1st Edition
The Routledge Handbook of Comparative World Rhetorics Studies in the History, Application, and Teaching of Rhetoric Beyond Traditional Greco-Roman Contexts
Chapter One: Comparative World Rhetorics: The What and How
Keith Lloyd
Part I: What is Comparative Rhetoric?
Chapter Two: Redefining Comparative Rhetoric: Essence, Facts, and Events
LuMing Mao
Chapter Three: The Intersection between Intercultural Communication and Comparative Rhetoric studies: A Review and Case Studies
Xing (Lucy) Lu
Chapter Four: What is Jewish Rhetoric? Issues of Diasporas, Nationalities, Cultures, and Pre-Human Emergence: A Case Study
Steven B. Katz
Chapter Five: Rhetorical Histories of Comparison: An Archaeology
of the Comparative Act
Lance Cummings
Chapter Six: Rhetoric out of Context: The Challenge of Contemplative Rhetoric
Joshua DiCaglio
Part II: History/Recovery
Chapter Seven: Confucian Deliberation: A Rational Reconstruction of Themes in the Analects
Arabella Lyon
Chapter Eight: From Oratory to Writing: An Overview of Chinese Classical Rhetoric (500 BCE-220 CE)
Hui Wu
Chapter Nine: Was There an Art of (Asiatic) Rhetoric at Halicarnassus? A Plea for Rediscovering the Lost Centers of Classical Rhetoric
Richard Leo Enos
Chapter Ten: An Overview of Kut and Töre as the Pillars of the Turkish Rhetorical Tradition
Elif Guler
Chapter Eleven: On the Differences Between Ma’atian Communicative Solidarity and the Socratic Dialectic
Melba Vélez Ortiz
Chapter Twelve: Hadassah, that is Esther:’ Diasporic Rhetoric in the Book of Esther
Eliza Gellis
Chapter Thirteen: Foundations in Vedic Rhetorical Culture: Approaching Mokṣa Analogically
Anne Melfi
Chapter Fourteen: Epistolary Rhetoric
Rasha Diab
Chapter Fifteen: Through the Magic Glass of Sufism: Studying Orientalism in Sufism
Eda Ozyesilpinar and Firasat Jabeen
Chapter Sixteen: Rhetorical Comparison of Hindu God Krishna and Plato: Towards Exploring Hindu Rhetoric and Greek Rhetoric
Sweta Baniya
Chapter Seventeen: Hair-splitting critics and pair-splitting circumstances: the persuasive role of stylistic ornaments in Aśvaghoṣa’s Saundarananda
Elizabeth Thornton
Chapter Eighteen: Yuğ□Ceremony□in the Steppe:□Rhetorics□of□Grief in□Turkic Community Formations
Iklim Goksel
Part III: Contemporary Comparative Studies
Chapter Nineteen: I Have No Mother Tongue": (Re)Conceptualizing Rhetorical Voice in Indonesia
Amber Engelson
Chapter Twenty: Is Modern Chinese Writing Close to Contemporary English Writing?—Rhetorical modes of Chinese expository paragraphs
Donghong (Julie) Liu
Chapter Twenty-One: Ubuntu: A Rhetorical Look at An African Concept of Community and Life
Leonora Anyango-Kivuva
Chapter Twenty-Two: You Know You’re Filipino When": nostalgic tropes of Filipinoness in YouTube videos by second-generation Filipino Americans
Daphne-Tatiana (Data) T. Canlas
Part IV: Hybrids
Chapter Twenty-Three: Modern Holism: The Hybrid Rhetorics of Insight Meditation
Tyler Carter
Chapter Twenty-Four: Usable Presents: Hybridity in/for Postcolonial African Rhetorics
Stephen K. Dadugblor
Chapter Twenty-Five: The Study of Rhetoric in Japan: A Survey of Rhetorical Research from the Late Nineteenth Century to the Present
Massimiliano Tomasi
Chapter Twenty-Six: Recontextualizing Comparative Rhetoric
Michelle Zalestki
Chapter Twenty-Seven: A Comparative Cultural Rhetorics Approach to Indigenous Rhetorics in the Americas
Abraham Romney
Chapter Twenty-Eight: New Materialist Orientations to Comparative Historiographical Methods: Places of Invention and Public Memory In Situ
Erin Cromer Twal
Chapter Twenty-Nine Nüshu, the Unique Female Rhetoric in the Chinese Rhetorical Tradition
Xiaobo (Belle) Wang
Chapter Thirty: A Feminist Praxis of Comparative Rhetoric
Mari Lee Mifsud
Part V: Applying and Promoting Comparative Pedagogies
Chapter Thirty-One: Bringing Comparative Methodologies into the US-Centric Major: Questioning the Nature of "History" and "Text" for Cross-Cultural Learning in English Studies
Tarez Samra Graban and Meghan Velez
Chapter Thirty-Two: Cultivating Transnational Thinking Through World Rhetorics
Xiaoye You
Chapter Thirty-Three: Enacting Comparative Pedagogies as Common Topics
Hua Zhu and Yebing Zhao
Chapter Thirty-Four: Teaching World Rhetorics: Promoting Pedagogy and Addressing Politics
Shyam Sharma
Part VI: New Directions
Chapter Thirty-Five: Comparative Rhetorics of Technology and the Energies of Ancient Indian Robots
Miles C. Coleman
Chapter Thirty-Six: Using Bridging Rhetoric for Deliberative Dissent: Some Insights from India
Keith Lloyd
Chapter Thirty-Seven: Doing Rhetoric Elsewhere: Chicanx Indigeneities, Colonial Peripheries, and the Underside of Written Communication
Damián Baca
Chapter Thirty Eight: Comparative Balāghah: Arabic and Ancient Egyptian Literary Rhetoric Through the Lens of Post-Eurocentric Poetics
Hany Rashwan
Chapter Thirty-Nine: Singing "Nan Yar?": The Ecstatic Transmissions of Avudai Akkal and The Awakening of Ramana Maharshi
Trey Conner and Richard Doyle
Chapter Forty: Preliminary Steps Towards a General Rhetoric: Existence, Thrivation, Transformation
Thomas Rickert
Biography
Professor of English at Kent State University Stark, Dr. Keith Lloyd’s research interests include promoting collaborative, innovative, and non-dualistic modes of political and cross-cultural communication. His work is published in Rhetoric Review, Rhetorica, Advances in the History of Rhetoric, Rhetoric Society Quarterly, and the Handbook of Logical Thought in India.






