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Rhetorical Leadership and Transferable Lessons for Successful Social Advocacy in Al Gore's an Inconvenient Truth

Rhetorical Leadership and Transferable Lessons for Successful Social Advocacy in Al Gore's... Despite its apparent limitations, the film An Inconvenient Truth was not only an unlikely hit but also a successful instance of social advocacy that galvanized ordinary people. Al Gore's rhetorical choices in the film presented a compelling, concrete vision of the stakes to be lost or gained, nurtured hope that change was possible and personal, made mortification an appealing path for coping with guilt over one's contribution to a shared problem, demonstrated dignitas of public character that added weight to his argument, and relationally generated ethos that overcame his history as an unengaging, unmotivating rhetor. Gore's argumentative approach is transferable and so offers valuable lessons fir potential rhetorical leaders. The essay also yields a theoretical contribution on mortification. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Argumentation and Advocacy Taylor & Francis

Rhetorical Leadership and Transferable Lessons for Successful Social Advocacy in Al Gore's an Inconvenient Truth

Argumentation and Advocacy , Volume 44 (2): 20 – Sep 1, 2007

Rhetorical Leadership and Transferable Lessons for Successful Social Advocacy in Al Gore's an Inconvenient Truth

Abstract

Despite its apparent limitations, the film An Inconvenient Truth was not only an unlikely hit but also a successful instance of social advocacy that galvanized ordinary people. Al Gore's rhetorical choices in the film presented a compelling, concrete vision of the stakes to be lost or gained, nurtured hope that change was possible and personal, made mortification an appealing path for coping with guilt over one's contribution to a shared problem, demonstrated dignitas of public...
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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2007 Taylor and Francis Group, LLC
ISSN
2576-8476
eISSN
1051-1431
DOI
10.1080/00028533.2007.11821680
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Despite its apparent limitations, the film An Inconvenient Truth was not only an unlikely hit but also a successful instance of social advocacy that galvanized ordinary people. Al Gore's rhetorical choices in the film presented a compelling, concrete vision of the stakes to be lost or gained, nurtured hope that change was possible and personal, made mortification an appealing path for coping with guilt over one's contribution to a shared problem, demonstrated dignitas of public character that added weight to his argument, and relationally generated ethos that overcame his history as an unengaging, unmotivating rhetor. Gore's argumentative approach is transferable and so offers valuable lessons fir potential rhetorical leaders. The essay also yields a theoretical contribution on mortification.

Journal

Argumentation and AdvocacyTaylor & Francis

Published: Sep 1, 2007

Keywords: Activism; Dignitas; Ethos; Gore; An Inconvenient Truth; Mortification; Rhetorical Leadership; Social Advocacy

References