Culture as rhetoric: patterning in the verbal interpretation of interaction between teachers and administrators in an American high school
- 1 November 1978
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in American Ethnologist
- Vol. 5 (4) , 635-650
- https://doi.org/10.1525/ae.1978.5.4.02a00010
Abstract
Six “texts” produced by the staff of an American high school are analyzed and shown to possess a common rhetorical structure that is independently constituted and that may determine what is being said. It is argued that this rhetoric of everyday talk signifies a set of social positions that are projected onto social reality without always representing it. It is suggested that in this rhetoric may lie the concrete impulse in the phenomenological world that has led anthropologists to talk of culture.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- American Culture and the School: A Case StudyPublished by Walter de Gruyter GmbH ,1976
- Fission in an Amazonian TribeThe Sciences, 1976
- FROM GRADING AND FREEDOM OF CHOICE TO RANKING AND SEGREGATION IN AN AMERICAN HIGH SCHOOLCouncil on Anthropology and Education Quarterly, 1974
- Rhetoric of MotivesPublished by University of California Press ,1969
- Classificatory Systems of Relationship.The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, 1909