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Audience Theory and its Treatment in American Composition Textbooks 1850-1920
This research shows that major textbooks responded to the change
from oral to written pedagogy with a rich variety of audience theory.
This research suggests that major textbook writers theories reflected
competing cultural issues that evolved from the needs of the developing industrialized
society and the Constitutionšs promises of equal rights to all citizens. Rather than
building an evolving theory of audience, textbook writers responded with a wide variety
of concepts of audience instead of building a consistent theory. The diversity of audience
theory found suggests fragmentation in an age in transition.
Many major textbook writers struggled primarily with the effects of
the written artifact on the reader; Fred Newton Scott and Gertrude Buck worked on organic
and democratic theories of audience that were reflective of their social concerns. Buck
challenged some contemporaries' theories with a social theory and pedagogy that served
both marginalized populations' needs for communication and technology's need for
transference of information.
This dissertation contributes to the historical literature on
nineteenth and early twentieth century rhetoric. It contextualizes the idea of
audience in Current-traditional textbooks between 1850 and 1920, and it challenges
the claim by rhetorical scholars that textbooks of this period have ignored the concept
of audience in their rhetorical theory (Kitzhaber, Berlin, Crowley, Brereton). This
study develops an understanding of the significant number of concepts of audience
presented in the important textbooks of the period, and hence enhances the
understanding of the roots of the Current-traditional paradigm.
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