Thursday, January 8, 2009

Paper Topics 5364

I like to start thinking about things early.

From TOPIC:
The term paper will be a typical academic study of about 4000-5000 words, or about 16-20 pages double spaced, 12 point New Times Roman. Obviously, the primary subject will be classical Rhetoric, but your thesis may extend beyond just our time period, 500 BC to 400 AD, and beyond the tradition of oral political and judicial oratory. What I mean by this is that you may apply the precepts we will study to other times and even other genres of expression. We will talk more about this in the coming weeks, but if you’ve read my slightly incendiary little essay, “What is Classical Rhetoric?” (item 1.1), you should realize that I take Rhetoric, even classical Rhetoric, as the essential element (beyond language itself) of what I somewhat clinically refer to as the “negotiated society,” more easily understood as the “free society” or democracy.


and more:

In these ways, classical Rhetoric should not be thought of as existing in an isolated time period “back then,” but instead seen as the original paradigm of how society functions when it functions well. This paradigm, or these paradigms, are applicable to a wide range of human endeavors -- politics, art, war, education, business.

Your principal subject must be classical Rhetoric, of course, but you may either further explain something you find interesting in the period or compare-and-contrast with something operating entirely outside the period. What you should avoid is a "report," or a summary of what scholars have already summarized.



The key points that have my attention are in bold.

Potential Topics:
Compare/contrast current/classic rhet surrounding olympics (broad)
same but combat sports, i.e. classic pankration and current MMA
rhetoric of sports or combat
rhetoric re: warriors/atheletes

focus on the epideitic rhetoric of sports?

Google Scholar produced a number of good results, and views, on pankration

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