Dramatism Of Kenneth Burke
Identification: Without It, There is No Persuasion Burke was less concerned with enthymeme and example than he was with a speaker’s overall ability to identify with an audience. Identification is the common ground that exists between speaker and audience. Substance: a person’s physical characteristics, talents, occupation, background, personality, beliefs, and values.
Identification: Without It, There is No Persuasion The more overlap there is between the substance of the speaker and the substance of the listener, the greater the identification is. Behavioral scientists have used the term homophily to describe perceived similarity between speaker and listener. Burke said identification is “consubstantiation.”
The Dramatistic Pentad Burke regarded persuasion as the communicator’s attempt to get the audience to accept his or her view of reality as true. The dramatistic pentad is a tool to analyze how the speaker tries to do it. The five-pronged method is a shorthand way to “talk about their talk about.”
The Dramatistic Pentad Burke’s pentad directs the critic’s attention to five crucial elements of the human drama: §Act (response) §Scene (situation) §Agent (subject) §Agency (stimulus) §Purpose (target)
Guilt-Redemption Cycle: The Root of All Rhetoric The immediate purpose of a speech may vary according to the scene or agent, but Burke was convinced that the ultimate motivation of all public speaking is to purge ourselves of an ever-present, all-inclusive sense of guilt. Guilt is his catch-all term to cover every form of tension, anxiety, embarrassment, shame, disgust, and other noxious feelings that he believed intrinsic to the human condition.
A Rhetorical Critique Using Dramatistic Insight Many rhetorical critics in speech communication have adopted Burke’s techniques of literary criticism to inform their understanding of specific public address events. Malcolm X, “The Ballot of the Bullet”
A Rhetorical Critique Using Dramatistic Insight Burke was perhaps the foremost rhetorician of the twentieth century. Burke wrote about rhetoric; other rhetoricians write about Burke.
A Rhetorical Critique Using Dramatistic Insight Burke’s writing invites active reader participation as he surrounds an idea. His concept of rhetoric as identification is a major advance in a field of knowledge which many scholars had thought complete. Of all Burke’s motivational principles, his strategies of redemption are the most controversial.