Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Richard Lanham's "The 'Q' Question"


            Because the reading for today was confusing to me at points, and I had a hard time following all the ideas, I decided to latch onto an idea that I liked and began developing in a previous rhetoric class and then try and explore how this information can be helpful when teaching or creating curriculum.
            Before the article begins, Lanham prefaces it by explaining what the Q Question is, which is a question that “emerges every time technology changes in some basic way” (154). I suppose the Q Question is constantly being brought up in today’s classroom because it seems as if technology is constantly changing and every time it does we have to step back and orientate ourselves with a new system. All of this means that there is always a changing form of rhetoric and ways that rhetoric can reach others. There are new mediums for conveying ideas and arguments. Along with any argument, however, there is a version of truth that needs to be arrived at. With Lanham’s article, I wanted to see if I could fit the ideas of Classical truth and more modern truth in with the thoughts brought up in the article.
In my first semester of grad school, I became very interested in the truth, or Truth, what truth really means, how to deal with it in language and/or writing, and now, how it applies when dealing with rhetoric, more specifically, teaching rhetoric. In Richard Lanham’s “The ‘Q’ Question,” instead of designating truth and Truth, he designates the Weak Defense and the Strong Defense. These Defenses are immediate reactions to rhetoric and often shape how we perceive the arguments of others, and the Defenses sounds very similar to differing views of truth which I attempted to understand last semester.
The Weak Defense is what would be considered a more Classical view of truth: “The Weak Defense argues that there are two kinds of rhetoric good and bad. The good kind is used in good causes, the bad kind in bad causes. Our kind is the good kind; the bad kind is used by our opponents” (155). Lanham points out that this is a Platonist view, and it also a very Platonist way to approach truth; there is truth and lies, what philosophers believe is truth, and what rhetoricians believe are lies. This is problematic with the truth question as well as with the Weak Defense of rhetoric. Where is the line drawn here? If you take this example of “I am right, others are wrong” and apply it to life, no one is ever wholly good or bad because they are always both; you believe you’re right, someone else believes they are right, so you are also both wrong. How can rhetorical discussion or argument take place in this situation? It cannot, which is why Lanham correctly identifies this as a Weak Defense.
            On the opposite side, we have the Strong Defense which “assumes that truth is determined by social dramas, some more formal than others but all man-made….In its world, there is as much truth as we need, maybe more, but argument is open-ended” (156). This Defense fits in with a more modern view of truth where there are multiple ideas of truth, and that truth changes depending on the circumstance. Truth, or rhetoric, moves away from being good or bad, black and white, and moves into a gray area.
            Lanham moves out from these Defenses and gives examples of situations where the Q Question was asked and what kind of Defense was given in each situation. I have to admit that I think he used too many examples and because of that it was easier for me to get lost while I was reading. However, what I took away from Lanham’s article was when constructing curriculum for the humanities, much like when arriving at a more contemporary version of truth, one which isn’t black and white, we must approach rhetoric as something positive as well as something that is multifaceted. As much as I love the idea of looking for what truth is and what it means, perhaps there is no truth here when we break it down. There is not ultimate truth when teaching rhetoric because it is created by each individual. Each writer or speaker is giving a Strong or Weak Defense and it is left up to the audience, or teacher, to decide what kind of Defense is given. I think that at the end of the article, Lanham was basically calling for a more varied structure when it comes to what is being taught in the humanities departments. There is a lot of caution against hesitation to going toward this varied system, and Lanham seems to believe it is essential to the educational system to adopt these methods. 

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