Inventing the Potential of Rhetorical Culture

A Philosophy and Rhetoric Special Issue. Over the course of a distinguished and celebrated career, Thomas Farrell held that rhetoric is a rich source of creative reason and a vital element of contemporary public life. In his award-winning 1995 book, Norms of Rhetorical Culture, Farrell took this position a step further, arguing that "Rhetoric is the primary-indeed the only-humane manner for an argumentative culture to sustain public institutions that reflect on themselves, that learn, so to speak, from their own history." In the midst of violence and social fragmentation, according to Farrell, the renewal of rhetoric"s difficult art offers an opportunity to invigorate critique, cultivate the grounds for mutual understanding, and foster the practical wisdom that sustains democracy"s politics. Inventing the Potential of Rhetorical Culture sheds new light on Thomas Farrell"s provocative defense of rhetoric and makes an innovative case for the contemporary importance of rhetorical theory...