Ronald Reagan on Lebanon and Grenada: Flexibility and interpretation in the application of Kenneth Burke's pentad
- 1 August 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Quarterly Journal of Speech
- Vol. 73 (3) , 267-279
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00335638709383808
Abstract
The pentad is most useful when critics take a flexible approach to the five terms, preserving the inherent ambiguity of act, agent, agency, scene, and purpose. Experimentation with different pentadic root terms will produce different readings of any given text. In most cases, such experimentation will result in the identification of a single term that coordinates a critic's understanding of a text. A pentadic analysis of Ronald Reagan's address of October 27, 1983, on Lebanon and Grenada, demonstrates the critical value of employing multiple pentadic frames. Reagan's speech reveals a formulation of American character incompatible with a thorough multinationalism.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Transforming scandal into tragedy: A rhetoric of political apologyQuarterly Journal of Speech, 1985
- Epistemology and ontology in Kenneth Burke's dramatismCommunication Quarterly, 1985
- Phases, pentads, and dramatistic critical processCentral States Speech Journal, 1984
- The 1980 republican primary debates: The transformation of actor to sceneQuarterly Journal of Speech, 1983
- A pentadic analysis of ideologies in two gay rights controversiesCentral States Speech Journal, 1979
- Presidential motives for warQuarterly Journal of Speech, 1974
- The interest value of rhetorical strategies derived from Kenneth Burke's pentadWestern Speech, 1973
- Method in rhetorical criticismThe Southern Speech Journal, 1969