Selected Readings in Public SpeakingJane Blankenship, Robert Wilhoit Dickenson Publishing Company, 1966 - 264 sivua |
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Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 87
Sivu 3
... audiences have a certain character . For example , televised speeches which the President of the United States addresses to an American audience differ somewhat from those he addresses to a world audience . The great speeches , which ...
... audiences have a certain character . For example , televised speeches which the President of the United States addresses to an American audience differ somewhat from those he addresses to a world audience . The great speeches , which ...
Sivu 29
... audiences . In adapting the subject to an audience it will aid the young speaker to remember that there are , broadly speaking , two kinds of audiences— select audiences and general audiences . The select audience is one possessing ...
... audiences . In adapting the subject to an audience it will aid the young speaker to remember that there are , broadly speaking , two kinds of audiences— select audiences and general audiences . The select audience is one possessing ...
Sivu 239
... audience . Although he need neither compromise his integrity , nor bow in subser- vience to an audience , he does need to understand the operating forces in the audience and select arguments that induce persuasion . He must remember ...
... audience . Although he need neither compromise his integrity , nor bow in subser- vience to an audience , he does need to understand the operating forces in the audience and select arguments that induce persuasion . He must remember ...
Sisältö
Preface | 1 |
THE SEARCH FOR IDEAS | 25 |
Toward an Analysis of Motivation | 74 |
Tekijänoikeudet | |
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action analysis arguments Aristotle attention attitude audience basic behavior communication concept conversation Craig Baird critic cues delivery desire determine discussion effect encoder ethical ethos example experience expression fact factors feel function George William Curtis gesture goal hearers human ideas important individual ingredients introductions and conclusions issues Journal of Speech Kenneth Burke kind learned Leonard Bloomfield listeners look mass media matter meaning methods mind minor premise modes of persuasion morpheme motives nature nouns opinion organization patterns person persuasion phonemes political possible problem proposition public speaking purpose Quarterly Journal question reading response rhetoric selected sense sentence significant situation social society sound speaker specific Speech Monographs stage fright student style suggest Susanne Langer syllogism symbols talk teacher things thinking thought tion tone understanding University values verbal verbs voice W. D. Ross Wilbur Schramm words writing York