Still Life with Rhetoric: L. E. Gries

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The quotes I deem most vital to understanding chapters 1 2 and preface
Jennifer Wilhite
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Jennifer Wilhite
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Still Life with Rhetoric: L. E. Gries
  1. 11 by rhetorical, I refer to something’s ability to induce change in thought, feeling, and actions; organization and maintain collective formation; exert power etc.
    1. 7 Rhetoric, in this framework, is conceived as not only the faculty one has to create and deliver a persuasive object of some sort but also as the object itself, whether it is delivered in the form of a speech, a text, or a picture.
    2. visuals, images, pictures
      1. Visual: I consider a visual to be ‘that which we think we see’ whether that is interpreted as an alphabetic letter or a cloud or a political poster… that which we perceive is never reality; it is always a mental configuration that emerges as an end result of a complex perceptual process that begins with a detection of light in the eye and proceeds as different parts of the brain interpret… (9)
        1. “you can hang a picture but you can’t hang an image” (9)
          1. A picture is an image that ‘appears in a material support,’ which includes photographs, posters, digital reproductions, murals…(9)
          2. 18 while authors and artists can attempt to account for rhetorical velocity by anticipation the third-party re-composition of their own work (Ridolfo and DeVoss 2009), they can never fully control where or how the things they produce will circulate
            1. 19 circulation, as defined herein, refers to spatiotemporal flows, which unfold and fluctuate as things enter into diverse associations and materialize in abstract and concrete forms
            2. Xiii: I am particularly curious about the relations we develop with things and the active roles they play in (re) arranging collective life as they weave in and out of various relationships.
              1. 41 repetition and imitation constitute the fabric of social reality
                1. 43 Mikhail Bakhtin: a chronotope refers to the intrinsic connectedness of temporal and spatial relationships artistically expressed in literature
                  1. 43 from a new materialist perspective, this chronotopic understanding of time is key to conceiving of and studying how a single multiple image becomes rhetorical over its lifetime as it materializes in different versions, each with their own spatiotemporal configuration.
                    1. 48 Blair claims that in order to broaden our studies of rhetoric beyond effect (or goal fulfillment) to the actual consequences that emerge from material action, we must ask not what a text or artifact means but rather we ought to be asking what a text does and what happens as a result of its existence
                      1. 49 Disclosure is a term I use to give name to a methodological strategy that can help account for the material consequences that emerge in a distributed reality. 49 I deploy disclosure as a means to shed light on not only a single image’s divergent actualizations but also on the divergent meanings that propagate as material consequences of a single multiple image’s varied relations.
                        1. 51 the methodological enterprise is especially difficult because a single multiple image’s rhetorical meaning is unforeseeable. 51 event horizon of meaning: the boundary between an actualized image and its consequences
                          1. 52 It is only in tracing a single multiple image’s transformations that unfold with time and space that we can discover what divergent consequences emerge and thus know for certain what rhetorical meanings have materialized.
                            1. 52 a new materialist perspective holds that things exist independently from our conception of them.
                        2. 53 the things we study are complex paradoxes. They both exist in their own right and come into being when we encounter them.
                2. 25 we still think of composed matter as static, stable things that circulate in the world as fixed entities. Such a perspective reinforces a static model of discourse structure in which we ‘view meaning as an object contained in the text, accessible to an objective description, capable of spatialization and and thus open to simultaneous comprehension of all its parts”
                  1. 26 in a viral economy, in which both intended and unintended audiences play such an interactive role in remixing, appropriating, and spreading images, we know that ‘delivery’ is not something so direct or controlled. We also know that digital things are rarely stable in and of themselves.
                    1. 28 to think intuitively in a general sense is to perceive reality as change, as mobility
                      1. 28 while intelligence is concerned with the static and makes of change only an accident, intuition sees everything as mobility, as change.
                        1. 29 meaning is not something, then, that can be fleshed out from an actualized image, nor is it ever stable, as an image is constantly transforming change and rearranging space
                  2. 32 the power of discourse lies in its ability to move the individual self (and thus a democratic public) towards unknown possibilities.
                    1. 36 such a perspective is especially productive when trying to track the rhetorical life of images such as Obama Hope, which may not have experienced as much transformation as Mona Lisa has over the long haul, but whose speed of circulation and frequency of transformation over the short haul have certainly been more intense.
                      1. 37 things do not just move inconsequentially and unchanged through space and time; they are both impacted by and impact that which they encounter.
                        1. 38 Actualization is, in other words, a mode of constant (but not continuous) individuation in which multiple varieties materialize with time and space
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