepted:
2004-07-15
Date published:
2004-12-27

Abstract

The article considers the object and subject of political rhetoric as a scientific discipline, shows the differences between political rhetoric and the theory of political communication, and provides a classification of modern Russian political speech. The object of political rhetoric - oral and written speech of any genre, used as a means of obtaining and exercising state power and influencing power structures. The subject of political rhetoric is the realization of rhetorical categories "ethos", "logos", "pathos" and "image of the rhetor" and parts of the rhetorical canon in political speech, as well as the functions of political speech. Modern Russian political speech is divided into state and civil speech. State speech is divided into presidential, parliamentary, governmental and gubernatorial speech, civil speech - into pre-election and non-election speech. The basis for classification is the rhetor's position in relation to the state power.

Область исследования:
(Archived) Rhetorical classics and the contemporary status of rhetoric
Go to volume 160

Similar articles

On understanding the sociopsychological mechanism of business communication
2004 S. A. Yarusheva
On the idiostyle of the modern speaker as a linguistic personality
2004 A. A. Burov
Rhetor's image as an indicator of rhetorical literacy and speaker's speech culture (on the material of political discourse)
2004 O. I. Sharafutdinova
"Russian language and culture of speech" in universities of nonphilological profile: goals, objectives, content modules
2004 L. A. Vvedenskaya, L. G. Pavlova, E. Yu. Kashaeva
Toward the origins of philological education at the Mining Institute
2004 O. N. Bondareva
Rhetorical genres of Russian political oratory of the first half of the 20th century
2004 I. Yu. Chistyakova