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The ever-widening application of conversational style created a conversational EnlightenmentThe Conversational Enlightenment traces the spread of the concept of conversation during the Enlightenment, including the project of politeness, the fine arts, philosophy and public opinion. The book narrates this triumph of conversational style and thought partly as a succession to the oratorical rhetoric that characterised the Renaissance and partly as the victory of the only mode of speech that recognised women as women, and not as imitation men. It also rewrites Jürgen Habermas’ history of the public sphere as the history of rational conversation.Key Features:The first book-length intellectual history of Enlightenment conversation in EnglishSynthesises a great deal of Enlightenment intellectual history within the frameworks of rhetoric and conversationPuts women’s speech at the heart of the history of Enlightenment rhetoricFuses Habermas’ historical-theoretical framework to the history of rhetoric, revising both
David Randall is Director of Research at the National Association of Scholars. His publications include Credibility in Elizabethan and Early Stuart Military News (2008) and English Military News Pamphlets, 1513-1637 (2011).
Introduction 1 The Society and Culture of Conversation2 The Oratorical Arts3 The Conversational Arts4 The Philosophy of Conversation5 Public OpinionConclusionBibliographyIndex
In this bold and wide-ranging investigation, Randall shows how the Western rhetorical tradition illuminates conversation and its impact on literature, philosophy and art in eighteenth-century Britain, France and America. What emerges is an account of the politics of conversation that reconfigures our understanding of the eighteenth-century communicative domain.