RHETOR 20 Study Guide - Midterm Guide: Nat Turner, Pseudohistory, Hyperreality

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23 Feb 2017
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The meaning of a text that seems obvious based on the interpretative conventions used in considering the text. Language in a text takes shape because of the context. There are many literal meanings that are possible based on the situation. Anti-essentialist: no fixed meaning, there are literal meanings but they shift across context and time, limited plurality of meanings. Essentialist: narrow view of words into the essential aspects. There can be multiple conventions in one situation, need to negotiate. Set of rules that determine literal meanings in a given situation. Most of the time unacknowledged and invisible but still operative. Immediate apprehension of meaning based on these conventions. Social conventions, conventions are tied to community (ex. Includes ic, if, tacit knowledge of rules of the game, intertextuality, events, paratext. Being in a context already determines how we read a text (ex.

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