Monday, August 31, 2015

Changing Reality, Or Stuck In It?

I've become pretty familiar with rhetoric in the past few semesters, but it's an elusive construct that I always have to redefine for myself at the start of each class.  The issues discussed in our readings were ones that I've encountered before, but a few key phrases caused me to want to play devil's advocate.
Reality can get kinda weird and produce stuff like this.  But even in the abstract, we would describe everything in this picture by using other things that already exist.
  Grant Davie says that "a rhetorical situation is a situation where a speaker or writer sees a need to change reality and sees that the change may be effected by rhetorical discourse" (265).  This is a pretty bold statement, because it assumes that all speaking or writing changes reality.  Does this mean that we are unable to talk or write 'casually' for lack of a better word?  Must each utterance be an effort to do something as drastic as changing the reality we know little by little?  I'd like to think that there are some moments of communication that occur simply because we are alive and passing time, taking a break from shifting reality.  But the more I think about this, the harder it is to deny that everything has some sort of chain reaction.  For example, I might be talking about the plot to The Scarlett Letter (not sure why) and cause my significant other to think internally, "Letter...Mail comes around noon...OH SHIT I forgot to put the check for the energy bill in the mailbox!" I changed reality without meaning to, and without "seeing" a need to change reality.  The point of all this is to say simply, yeah, we can change reality with writing and talking but at the same time, shit just happens whether rhetoric exists (or is invented) or not.

Taking another perspective on this topic, Porter seems to think that we may not be changing reality at all, because we are intertextually "within the confines of a well-regulated system" (40).  Within this system is the impossibility of originality, because anything we can think to create relies on thinking about creation, which already exists.  We cannot change reality because everything has already occurred before the point of occurrence, otherwise we could not understand what the hell was happening.  Porter goes on to say that these limitations aren't as bleak as they seem, because "Even if the writer is locked into a cultural matrix and is constrained by the intertext of the discourse community, the writer has freedom within the immediate rhetorical context" (41).  This brings to mind the image of a solitary confinement prisoner, begging for just one minute of time outside, while the guard shrugs and says, "I don't see what all the fuss is about.  You have 8X10 feet to walk around in there."

Maybe it's not that bad.  After all, Porter says that really successful writing can help to "redefine this matrix" (42).  To borrow Doug's pet peeve, how the fuck do we "describe the thing by using the thing we are trying to describe as a description?"  If all definitions exist in the matrix, simply arranging them in a different order does not redefine anything.

On an entirely different note, one more element of Grant-Davie's article stood out to me as a writer, where they explained that "Vatz argues that rhetors not only answer the question, they also ask it" (265).  This was essentially saying that a situation does not exist until a rhetor begins to think of something as a situation.  I think I can buy this, if we are talking purely about the issue of perspective.  This means that we are creating a situation by approaching the delivery of a message (be it orally or written) as a situation.  In essence, because we have a word to associate with a particular notion, that word being "situation," we create this construct ourselves.  Well, sure we do!  We construct everything we think we know!  I don't think that necessarily means that situations cannot exist without rhetors.  As writers, there will be countless situations that arise independent of us, that then cause people to turn to us to write something about their situation.  For example, I just had to write a eulogy today for a woman that I met once, 10 years ago.  The question that begs for a eulogy is death.  The answer for the creation of a eulogy is writing.  I provided the answer here, but did not ask any of the questions.  Whether I wrote the eulogy or not, the situation existed whether or not I did.

 

2 comments:

  1. Adam,

    As always, your writing provokes a response much longer than a comment's worth. But here's what I can say:

    This is genius: "The point of all this is to say simply, yeah, we can change reality with writing and talking but at the same time, shit just happens whether rhetoric exists (or is invented) or not." It seems to me, that you're saying for all our effort acting upon the situation, for all the energy we put into "changing reality," sometimes that chain of events works in our exact opposition, or suddenly amounts to a reality we never predicted, like death. At the same time we constantly make meaning through interaction and interpretation, the meaning that exists in the world also "makes us," as events occur outside our contact zone, but inevitably effect us.

    Also, I'm thinking about "redefining the matrix." Naturally, if this matrix were a closed system it would be impossible to create anything new, that was not simply the re-arranging of previous ideas and thoughts. But knowledge, text, is constantly open and permeable to all sorts of influences. Texts are always being made, new research projects started, even new fonts are created all the time. It seems to me, that the matrix is add-able, and not by really successful writing alone.

    What we're doing on these blogs is phenomenal-- sharing ideas about scholars, interweaving multiple modalities...we are creating a space where ideas are exchanged. If that's not adding to "the matrix," what is?

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  2. Before commenting on your blog post, I mentioned on Anjeli's that I supported technology and loved how many advantages it gave us, especially for writing. I take that back. This is the second time I am writing a response to you because, as I was wrapping up my thoughts after several minutes of typing PURE GENIUS, it deleted. The whole thing. Just fucking deleted. So, here we go again.

    I started off the last blog post with something completely irrelevant, which was "I like your music." So I figured I'd throw that back in for shits... Okay. Writing. Let me say, I loved reading your blog. You have some mind-blowing ideas that always get me thinking... Example: I LOVE your analogy with The Scarlett Letter. I can't tell you how many times I've experienced this same thing: Someone says something weird, out-of-the-blue, and random, that then causes a chain reaction of events/thoughts/actions/words (THIS IS CRAZY). But really, this also baffles me when it happens. This situation typically happens between my boyfriend and me (because we're weird, and I rarely talk to anyone else...). He or I will say something random and a random moment, which will then cause the other to think of something that needs to be said or done. We have changed reality whether we meant to or not, and, as you said, without "seeing" a need to. I agree with you: shit happens. A lot more than planned, purposeful reality changing (at least with me). I usually just stumble into shit and make it work... This stuck out to me, as Anjeli pointed out as well, "We can change reality with writing and talking but at the same time, shit just happens whether rhetoric exists (or is invented) or not." I agree with you wholeheartedly, but I think, for me, I might put a twist on this. I would say, "We can change reality with writing and talking, but at the same time, shit just happens whether exigence exists or not." Grant-Davie says there's a need to change reality. This is exigence, the demand for rhetoric/writing/speech. Because, as I learned from my last rhetoric class (also with Doug) rhetoric is fucking everything.

    I'm looking forward to reading more of your awesome thoughts.

    -Alex

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