Lexington Books
Pages: 206
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7391-5062-7 • Hardback • October 2012 • $114.00 • (£88.00)
978-0-7391-9768-4 • Paperback • June 2014 • $56.99 • (£44.00)
978-0-7391-5064-1 • eBook • October 2012 • $51.00 • (£39.00)
Scott Welsh is assistant professor in the Department of Communication at Appalachian State University in Boone, North Carolina.
Introduction. The Cure for What Ails You
Chapter 1. Taking Politics out of Rhetoric
Chapter 2. Coming to Terms with Rhetoric
Chapter 3. Democratic Ends
Chapter 4. Truth Against Judgment
Chapter 5. Between Rhetorical Reflection and Political Agency
Conclusion. Democracy at the Edge of the Abyss
Scott Welsh has written a terrific book. It is so rich that this short review must pass over many of the thorny, deliciously complex, issues he raises. Welsh’s guiding light is Kenneth Burke, whose work he appears to have memorized, and he manages to replicate Burke’s wide-ranging curiosity along with his refusal to accept prevailing pieties. ... Welsh does not shy away from the toughest questions and his meditations on them are always thought-provoking. He fully grasps the difficulties, even paradoxes, that are part and parcel of the democratic project.
— Rhetoric Society Quarterly
Asserting the impossibility of public judgment, collective will, and the common good—notions underwriting most current theorists’ characterizations and celebrations of democracy—The Rhetorical Surface of Democracy builds an innovative conceptualization of rhetorical democracy that will undoubtedly spark spirited debate. Scott Welsh’s careful parsing of trends in democratic theory offers a complex discussion of the relationship between rhetoric, democracy, and power. [This book] provides readers new to democratic theory with a thorough and thoughtful engagement of foundational concepts, and it encourages readers well-versed in democratic theory to reevaluate taken-for-granted assumptions about the normative value of strategic rhetoric in democratic politics.
— Melanie Loehwing, Florida Atlantic University
Scott Welsh makes a lively case for considering rhetoric in the service of democracy as the strategic pursuit of power through words and symbols rather than as a dialogical pursuit of practical wisdom. Welsh provides a realistic discounting of idealistic models of deliberative democracy and political rhetoric. In place of an illusive common good, he argues for a conception of democracy that entails an ongoing nonviolent competition for habitable space. Welsh’s argument is a welcome provocation to revise our working assumptions about democracy and its rhetorical enactment.
— Robert L. Ivie, Indiana University
Any rhetorician who has become too complacent with platitudes about “deliberative democracy” and the 'common good' should welcome Scott Welsh’s book, The Rhetorical Surface of Democracy: How Deliberative Ideals Undermine Democratic Politics, with the same sense of gratitude that Socrates expressed toward Callicles: 'I realize that a person who is going to put a soul to an adequate test to see whether it lives rightly or not must have three qualities, all of which you have: knowledge, goodwill, and frankness' (Plato, Gorgias, 487a). All three of these qualities are indeed present in Welsh’s book: a comprehensive knowledge of major philosophers and contemporary rhetorical theorists; a refreshing frankness and critical eye toward democratic and rhetorical pieties; and a basic goodwill toward those he critiques. And, like a character in Plato’s Gorgias, Welsh enters the dialectical fray ready to take on all comers, using every argumentative resource to strip away illusions, undermine objections, reveal essential facts, and make us face up to the truth. And that truth is this: 'democracy is about individual people and power, not about producing an always fıctitious common good or will of the people' (101). And from this truth follows the hard fact that those who champion such fıctitious entities actually undermine democracy because 'they direct our energies to the imaginary collective production of shared judgments and common futures, leaving everyone disappointed, fearful, or resentful' (108). Here is a bold statement that Welsh upholds with considerable skill and forcefulness, making his book a contribution to rhetorical scholarship that warrants attention, particularly from those he challenges.
— Rhetoric & Public Affairs