With a unique combination of alphabetical and descriptive lists, A Handlist of Rhetorical Terms provides in one convenient, accessible volume all the rhetorical terms―mostly Greek and Latin―that students of Western literature and rhetoric are likely to come across in their reading or will find useful in their writing.
The Second Edition of this widely used work offers new features that will make it even more
* A completely revised alphabetical listing that defines nearly 1,000 terms used by scholars of formal rhetoric from classical Greece to the present day
* A revised system of cross-references between terms
* Many new examples and new, extended entries for central terms
* A revised Terms-by-Type listing to identify unknown terms
Without this book, I might not have known that Allen Ginsberg employs the anaphora in his poem "Howl", or that the dialogues of John Travolta's and Samuel L. Jackson's characters include instances of gradatio in a couple of scenes in Tarentino's film Pulp Fiction. Useful, of course, for definitions of figures of speech like metaphor and metonymy and rhetorical schemes like the zeugma, but particularly good for the less well-known verbal devices like the repetitio (Hamlet's "One may smile and smile and be a villain") and the catachresis (Hamlet's "I will speak daggers to her").
The most complete list of rhetorical terms and strategies I've been able to find. It presents some of the same information in several formats. This is actually quite helpful to understand and present this data that might have been otherwise a little too dry to read from start to finish.
Excellent reference for rhetorical terms — both for obtaining definitions, and for finding alternative names for the same term and related terms. An overview of the Divisions of Rhetoric and a list of the Terms by Type is included at the back.
A richer examples set for each term and more detailed definitions would have bumped the rating up to five stars.
Did I read this dictionary of rhetorical terms cover to cover? Why yes, I did! There's a lot in here that is out of date and a HUGE number of definitions are just cross-references to other terms. I am definitely going to use this book though. The terms and examples are helpful. It turns out you can do a crazy number of things with language. There's an alphabetical listing in the front of the book with definitions and examples of each term. There are also groupings by type in the back, which I imagine I will use regularly if I want to find a specific figure that uses repetition, for example.
An anthology of pithy and precise analyses of concepts and controversies in classical rhetoric for the contemporary student in the form of an alphabetical reference book. A classification of terms by type serves as a roadmap to the whole. Longer entries summarize core conceptual perspectives succinctly while taking clear positions. Examples range from medieval to modern (1990), with examples that still seem contemporary and readily adaptable to recent media of public communication.
It's divided into three main parts: alphabetical list of terms, divisions of rhetoric, & The terms by type.
It's pretty straightforward but it kind of wordy and complicated for my taste but what can you say it's English textbook for this class I'm just happy I didn't really have to do I use it a lot. Some of the definitions that they give are out there and doesn't really seem to explain the term that much, and is just little hard to remember all these terms. My favorite section is the term by type because it gives you a nice set of The terms and advise them by sections of usefulness.
Under the (example, allusion, and citation of authority) it lists...aenos, analogy, anamnesis, etc. along with a simplified definition that was given in the second section.
A very useful text for any student of rhetoric. Some of Lanham's explanations are difficult as they don't always seem to provide the entire context for the explanation. Overall, though, I'd say it's a pretty comprehensive list. The second portion of the book is useful for understanding the way Lanham ended up including all the terms he did. It's also useful for understanding rhetorical terms in general.