Communication Currents

Is Love Just Rhetoric?

August 1, 2013
General Communication Studies

Since our society regularly sings the praises of love and slings hate at rhetoric (basically persuasive communication), finding out that love has long been a metaphor for rhetorical communication, since before the time of Plato, may surprise the casual reader. The ancient Greek sophist Gorgias compared rhetoric and love through his discussion of the case of Helen of Troy, Plato contemplated the pros and cons of rhetoric and love in his famous dialogue, the Phaedrus, and many recent scholars have revitalized the metaphor of love and rhetoric. In our essay, “Rhetoric and this Crazy Little ‘Thing’ Called Love,” my co-author Josue David Cisneros and I review this history and offer an alternative understanding of rhetoric-love as an act rather than a thing, arguing that such an understanding helps scholars and critics understand the possibilities for both connection and division in acts of love-rhetoric. We call for all rhetors to practice a loving-rhetoric, one whose enactment seeks to connect rather than divide.

The metaphor of love-rhetoric makes sense to scholars because they see in both rhetoric and love the potential for deception and communion. Just as love might lead lovers into crazy acts and clouded thoughts, rhetoric is often lambasted for its empty and dangerous deceit. Yet just as love promises a special union with another, rhetoric holds the possibility for bringing people together for their mutual benefit. Typically, scholars envision rhetoric and love as stable things and then seek to pass judgment on them. This has been true for those ancient Greek thinkers of love and rhetoric as well as contemporary scholars seeking to revive the metaphor. Many psychoanalytic scholars portray love-rhetoric as based in a stupid delusion. Meanwhile, Neo-Platonic scholars praise love-rhetoric for its possibilities in promoting identification, communion, and union.

Each of these approaches seeking to condemn and/or exalt love-rhetoric, begins with an ontology – that is, with certain assumptions about human being. Psychoanalytic scholars claim that humans are fundamentally divided from one another, thus rhetoric and love are simply false promises of a union that can never be achieved. They fear these false promises of union, since history illustrates that claims for union (think Nazi Germany) can lead to the horrible oppression of those defined as “others” (the Jew). Hitler’s rhetoric, like many a silly pop song, promised a transcendent, happily-ever-after connection with the pure Aryan people, wishing away many of the difficulties of life and differences between people, just as a pop song might make love seem like a perfect melting into oneness. Neo-Platonic scholars, on the other hand, believe human beings hold an inherent potential for union, for bringing souls together into a perfect harmony. Thus, for these scholars, rhetoric-love should be celebrated as a means of unifying people.

In our essay, we argue by beginning with assumptions about human being (an ontology) both of these approaches conceive of rhetoric-love as a static thing (Love is…, Rhetoric is…) rather than as an act (I love, I communicate). Conceiving rhetoric-love as a thing allows scholars to pass judgment on love-rhetoric, either praising it for its possibilities of union or criticizing it for its stupidity and deceit. Such a position puts the critic in the role of the judge, what Ron Greene calls the “moral entrepreneur,” and leaves the critic with a permanent anxiety, constantly worried that rhetoric-love is being used for ill. Of course, we can find numerous examples of rhetoric being used for ill, but these prior conceptualizations of rhetoric-love begin from too broad a position, trying to judge rhetoric and love as a whole rather than consider each act individually. In contrast, conceiving rhetoric-love as acts allows critics to make contextual evaluations of each act of rhetoric-love in an attempt to discover those acts that promote connection rather than division, which heal rather than make ill.

Rather than beginning with an ontology of human beings, our alternative approach leaves the question of what humans can become fundamentally open. That is, we refuse to say that humans are either fundamentally connected or divided, prior to any individual act. In response to the ontological question “What is human being?” we reply, “I do not know.” We contend humans have the potential for both connection and division, in many different ways and to many different degrees, rather than foreclosing the numerous possibilities in advance with an ontological judgment. We see humans as a becoming, rather than a being, as a series of acts rather than a stable thing. We become human through our acts of love and rhetoric, and no one has yet discovered all the possibilities of human becoming. It remains the scholar’s role to explore these possibilities contextually, to take each new becoming individually and evaluate whether these are truly acts of love or acts that hurt and divide. The connections we make through love and rhetoric will always be partial and temporary; no one act will transform the world into some utopia. Thus we must engage in the hard work of repeatedly engaging in acts of loving rhetoric anew. Love, unlike the tales in so many of our pop songs, is hard work, but it remains just as possible and real as are the (all too many) acts of hate and deceit.  

Answering “I don’t know” to the big philosophical questions about love, about rhetoric, and about human being might be scary to scholars who have been trained to search for answers. Yet such a perspective allows scholars to, instead, roll up their sleeves and engage in the hard work of evaluating on a case-by-case basis, to the best of our always limited knowledge. Better yet, such a perspective allows scholars to escape from the permanent anxiety of the moral entrepreneur who is always seeking to judge rhetoric and love once and for all. Instead, this scholarly gesture remains open to the possibilities of different becomings and ever hopeful that we can uncover new ways of becoming that more closely embody acts of loving rhetoric and can therefore promote the health of ourselves and our world. Discovering such acts and uncovering new ways of becoming a loving-rhetor should be, in our opinion, our primary scholarly task.

About the author (s)

Eric S. Jenkins

University of Cincinnati

Assistant Professor

Josue David Cisneros

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Assistant Professor