학술논문

The Humanist Scholar as Public Expert.
Document Type
Article
Source
Written Communication. Apr2006, Vol. 23 Issue 2, p150-172. 23p.
Subject
*SOCIAL sciences
*HUMANITIES
*SCHOLARS
*THEOLOGIANS
*CONSULTANTS
*DECISION making
*PUBLIC speaking
*DEBATE
*ABILITY
Language
ISSN
0741-0883
Abstract
Although the rhetoric of expertise stemming from the hard and social sciences has been well researched, the scholarship has not tended to focus on acts of public expertise by scholars from the humanities. This article reports a case study in the rhetorical practices of a theologian, acting as a public expert, first attempting to affect decision making in the Waco conflict in 1993 and then attempting to participate in and shape the public debates that followed it. To compare the practices of this humanities scholar to expectations from research on the rhetoric of expertise, a rhetorical analysis was conducted on the context, style, genre, and argument in the scholar's public writings. This article discusses (a) the role of kairos in the policy cycle in determining the scholar's bids for acceptance as an expert, (b) the use of narrative as a generic hybrid of intra- and interdisciplinary practice, and (c) the role of ‘understanding’ as a special topic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]