
From the Constitution to the Bible, from literary classics to political sound bites, our modern lives are filled with numerous texts that govern and influence our behavior and beliefs. Whether in the courtrooms of our judiciaries or over our dining room tables, we argue over what these texts mean as we apply them to our lives. Various schools of hermeneutics offer theories of how we generally understand the world around us or how to read certain types of texts to arrive at the correct or best interpretation, but most neglect the argumentative and persuasive nature of every act of interpretation.In Arguing over Texts, Martin Camper presents a rhetorical method for understanding the types of disagreement people have over the meaning of texts and the lines of argument they use to resolve those disagreements. Camper's fresh approach has its roots in the long forgotten interpretive stases, originally devised by ancient Greek and Roman teachers of rhetoric for inventing courtroom arguments concerning the meaning of legal documents such as wills, laws, and contracts. The interpretive stases identify general, recurring debates over textual meaning and catalogue the lines of reasoning arguers may employ to support their preferred interpretations. Drawing on contemporary research in language, persuasion, and cognition, Camper expands the scope of the interpretive stases to cover textual controversies in virtually any context. To illustrate the interpretive stases' wide range of applicability, Arguing over Texts contains examples of interpretive debates from law, politics, religion, history, and literary criticism. Arguing over Texts will appeal to anyone who is interested in analyzing and constructing interpretive arguments.
How can we systematically categorize and resolve the recurring disagreements that arise when individuals interpret influential texts? Martin Camper, a scholar of rhetoric, argues that most hermeneutic theories overlook the inherently persuasive nature of interpretation. By reviving and expanding the ancient Greco-Roman framework of interpretive stases, he provides a structured method for identifying the lines of reasoning used in textual disputes across diverse fields.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and students of rhetoric frequently identify this work as a significant modern application of classical stasis theory to contemporary communication challenges. Experts note that the text serves as a practical manual for those seeking to understand the mechanics of debate in both academic and everyday contexts.
Page Count:
203
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190677147
ISBN-13:
9780190677145
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