
Rhetorical Delivery and Digital Technologies
Networks, Affect, Electracy
Sean Morey(Author)
Routledge (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 24. November 2015
Book
Hardback
278 pages
978-1-138-92544-1 (ISBN)
Description
This book theorizes digital logics and applications for the rhetorical canon of delivery. Digital writing technologies invite a re-evaluation about what delivery can offer to rhetorical studies and writing practices. Sean Morey argues that what delivery provides is access to the unspeakable, unconscious elements of rhetoric, not primarily through emotion or feeling as is usually offered by previous studies, but affect, a domain of sensation implicit in the (overlooked) original Greek term for delivery, hypokrisis. Moreover, the primary means for delivering affect is both the logic and technology of a network, construed as modern, digital networks, but also networks of associations between humans and nonhuman objects. Casting delivery in this light offers new rhetorical trajectories that promote its incorporation into digital networked-bodies. Given its provocative and broad reframing of delivery, this book provides original, robust ways to understand rhetorical delivery not only through a lens of digital writing technologies, but all historical means of enacting delivery, offering implications that will ultimately affect how scholars of rhetoric will come to view not only the other canons of rhetoric, but rhetoric as a whole.
Reviews / Votes
"Like delivery itself, Sean Morey's book offers more than it suggests at first glance. Beneath its insightful readings of delivery/hyprokrisis in the classical tradition and its examinations of delivery's many meanings and possibilities in new media contexts, it delivers something else as well: a new style of reading and writing-indeed, a new method for rhetorical inquiry-specifically attuned to the medial logics of the digital age."- Scot Barnett, Indiana University, USA
"Rhetorical Delivery and Digital Technologies offers a way of rethinking delivery that is appropriate for the digital age, one in which electracy replaces digital literacy, and delivery is reconceptualized not through print-based practices, but through the human and nonhuman nodes and networks of communication in a digital age. (...) Rhetorical Delivery and Digital Technologies offers a sound argument for a rebirth of delivery in the digital age.
- Bree McGregor, George Mason University
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
Illustrations
2 s/w Photographien bzw. Rasterbilder, 1 s/w Zeichnung
1 Line drawings, black and white; 2 Halftones, black and white
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 157 mm
Thickness: 20 mm
Weight
557 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-138-92544-1 (9781138925441)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Book
12/2017
1st Edition
Routledge
€75.10
Shipment within 15-20 days

E-Book
11/2015
Routledge
€68.49
Available for download

E-Book
11/2015
Routledge
€68.49
Available for download
Person
Sean Morey is Assistant Professor in the Department of English at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA.
Content
Introduction: The Rebirth of Delivery Part 1: What is Delivery? 1. Declassifying Delivery 2. Reclassifying Delivery Part 2: Who Delivers? 3. Becoming Delivery-Machine-Emotion, Feeling, Affect 4. Becoming Shaman-Delivering the Invisible Part 3: How to Deliver? 5. Delivery-Networks 6. Posthuman Gestures and Electrate Attunements Postscript: The Death of Delivery (and Other Transitions)