Defining Visual Rhetorics
Defining Visual Rhetorics
VISUAL RHETORICS
§
DEFINING
VISUAL RHETORICS
Edited by
Charles A. Hill
Marguerite Helmers
University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
Preface ix
Introduction 1
Marguerite Helmers and Charles A. Hill
vii
viii CONTENTS
A few years ago, we noticed a major shift in the field of rhetoric, one in which
an increasing amount of the discipline’s attention was becoming focused on
visual objects and on the visual nature of the rhetorical process. The phrase
visual rhetoric was being used more frequently in journal articles, in textbooks,
and especially in conference presentations. However, it seemed equally obvi-
ous that the phrase was being used in many different ways by different schol-
ars. There seemed little agreement on what exactly scholars intended when
they used the term, and no reliable way to distinguish the work being done un-
der the rubric of “visual rhetoric” as a coherent category of study.
Some scholars seemed to consider visual elements only in relation to ex-
pressing quantitative relationships in charts and graphs. Others concentrated
solely on the ubiquity of visual elements on the Internet, which might give the
impression that visual elements are important only in online communication.
Much of the more culturally oriented work was based in art history and art
theory, sometimes using the terms visual rhetoric and visual culture to refer to
artistic images exclusively. In still other cases, the use of the word visual in-
cluded visualizing, the mental construction of internal images, while other
scholars seemed to use it to refer solely to conventional two-dimensional im-
ages. Add those scholarly pursuits to the study of print and film advertising,
television, and cinema, and suddenly a new field of inquiry emerged, rich with
possibility, but sometimes puzzling in its breadth.
The larger problem was not that rhetoricians were analyzing a wide variety
of visuals—we saw this diversity of efforts as exciting and productive. The
problem was that there seemed to be very little agreement on the basic nature
of the two terms visual and rhetoric. To some, studying the “visual” seemed to
consist solely of analyzing representational images, while to others, it could
include the study of the visual aspect of pretty much anything created by hu-
man hands—a building, a toaster, a written document, an article of clothing—
ix
x PREFACE
making the study of “visual rhetoric” overlap greatly with the study of design.
To still others, the study of visual rhetoric seemed to necessarily involve a
study of the process of looking, of “the gaze,” with all of the psychological
and cultural implications that have become wrapped within that term.
Scholars engaged in visual analysis have also (with notable exceptions)
largely neglected to discuss the ways in which their work is truly rhetorical, as
opposed to an example of cultural studies or semiotics. What seems clear is
that the turn to the visual has problematized any attempts to distinguish be-
tween these methodologies, blurring further what were already quite fuzzy
and often shifting boundaries between them. But while it would make little
sense to try to draw any rigid boundaries between these methodologies, we
think it is still useful to ask of any scholar what aspects of his or her work make
it legitimate or useful to label such work “rhetorical.”
As we thought about the definitional problems surrounding the study of
visual rhetoric, it became immediately clear that the appropriate response was
not to try to “nail down” the term, to stipulate a set of definitions that all rheto-
ricians would agree to abide by (a naïve notion, to say the least). Rather, we
thought that it would be more interesting and productive to have scholars
working with visuals discuss the definitional assumptions behind their own
work, and to exemplify these assumptions by sharing their own rhetorical
analyses of visual phenomena. Our own assumptions behind this approach
are two-fold. First, any discussion of definitions from which one is operating is
necessarily post-hoc; that is, one discovers such definitional assumptions
through the work, rather than explicating them (even to oneself ) before ap-
proaching a scholarly project. Second, at this very early stage in the contempo-
rary study of visual rhetoric, we assume that people are more interested in
writing about and in reading about specific scholarly projects than in lengthy
arguments about definitions.
We asked each contributor to this book to explain how his or her work fits
under the heading of, and helps define, the term visual rhetoric. Using this ap-
proach, we hoped to capture the diversity of the work being done in this area
while providing—for readers and, by extension, for the rhetoric community—
some explanation of how this wide variety of work can be seen as comple-
mentary and part of a coherent whole. Our goal is not to promote any particu-
lar claims about what terms such as visual and rhetoric and visual rhetoric should
or must mean. Rather, we want to prompt readers to think about, and to talk
to each other about, what these terms mean to them and what they could
mean—about how they can be productively used in creative ways to explore a
broad range of phenomena, but without being diffused to the point where
they lose their explanatory power.
We intend this book for anyone who is involved in or interested in such con-
versations. This includes not just those who are working explicitly on projects
in visual rhetoric, but anyone interested in the rhetorical nature of visuals or in
PREFACE xi
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
All books are collaborative efforts, and thanks are due to many individuals who
assisted in the preparation of this one. First and foremost is Linda Bathgate at
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, whose belief that visual rhetoric was a develop-
ing area of rhetorical study led directly to the production of this volume. Debbie
Ruel at Erlbaum provided us with valuable editorial assistance in the production
of the manuscript. Robie Grant created the indexes. Richard LeFande was en-
thusiastic when we contacted him about the use of his photo as a cover piece.
Peggy O’Gara at Corbis helped us secure the use of Thomas P. Franklin’s Sep-
tember 11, 2001 photograph for the Introduction. Anna Hill developed several
striking cover designs, and conversations with Anna about art history and
graphic design played no small part in the original inspiration for this collection.
The Faculty Development Board at the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
funded research that led to the development of parts of this work. In addition,
the authors gratefully acknowledge the assistance of the Alberta Kimball En-
dowment at the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh. Large sections of the Intro-
duction to this work were completed during a summer seminar on literature
and the visual arts, sponsored by the National Endowment for the Humanities
and held at the Boston Athenaeum in 2002. The seminar group, led by Director
Richard Wendorff, included Anna Arnar, Laura Bass, Megan Benton, Ellen
Garvey, Michelle Glaros, Christine Henseler, Margot Kelley, Jim Knapp, Lori
Landay, Vincent Lankewish, Jennifer Michael, Peter Pawlowicz, Laura Saltz,
and Thaine Stearns. All of these colleagues deserve praise for their insightful ob-
servations, without which this work would not have taken the shape that it did.
We thank our colleagues in the English Department for their friendship, en-
couragement and support, as well as for stimulating conversations about the
use of images in rhetoric and literature pedagogy, and our students, who trav-
eled with us as we explored some of the initial ideas behind this volume.
Introduction
Marguerite Helmers
Charles A. Hill
images and words has been especially neglected. “One of the crucial media-
tions that occurs in the history of cultural forms is the interaction between
verbal and pictorial modes of representation,” writes W. J. T. Mitchell. “We
rarely train scholars, however, to be sensitive to this crucial point of conflict,
influence, and mediation and insist on separating the study of texts and images
from one another by rigid disciplinary boundaries” (“Diagrammatology”
627). Mitchell’s caution, about which we will have more to say later, provides
us with a rationale for undertaking this type of interdisciplinary work. For this
book, we invited contributions from authors who situate themselves at the
crossroads of more than one discipline, and we have chosen to survey a wide
range of sites of image production, from architecture to paintings in muse-
ums and from film to needlepoint, in order to understand how images and
texts, both symbolic forms of representation, work upon readers.
Rhetoricians working from a variety of disciplinary perspectives are begin-
ning to pay a substantial amount of attention to issues of visual rhetoric.
Through analysis of photographs and drawings, graphs and tables, and motion
pictures, scholars are exploring the many ways in which visual elements are
used to influence people’s attitudes, opinions, and beliefs. There is a diversity in
these efforts that is exciting and productive, but which can also be confusing for
those who are trying to understand the role of visual elements in rhetorical the-
ory and practice. Some people seem to think of visual elements only in relation
to expressing quantitative relationships in charts and graphs. Other scholars
concentrate solely on the ubiquity of visual elements on the Internet. Much of the
more culturally oriented work is based in art history and art theory, giving the im-
pression that, when speaking of “visuals” and “images,” we mean artistic artifacts
exclusively. In English studies, there is no vocabulary for discussing images, or per-
haps we might say that there are so many disciplinary-specific vocabularies that
we in English have to borrow extensively. In fact, despite his assertion that
“transferences from one art form to another” are “inescapable” (“Spatial Form”
281), Mitchell encourages cross-disciplinary rhetoricians and cultural critics to de-
velop a “systematic” method for investigating the relationship between arts and
words in order to avoid charges of “impressionism” (“Spatial Form” 291). This
systematic approach would demand a theoretical basis and a set of terms com-
mon to the field of visual rhetoric. One of the most important lessons from the
Sister Arts Tradition in literary studies from the late 1950s is that “A student of the
sister arts must learn to work twice as hard” (Lipking 4), training as a scholar in
two disciplines—linguistic and visual—in both primary and secondary materi-
als. Mitchell’s warning draws attention to the institutional fact that, just as ear-
nestly as we seek to join the study of verbal rhetoric with the study of visual
material, so also others earnestly seek to separate the disciplines from “contami-
nation,” a perception that the study of images is soft or non-rigorous because
images are commonly construed to be illustrative and decorative. In order to
counter what has been called a paragonal relationship between word and im-
INTRODUCTION 3
age—a struggle for dominance over meaning between verbal and visual dis-
course—we suggest that readers and scholars working with visual rhetoric
attend to the notion that word and image are used by writers and illustrators to
accomplish different aims. Printed verbal material is conveyed to us in visual
forms, whether electronically or through traditional paperform methods. Thus
rhetoric encompasses a notion of visuality at the very level of text; it is mediated
by visuality, typography, even the somatic experience of holding the book or
touching the paper.
Art historian Barbara Stafford draws attention to the ways that images are
often considered to be subordinate to written text, logical argument, and
truthful exposition: “In spite of their quantity and globalized presence, for
many educated people pictures have become synonymous with ignorance, il-
literacy, and deceit. Why?” (110). In “Material Literacy and Visual Design,”
Lester Faigley explores a similar point, citing an 1846 poem by William Words-
worth that, with characteristic Romantic era angst, bemoans the initial publi-
cation of the Illustrated London News in 1842. Wordsworth’s concern is with
progress: It was the word that raised the English from their earliest beginnings
to an “intellectual Land.” The image, because it is mute, or “dumb,” cannot ex-
press either truth or love, but rather has a profound national and psychological
effect of reverting the country “back to childhood.” He concludes his poem
with the exclamation, “Heaven keep us from a lower stage!” Faigley’s essay re-
captures the notion of progress, however, and records the irrepressible move-
ment of images into our society through various technologies from the
printing press to the World Wide Web.
Where, then, should the rhetorician who is interested in analyzing visual
images begin? What bodies of scholarship are essential to master? What terms
should rhetoricians adopt? Are some images more suitable than others for the
study of images in rhetorical theory?
As we worked together to identify a suitable cover image for this volume,
these questions surfaced. The image we chose to represent a volume of work
on vision and representation had to be multilayered and complex, but not so
detailed as to be inscrutable or to require excessive verbal explanation. On the
other hand, the image had to foster verbal discourse, debate, argument, and
thoughtful reflection while in itself having a visual impact. Furthermore, we
believed the image could not be tied too strongly to one event because its own
rhetorical work was to represent the themes that the authors in this book ad-
dress: vision, revision, representation, media, memory, presence and absence.
Richard LeFande’s (cover) image of a photograph held against the Manhattan
skyline spoke to these themes, while drawing attention to the strongest visual
event of this new century: the devastation of the World Trade Center in New
York City on September 11, 2001.
Points of crisis in American culture since the Vietnam War have been visually
recorded and widely disseminated to the public. The use of television cameras
4 INTRODUCTION
and the evening news to broadcast the battles of Vietnam gave it the name “the
living room war.” The Gulf War two decades later was a visual event of a
slightly different sort. Anchormen broadcasting with bombs falling over their
shoulders became symbolic of the real presence of the media in our lives. The
use of infrared and computerized piloting devices by the military became sym-
bolic of the depersonalized gamesmanship of an advanced technological war.
In both cases, though, just as with September 11, 2001, the spectator was able to
experience the exceptional power of visual media to create “simultaneity,” a na-
tional consciousness of being together as a community (Anderson 132; Baty).
Writing about September 11 in “Images, Imaging, Imagination,” Annick T. R.
Wibben expresses the conundrum of televised access:
We all have images stored in our eyes (how does this differ for those who saw
the events on TV and those that were in NYC or DC?). We are bombarded by
ever more images by the media (how does the replay and information over-
load numb us to the effects of particular images?)…. We were all there, but
yet we weren’t. We saw it, but saw nothing. We kept uttering this isn’t real,
while knowing that it was. We witnessed death, yet we saw no bodies, no
blood. (Wibben)
One of Benjamin Barber’s main points in his influential book Jihad vs.
McWorld is that information technologies (audio, visual, film, print, and
electronic) “inevitably impact culture and politics and the attitudes that con-
stitute them” (74). The “infotainment telesector”—the connection of tech-
nologies, news, and entertainment (60), comprised of “those who create and
control the world of signs and symbols” (79)—is something like a universal
country without borders. As Wibben indicates, significant facts about im-
ages and their interpretation and important questions about the relations of
all images to human mediation emerged from the September 11 attacks.
Strong national symbols such as the eagle and the flag are liberally in use in
the popular and mass media as a means of gathering together the imagined
national community, and to these patriotic and sentimental images the twin
towers of the World Trade Center have been added in the way that the red
poppy came to symbolize the First World War. Together, these symbols
form an expressive syntax for what Barber calls American “monoculture,” a
“template,” a “style” that exemplifies a certain lifestyle—but in turn begins
to demand “certain products” (82). Symbols resist individualistic interpreta-
tion because they are overdetermined by customary usage, embedded so fre-
quently in conventional discourse that they rarely take on a reflective,
individual meaning. As Edwards, Strachan and Kendall point out in their
contributions to this book, national symbols are employed as a visual short-
hand to represent shared ideals and to launch an immediate appeal to the au-
dience’s sense of a national community.
INTRODUCTION 5
FIG. I.1. Firefighters at Ground Zero. Photograph by Thomas E. Franklin, 2001. Copy-
right © 2001, The Record (Bergen County, N.J.). Reprinted by permission of Corbis.
of the photograph. It is the act captured on film that matters. The three men
raising the flag do have proper names, of course—George Johnson, Dan
McWilliams, Bill Eisengrein—and due to the popularity of the photograph,
their individual names are now protected by copyright and licensing agree-
ments; however, in viewing the photograph, their names are less important
than their symbolic value as “firefighters.” They intended to use the American
flag as a sign to rally the spirits of those working amidst the rubble of the
Trade Center. McWilliams had been working at Ground Zero since late in the
morning on September 11, when he was called to evacuate. He saw the flag on
the yacht the Star of America docked at one of the piers on the Hudson River, to
INTRODUCTION 7
the west of the Trade Center site. It was an immediate symbol. He was, in the
words of the Bergen County Record, where the photograph was originally
published, “inspired.” “Everybody just needed a shot in the arm,” McWilliams
later noted (Clegg). The flag was raised on a flagpole emerging from the rub-
ble at the site at 5:01pm in the afternoon of September 11. Photographer
Franklin was at Ground Zero all day, despite threats to arrest him. He com-
mented later that the photo “just happened,” although he immediately recog-
nized the pose of the firefighters as being similar to the pose of the Marines in
Joe Rosenthal’s Iwo Jima photograph. “It was an important shot,” Franklin ex-
plained. “It told of more than just death and destruction. It said something to
me about the strength of the American people and of these firemen having to
battle the unimaginable. It had drama, spirit, and courage in the face of disas-
ter” (Franklin, “Photo of a Lifetime”).
When the photograph was published the next day, its impact was powerful
and immediate, seized at once as a symbol by millions. Newsweek cemented
the photograph’s popularity and significance by running the Ground Zero
photo as the cover image for the September 24, 2001 issue. “I have just received
my Sept. 24 issue, ‘After the Terror,’ wrote Jodi Williams to Newsweek:
I haven’t even had time to read it yet, but I wanted to say thank you for the
cover picture. I have wondered what the icon of this event would be and
am pleased with your choice. In showing the flag being raised out of the
rubble, you have chosen a positive image—the strength and resilience of
Americans, and the specific bravery of those members of the NYPD and
FDNY who risked and sometimes lost their lives in the hope of saving
others.
The simple composition of the image is both essential and non-essential to the
meaning. The fact that there are three figures involved in the flag raising,
rather than two or five, invokes the Christian Trinity of Father, Son, and Holy
Ghost. Inscribing the Trinity over the rubble of the Trade Center offers a cor-
rective to the “Islamic fundamentalism” of the ad hoc pilots of the aircraft that
blasted into the buildings in the morning. The immediate symbolic value of
the American flag encodes “appropriate” and conditioned responses of patrio-
tism, loyalty, and invincibility. Whenever an image of the flag appears, the
American public associates it with such abstract ideas—even if individuals do
not respond to it emotionally. The colors of the flag have symbolic meaning:
red for valor, white for innocence, and blue for justice. When the American
flag was created, it was designed to represent ideas rather than a monarchy or a
particular religion. By the early decades of the 20th century, the flag was rec-
ognized as denoting freedom and democracy. In being designated a national
symbol, the flag is synecdochic. To defend one’s country and people, and pos-
sessions, is synecdochically known as “defending the flag.” It is the embodi-
ment of national spirit, a shorthand for the words of the Pledge of Allegiance
8 INTRODUCTION
(to the flag): “liberty and justice for all.” Furthermore, like any icon, the flag
becomes meaningful to the public through repeated imaging and storytelling.
“[I]t is useful to remind ourselves that nations inspire love, and often pro-
foundly self-sacrificing love. The cultural products of nationalism”—poetry,
painting, song—“show this love very clearly in thousands of different forms
and styles” (Anderson 120). In Franklin’s image, the flag’s importance is em-
phasized because it occupies the central axis of the photograph. The diagonal
placement of the flagpole across the ground of the rubble physically cuts
across the devastation with something whole, purposeful, strong, and inte-
grated. It marks the connection to an imagined community called “America”
that, in turn, recognizes the photograph as symbolic.
New York firefighters were the first on the scene and were inside the towers
when they collapsed, leaving 343 firefighters dead. The rubble—the back-
ground to this photograph—provides meaning to the image, for it is this
“ground” of rubble, which encompasses half of the scene but does not in-
trude on the activities of the men, that gives meaning to the figures’ resilient
action. They are not rescuing or digging out here, but taking time to reflect on
the spirit that gives meaning and purpose to the activities at Ground Zero. It is
because the men stand in the foreground that the photograph achieves its
power. Imagine a different photograph, one taken through the rubble, fram-
ing the men, dwarfed by the gothic arcs of the burning, decaying steel, or, as
seen through the charred cruciform windows of buildings adjoining Ground
Zero. Decreasing the physical relationship between men and rubble would de-
crease the importance of the working man, the New Yorker, in overcoming di-
saster. It would place disaster in the foreground and as the protagonist of the
photograph. In fact, photographers such as James Nachtway, Anthony Suau,
Susan Meiselas, and Gilles Peress made images such as these; yet these images
failed to become icons.
When Joe Rosenthal’s image of the Marines raising the American flag on
Mount Suribachi appeared in 1945, the photograph immediately symbolized
the triumph over adversity and death that the Marines had encountered in tak-
ing the island. Karal Ann Marling and John Wetenhall write that the “act of
planting a flagstaff meant: enemy terrain captured, the highest point seized—
triumph” (73). Thus, the meaning of the American flag in this context depends
on a notion of an enemy, the adversary who held the ground initially.
“Rosenthal’s picture spoke of group effort, the common man—working in con-
cert with his neighbors—triumphant. The very facelessness of the heroes sanc-
tified a common cause” (73). Similar meanings are associated with Ground Zero
Spirit as well. Franklin’s photograph of the three firefighters shifts the emphasis
from military might to the exemplary actions of common men. The three are
self-assured and attentive to duty. Hands on hips, focused on the stars and stripes
of the rising flag, they don’t cry over the disaster behind them, but stoically re-
solve to raise the symbol for their lost and living comrades as an indication that
INTRODUCTION 9
there is courage in the collective will of the nation. Like its precursor in the Pa-
cific a half-century earlier, this flag in New York City “calls the audience to the
task of building their society in the same manner as the men in the picture,
through sacrifice and coordinated labor” (Hariman and Lucaites 372).
As Marling and Wetenhall point out, “[T]he Stars and Stripes took on a new
symbolic weight during World War II …. Beginning with the Memorial Day
parade in Washington in 1942 … flags appeared everywhere and, thanks to
[President FDR’s] example, the display of Old Glory on private homes, busi-
nesses, and commercial products became common practice” (76). The ability
of the flag to grace a private home meant that everyone could partake of its
meaning, share its association, mark the national community. The 1946 Con-
gressional Flag code made the flag a religious object, with rules for devotion.
The flag unified a country that was based on diversity; without allegiance to a
common religious goal, the country could focus on patriotism, on protecting
the country that allowed individual and collective freedom to flourish. The
flag aspires, pushes upward, and lifts the spirit, as Marling and Wetenhall com-
ment (204). Furthermore, it is itself an intertextual symbol, “a field of multi-
ple projections,” as Robert Hariman and John Lucaites describe:
flag, adjusting its folds and presentation, very much aware of its meaning for the
workers at the site. It is this attentiveness that provides interpretive clues.
McWilliam’s and Eisengrein’s hands are on the flag; they look up at its folds.
Iconographically, to look downward is to lower, and lower the spirits of the spec-
tator. Looking up, as in the Renaissance images of the Madonna and the saints,
represents hope. The attention of Johnson, McWilliams, and Eisengrein attests
to the need to raise the flag as a symbol on this day.
Rosenthal’s photograph was compared to other works of American patri-
otic art: Archibald M. Willard’s The Spirit of ’76 (1876; 1891) and Emanuel
Gottlieb Leutze’s Washington Crossing the Delaware (1851), both of which em-
ploy, like Franklin and Rosenthal’s images, triangular formats. In both Spirit of
’76 and Washington Crossing the Delaware, the American flag occupies the cen-
tral axis of the painting and is the highest physical point of the image. In a
now-famous editorial from February 1945, the Rochester Times-Union com-
pared Rosenthal’s photograph to DaVinci’s Last Supper and drew attention to
the structural gesture in which “the outstretched arms and the foremost man’s
left leg leads the eye directly to the flag.” The writer continues:
Oddly, though, the eye does not rest there. A slight breeze is stirring, not
enough to unfurl the folds of the flag, but enough to enlist the forces of na-
ture on the side of the Marines who are hurrying to raise the staff. So the
eye, turning back to a line parallel to the outstretched arms, follows the
blood-red stripes to the entirely empty space in the upper right where the
flag, in just a moment, will be. Few artists would be bold enough to make
empty space the center of their picture. And yet this bit of art from life has
done just that. In that space is a vision of what is to be. (qtd. in Marling and
Wetenhall 204)
temporal fact that three men raised an American flag at Ground Zero exists
ontologically, the idea that three White men (and not women, gays, or Blacks)
could represent work at Ground Zero, but also the community of “America”
and its spirit, seemed to test the capacity of imaging to be inclusive. The pho-
tograph functions, with the absence of women, as a powerful persuasive de-
vice that women did not exist at Ground Zero. Lt. Brenda Berkman of the New
York Fire Department, in remarks made at the National Women’s Law Cen-
ter’s 2001 Awards Dinner in Washington, DC, listed the roles that women
played in the immediate rescue at Ground Zero: firefighter, EMT, police offi-
cer, ambulance driver, nurse, doctor, construction worker, chaplain, Red
Cross worker, and military personnel:
The reality is that women have contributed to the aftermath of the World
Trade Center attack in every imaginable way. But the face the media has put
on the rescue and recovery efforts in New York City is almost exclusively
that of men. Where are the pictures or stories of Captain Kathy Mazza
shooting out the glass in the lobby of one of the towers to allow hundreds
of people to flee the building more quickly?
In becoming the iconic image of 9/11, Ground Zero Spirit imprints an idea of
heroism on the collective consciousness of Americans, and that idea is entirely
male. Ultimately, it must be read for what is absent as much as for what is pres-
ent. As the women firefighters in New York—the 25 out of 11,500—attest, the
representation of the males in the photograph is fact, evidence of the discrimi-
natory policies of the FDNY against hiring women. That the losses at the
Trade Center were male “reflects the way the FDNY has tested and hired over
the past two decades,” writes Terese Floren, editor of WFS Publications, but it
does not attest to “the merits or failures of women firefighters.” Berkman re-
turns to the issue of representation: “When we were growing up, we did not
see any women role models in firefighting and the trades” (qtd. in Willing).
That Ground Zero Spirit exemplifies the male ideal is disturbing in the long run
because it represents rescue work as the domain of men. Berkman’s point is
important, yet even she, like the three men themselves, does not realize the
full measure of the photo’s significance: The image relies on the interpretant,
the mental representation that is individuated for each viewer. The photo
means, not because Johnson, McWilliams, and Eisengrein were there physi-
cally, but because they represented the millions who were there only “in
spirit”—or perhaps more accurately, and to echo Wibben’s thoughts, those
who were there due to electronic and print media.
One of the important concepts for any discussion of the role of the viewer
in images is the relationship between viewing and time. Images work on us
synchronically and diachronically. Synchronically, we view the image that rep-
resents the present. Diachronic viewings are slightly more complicated, for we
INTRODUCTION 13
view an image that represents the past and was created in the past, but we also
view contemporaneous images with a knowledge of their precursors and
their previous meanings. “As American attitudes and values changed, so the
public estimate of the Iwo Jima motif shifted from near adoration to neglect
and back again to a patriotic pride mingled with nostalgia for the lost age of
unambiguous heroes” (Marling and Wetenhall 196). Intervening in the history
of the image was the suspicion over the military fostered by Vietnam and,
even earlier, post-war films that were critical of the violence of war. The nos-
talgia for the masculine American hero is evident again in the Ground Zero
photograph, in which the flag raisers are common men, focused on their duty
and, symbolically, on their country. Some of the commentary following the at-
tacks of 9/11 praised the return to the “unambiguous hero” of the 21st cen-
tury. However, just as the fiction was in place in 1945, it is again in place.
Heroes are manifestations of national desire.
In the introduction of this visual text, we have drawn upon a text that is pop-
ular, widely imitated, photojournalistic, and symbolic in order to introduce
key ideas about the problems of vision and representation and in order to in-
troduce key terms—paragonal, intertextual, interpretant—which we explain
further a bit later. We have also, after much debate, decided to reproduce the
newly famous photograph by Thomas E. Franklin, despite it being readily
available to readers’ consciousness due to its reproduction and extensive distri-
bution. In addition, there is evidence from psychologists and historians who
have studied memory and “flashbulb” memories that “the distortion of mem-
ory traces” occurs at the level of the interpretant, at the moment that the vi-
sual image or event is encoded (Winter and Sivan). In other words, our
memory of the photograph may habitually encode distortions. According to
Winter and Sivan, this is a frequent predicament with visual memory:
I. INTERTEXTUALITY
In the late 19th century, the philosopher Charles Sanders Peirce articulated
several theories of signs and representation that have continued to influence
rhetoricians. Peirce’s theory derived from John Locke’s Essay Concerning Hu-
man Understanding, in which Locke proposed that the study of “semeiotic”
(now commonly referred to as “semiotics”) would afford a theory of knowl-
edge. Peirce’s conviction was phenomenological: Things exist in a reality out-
side of what we perceive or think about them. His background in the natural
sciences caused him to search for a logical, scientific method that would not be
confused by what he termed “beliefs.” Three theories of signs emerge in his
philosophy of logic as semiotic, and each of these theories is parsed in detail,
but the one that is used most frequently by rhetoricians to discuss both lan-
guage and images is the triadic theory of icon, index, and symbol. Peirce’s dis-
tinctions are useful to rhetoricians because they establish a formal
terminology for considering different types of imagistic sign systems, from
representational, through diagrammatical, to allegorical.
Two levels of terminology establish the relationship of sign to referent. At
the first level, Peirce contended that a sign stands in for an Object; it “tells
about” its Object (100). He gave this sign the name representamen. The represen-
tamen is rhetorical; it “addresses somebody, that is, creates in the mind of that
person an equivalent sign” and this equivalent sign is called the “interpretant”
(Peirce 99). The interpretant represents an idea that Peirce called “the ground
of the representation” (qtd. in De Lauretis, Alice 19). The interpretant is thus a
mental representation; it is not a person. Thus, both representamen and interp-
retant relate to the same Object. In using the work of Peirce to establish a
semiology of art, Mieke Bal and Norman Bryson contend that the interpre-
tant is associative and connotative. “The interpretant is constantly shifting; no
viewer will stop at the first association” (189). Nonetheless, this does not mean
that interpretants are unique; interpretants are shot through with “culturally
shared codes” (De Lauretis 167). “Interpretants are new meanings resulting
from the signs on the basis of one’s habit. And habits, precisely, are formed in
social life” (Bal and Bryson 202). At this point, ideological constructions of
gender enter into the creation of the interpretant.
Once these terms are understood, they facilitate understanding Peirce’s dis-
tinction between icon, index, and symbol. This trio of signs is not graded or hi-
erarchical; rather, each term describes ways that different types of images may
be understood. The icon may be abstract or representational; it possesses a
character that makes it significant. A vacation photograph and Charles
Schultz’s Snoopy are icons, but so is a pencil streak indicating a geometric line.
The Object does not have to exist, for it is easy enough to visually represent an
alien from “outer space” or a solar system even though we have not seen ei-
ther. Peirce refers to the icon as an image.
16 INTRODUCTION
The index, on the other hand, depends on the existence of the Object to
have left what Jacques Derrida, in Dissemination, would later call a “trace.”
Therefore, the indexical image holds an existential relationship to its Object
and often raises in the viewer a memory of a similar Object. The classical ex-
ample of an indexical sign is a bullet hole. The interpretant indicates, “here is a
hole in the front door” and relates the hole to other holes, but not to the Object
(a bullet making the hole) because the Object—the bullet and the gun—are
missing. In Roland Barthes’ words, the index “points but does not tell” (62).
Peirce describes the index as a diagram.
The symbol is the most abstract of the three sign types. It depends on the in-
terpretant, that is, the mental representation in the mind’s eye. Therefore, the
symbolic image holds a conventional relationship to its Object that is not con-
tingent on resemblance. “The act of interpretation … brings [the symbolic
sign] to life,” write Bal and Bryson (192). Peirce calls the symbol a metaphor.
Ground Zero Spirit operates on all of these levels. As an image/icon, at the
literal level, the three men who raise the American flag are performing a com-
mon action in American civil society. Thus, denotationally, their action is rec-
ognizable to that group that Benedict Anderson called “the imagined
community.” Memory of similar flag raising ceremonies, of the soaring exis-
tence and the dreadful collapse of the Twin Towers of the World Trade Cen-
ter, of the deaths of hundreds of firefighters and rescue workers moves the
image into the realm of indexical and diagrammatic sign, for the index points
to the prior existence of these Objects, even though they are not directly visi-
ble within the frame of the photograph. Metaphorically, the idea of the
firefighter in American culture carries symbolic weight; their triangulated
pose evokes the memory of the Marines at Iwo Jima, of courage under fire, of
American ideals of toughness, grit, and masculinity. Again, while Peirce does
not propose his levels of signs as a hierarchy, Ground Zero Spirit fulfills all as-
pects of his taxonomy, making the photograph appealing, disturbing, popular,
contentious, and powerful.
A third linguistic approach to the study of images derives from the work of the
French linguist Ferdinand de Saussure, whose published lectures titled A
Course in General Linguistics provided the foundation for the study of signs in
French thought of the late 20th century. It is neither practical nor theoretically
sound to reduce Saussure’s ideas to a single thesis, but we will focus here on his
system of linguistic differences between words, or signs, which was adopted
and further explicated by Roland Barthes. According to Saussure, understand-
ing is established by difference; practically speaking, we understand cat be-
cause cat is different from dog. The names are merely arbitrary, established by
social and linguistic convention, rather than having any existential link to the
INTRODUCTION 17
object itself. Barthes extended this refusal to name to the differences between
literature and painting. “Why not wipe out the difference between literature
and painting,” he asked, “in order to affirm more powerfully the plurality of
‘texts’?” (55). The question is not as polemical as it may seem. Barthes raised it
in the context of his analysis of Balzac’s short story Sarrasine, S/Z, a treatise
that set out to exhaustively identify the codes that comprise written work and
the experience of reading it. Rather than seeking to overthrow two disciplines,
textual studies and art history, he wanted to parse vision and experience as
semiological.
Thus, both paint and word refer not to an external reality, but “from one
code to another” (55). Reality is always framed by codes that determine what
the writer or painter looks at—what they believe is worthy of vision and repre-
sentation—and what mode of representation they select to describe that real-
ity (such as the selection of word or image, but also of poetry, Cubistic canvas,
film, etc., what Barthes terms a “code of the arts” [55]). As Hariman and
Lucaites acknowledge in their discussion of Rosenthal’s Iwo Jima image, the
frame created by the boundaries of the photograph “marks the work as a spe-
cial selection of reality that acquires greater intensity than the flow of experi-
ence before and after it” (366). As Andrea Kaston Tange demonstrates in this
book, 19th-century middle-class homemakers selected socially coded home
design items to represent their position in society. Quite literally, these objects
conveyed the meaning of their lives. Rather than depict reality accurately, or
event impressionistically, the creator assembles and arranges “blocks of mean-
ing” so that the description becomes yet another meaning. Rather than reveal
truth or provide understanding, the poem or the image offers yet another
meaning. The import of Barthes’ insights for the study of visual rhetoric is
that the assembling of these “blocks of meaning” is a rhetorical act. Further-
more, Barthes reminds us to avoid seeking the transparent, definitional rela-
tionship between image and referent. While an image may index something
exterior (that which is “real”), “it points but does not tell” (62).
For the rhetorician studying visual material, Barthes’ work is significant in
instructing us to continue following the chain of signifiers and connotations.
S/Z alone is rife with words that reference fluidity, movement, and instability,
words such as “layering,” “agglomeration,” “sequentiality,” “dynamic,” and
“infinite thematics.” Just as Peirce allowed for an infinite series of connota-
tions in his concept of the interpretant, so also does Barthes’ thesis allow for an
infinite series of meanings built from blocks of text. “Visual representation
gives way to visual rhetoric through subjectivity, voice, and contingency,” com-
ments Barbie Zelizer. With photojournalism, or with other representational
media, we are able to project “altered ends” for the representations we see.
This insertion of the spectator’s desires for the future is like the tense in verbal
discourse, as tense can locate a moment into the past (that which has already
happened and cannot be changed; visual representation), the present (what
18 INTRODUCTION
Zelizer terms the “as is”), or the future (the moment of possibility that Zelizer
calls the “as if ”). Rhetorically, “as if ” has the greatest power because it directly
involves the spectator and depends on the spectator’s ability to forecast and
manipulate contingencies in order to create a meaning.
This sophisticated reading between disciplines—between linguistics, rhet-
oric, and photojournalism—offers the next step to the Sister Arts Tradition as
a bridge between disciplines. We must offer a caution, nonetheless. Certainly,
the idea that verbal and visual modes of representation could be understood as
symbolic practices, each with a signifying grammar, is a powerful argument
for the founding of a visual rhetoric. Yet it denies the fact that verbal and visual
representation work with particular media that also, in themselves, signify. A
daub of paint is existentially different from a stitch with silk thread, and each
has its own mode of conveying meaning. One of our projects as visual rhetori-
cians is to differentiate ourselves from semiology by studying material as rhet-
oric. What does the character of and texture of pencil on paper or a smooth
and reflective wall with names etched into its face impart to the meaning that
the spectator takes from the object?
the term visual rhetoric. We deliberately did not set out to develop a single defi-
nition of visual rhetoric that we would try to persuade others to accept; rather,
we wanted to collect definitions from which individual scholars were work-
ing. We felt, here at the beginning of what may prove to be a renaissance of im-
age studies, that collecting some of these definitions and allowing individuals
to demonstrate how their own ideas and assumptions about the term influ-
ence their work would provide more heuristic value than trying to settle on a
single definition.
Some of the contributors have answered our call very explicitly; others
have implied more than expressed their notions of the term visual rhetoric. But
all of them attempt to explicate and demonstrate methodologies for analyz-
ing various types of visual texts. It is important, at this point in the history of
visual studies, to collect a wide range of such methods, examining the explicit
and implicit theoretical stances behind them, before disciplinary conventions
begin to restrict the kinds of work that disciplinary structures will reward.
In some ways, the contributors’ responses indicate a surprising level of
agreement. At one level or another, every contributor rejects the notion that a
clear demarcation can be drawn between “visual” and “verbal” texts. In almost
every chapter, the reader will find some discussion of the ways in which the vi-
sual and the verbal bleed over into each other’s territory. In popular film
(Blakesley), political cartoons (Edwards), captioned photographs (Finnegan),
needlepoint samplers (Goggin), advertisements (Hope), political campaign
films (Kendall & Strachan), statistical graphs (Kostelnick), and in some of
Blair’s examples of “visual arguments,” we see visual and verbal expression
working together in an effort to prompt a desired response from the audience.
Stroupe discusses this blending of the visual and the verbal explicitly in his dis-
cussion of “hybrid” literacies.
The chapters by Kaston Tange and by Dickinson and Maugh push the defi-
nition of visual rhetoric to include the study of constructed spaces, but even
here we see the importance of verbal text for a rhetorical process that seems, at
first glance, dominated by the visual. Dickinson and Maugh discuss the verbal
text on a Wild Oats store’s display signs, text that explicitly points out the
global nature of the commercial enterprise, even while the visual and spatial
design of the store works to emphasize a sense of “locality.” And Kaston
Tange examines the ways in which home design and images of home life in
Victorian culture reflected dominant ideologies, assumptions about which
were disseminated largely through written texts. Finally, Helmers’ analysis of
the rhetorical nature of visual art points out the necessity of verbal dis-
course—in particular, the ways in which narrative discourse is used—to com-
prehend, to interpret, and to respond to works of an entirely visual medium.
Of course, others have argued before us that words and images most often,
perhaps inevitably, work together in persuasive discourse, and that a “visual
turn” in scholarly work in the humanities should not ignore the insights into
INTRODUCTION 21
the primary influence of language on all human enterprise, including the dis-
semination of, interpretation of, and response to visual texts. James Elkins ar-
gues perhaps most explicitly and forcefully against any sharp demarcation
between words and images, insisting that “the word–image opposition is …
demonstrably untrue” and persists largely because it “correspond(s) to institu-
tional habits and needs” (84). In this volume, though, the contributors do not
stop at arguing that visual and verbal modes of communication work together
in complex ways; rather, they offer analyses of the workings of these interre-
lated modes in a wide variety of rhetorical situations.
A glance at the table of contents will demonstrate that the contributors to
this volume analyze a wide variety of visual modes of communication. One of
our aims, of course, was to demonstrate some of the many kinds of texts that
could be considered instances of visual rhetoric. However, it is also important to
note the wide variety of rhetorical situations in which these texts are operative,
with their attendant variety of rhetorical methods, motives, and cultural as-
sumptions. A hint at this variety can be gleaned merely by noting the different
physical sites in which these texts are located—for example, political conven-
tions, editorial pages, movie theatres, art museums, suburban food stores, gov-
ernment documents, as well as the Victorian drawing room and, as in Goggin’s
examination of needlepoint, orphanage schools in the 19th century. This wide
range of texts, rhetorical situations, and sites of praxis supports our point that it
may be premature to begin constructing the boundaries that would define a
“discipline” of visual studies in the formal sense. Perhaps, at least for awhile, it
would be more productive to continue pushing against existing disciplinary
boundaries and to maintain the “indiscipline” status, continuing to question all
current practices while developing new ones. This may be a romantic idea, and
it may be impractical, as Stafford argues, to maintain this undisciplined stance
for long, but it is, we believe, both necessary and desirable to maintain the cur-
rent unsettled state of visual studies for at least the near future.
Perhaps the most useful possible outcome of a volume such as this—one
that attempts to capture a small part of the wide range of work that is possible
when a field begins to take seriously the study of images as important cultural
and rhetorical forces—is that it makes explicit the seemingly infinite range of
possibilities for those who are interested in studying rhetorical transactions of
all kinds. It is this openness, this resistance to closure, that drew us to the field
of rhetoric in the first place. And, as we hope the chapters in this volume dem-
onstrate, every new turn in the study of rhetorical practices reveals yet more
possibilities for study, for discussion, for wonder. The visual turn is just the lat-
est of these, but it has revealed a seemingly inexhaustible supply of new ques-
tions, problems, and objects of study—so many that any one volume can
contain only a tiny fraction of the possibilities. Knowing that one has barely
touched on the range of possibilities in a vast new area of inquiry is humbling,
but tremendously exciting. It is, perhaps, the best of all possible worlds.
22 INTRODUCTION
WORKS CITED
Anderson, Benedict. Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of National-
ism. 1e. London: Verso, 1983; 1991.
Bal, Mieke, and Norman Bryson. “Semiotics and Art History.” Art Bulletin 73.2 ( June 1991):
174–208.
Barber, Benjamin. Jihad vs. McWorld. New York Times, 1995.
Barthes, Roland. S/Z: An Essay. Trans. Richard Miller. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux,
1974.
Baty, S. Paige. American Monroe: The Making of a Body Politic. Berkeley: U of California P, 1995.
Berkman, Brenda. “Remarks of Lt. Brenda Berkman, FDNY at the National Women’s Law
Center’s 2001 Awards Dinner, ‘Celebrating the Many Roles of Women,’ 14 November
2001.” Women in the Fireservice, Inc. (WFSI). <http://www.wfsi.org/
BerkNWLC.html>. 12 September 2002.
Calinescu, Matei. Rereading. New Haven: Yale UP, 1993.
Campbell, David. “Imaging the Real, Struggling for Meaning.” INFOinterventions. 6 October
2001. <http://www.watsoninstitute.org/inforpeace/911/campbell_imaging.html>.
Clegg, Jeannine. “Flag-raising was ‘shot in the arm,’ The three firefighters who hauled up
the flag.” The Record. 14 September 2001. <http://www.groundzerospirit.org>. 19
September 2002.
Collins, Billy. “The Names.” The Poetry and Literature Center of the Library of Congress.
6 September 2002.<http://www.loc.gov/poetry/names.html>.
De Lauretis, Teresa. Alice Doesn’t: Feminism, Semiotics, Cinema. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1983.
—. “The Violence of Rhetoric: Considerations on Representation and Gender.” Semiotica
54.5 (1985): 11–31.
Derrida, Jacques. Dissemination. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1981.
De Saussure, Ferdinand. A Course in General Linguistics. Trans. Roy Harris. London:
Duckworth, 1983.
Elkins, James. The Domain of Images. Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1999.
Faigley, Lester. “Material Literacy and Visual Design.” Rhetorical Bodies. Ed. Jack Selzer and
Sharon Crowley. Madison: U Wisconsin P, 1999.
Floren, Terese M. “Too Far Back for Comfort.” Women in the Fireservice, Inc. (WFSI). No
date. <http://www.wfsi.org/Toofarback.html>.
Fox, Roy F. “Image Studies: An Interdisciplinary View.” Images in Language, Media, and
Mind. Ed. Roy F. Fox. Urbana, IL: National Council of Teachers of English, 1994. 3–20.
Franklin. Thomas E. “Getting the Photo of a Lifetime.” The Record. 13 September 2001.
<http://www.groundzerospirit.org>.
—. “Sept. 11, Not a Photograph, Changed My Life.” North Jersey.com. 11 September 2002.
<http://www.northjersey.com>.
Gates, Henry Louis. The Signifying Monkey: A Theory of Afro-American Literary Criticism.
New York: Oxford UP, 1988.
Genette, Gerard. Palimpsests: Literature in the Second Degree. Trans. Channa Newman and
Claude Doubinsky. Lincoln: U Nebraska P, 1997.
Hariman, Robert, and John Lucaites. “Performing Civic Identity: The Iconic Photograph of
the Flag Raising on Iwo Jima.” Quarterly Journal of Speech 88.4 (November 2002): 363–392.
Lejeune, Philippe. On Autobiography. Trans. Katherine Leary. Minneapolis: U of Minnesota
P, 1989.
INTRODUCTION 23
Lipking, Lawrence. “Quick Poetic Eyes: Another Look at Literary Pictorialism.” Articulate
Images: The Sister Arts from Hogarth to Tennyson Ed. Richard Wendorf. Minneapolis: U of
Minnesota P, 1983. 3–25.
Locke, John. An Essay Concerning Human Understanding. Ed. Roger Woolhouse. New York:
Penguin Books, 1997.
Marling, Karal Ann, and John Wetenhall. Iwo Jima: Monuments, Memories, and the American
Hero. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1991.
Mitchell, W. J. T. “Diagrammatology.” Critical Inquiry 7.3 (Spring 1981): 622–633.
—. “Interdisciplinarity and Visual Culture.” Art Bulletin 70.4 (1995): 540–544.
—. Picture Theory: Essays on Verbal and Visual Representation. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1994.
—. “Spatial Form in Literature: Toward a General Theory.” The Language of Images. Ed. W.
J. T. Mitchell. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1980. 271–99.
Peirce, Charles Sanders. Charles S. Peirce: The Essential Writings. Ed. Edward C. Moore. New
York: Harper, 1972.
Stafford, Barbara Maria. Good Looking: Essays on the Virtue of Images. Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press, 1997.
Szentmiklosy, Chris. “Photographer Discusses Famous Sept. 11 Photo.” The Mosaic.
<http://northjersey.com>.
Wibben, Annick T. R. “9.11: Images, Imaging, Imagination.” INFOinterventions. 6 October
2001. <http://www.watsoninstitute.org/inforpeace/911/new/article.cfm?id=25>.
Williams, Jodi. Letter to the Editor. Newsweek. 1 October 2001.
Willing, Linda. Beyond Ground Zero. Women in the Fireservice, Inc. (WFSI). No date.
<http://www.wfsi.org/Berkman2.html>. 19 September 2002.
Winter, Jay, and Emmanuel Sivan. War and Remembrance in the Twentieth Century. Cam-
bridge UP, 1999.
Zelizer, Barbie. “The As If of Visual Rhetoric.” Paper delivered at Visual Rhetoric,
Bloomington, IN, 6 Sept. 2001.
CHAPTER ONE
The range of visual elements that could be considered rhetorical is vast, as evi-
denced by the many types of visuals that are examined and analyzed in the
chapters of this volume. The rhetorical analysis of visuals could be extended
even further, to include types not directly addressed in this volume, including
landscapes and public memorials. It is exciting and important that the field of
rhetoric is taking account of so many different types of visuals, partly because
doing so helps us understand how rhetorical elements work in forms of ex-
pression that are not obviously and explicitly persuasive. For my purposes in
this chapter, I will concentrate on representational images—visuals that are
clearly designed to represent a recognizable person, object, or situation—
while recognizing that such images constitute only a subset of the types of vi-
sual elements that could be productively examined as rhetorical elements.
Most rhetorical studies of images, including many of the ones in this vol-
ume, focus on a specific genre, medium, method of distribution, or rhetorical
purpose for which images are often used. Most of the insights now available to
us about the rhetorical nature of images have come from these types of stud-
ies. In this chapter, though, I intend to approach the rhetorical study of images
from a slightly different direction. I begin with a question that is both broad
and simple in its formulation: How, exactly, do images persuade? In other
words, how do representational images work to influence the beliefs, atti-
tudes, opinions—and sometimes actions—of those who view them? To be
sure, many practitioners (e.g., advertisers, political consultants, and other pro-
fessional persuaders) instantiate, in their daily practice, a variety of principles
about how to take best advantage of the persuasive power of representational
images. Any good undergraduate course in marketing, advertising, or public
relations includes some discussion of specific methods for using images to in-
fluence viewers’ opinions, beliefs, and actions. These principles and methods
are based mostly on past practice, and sometimes on experimental studies that
demonstrate the relative effects of a number of variables on the persuasive-
25
26 HILL
ness of visual appeals. But a full theoretical treatment of visual persuasion will
involve not only identifying individual variables that appear to strengthen vi-
sual appeals in certain situations, but also attempts to explicate the processes
by which images exert their rhetorical influences.
Cultural studies of visual rhetoric constitute one type of attempt to under-
stand how visual appeals operate. In these types of studies, scholars analyze
the ways in which culturally shared values and assumptions are utilized in per-
suasive communication, and how these shared values and assumptions influ-
ence viewers’ responses to mass-produced images. The psychological
approach that I take in this chapter is not meant to replace or to compete with
cultural or textual studies, but merely to address the phenomenon from a dif-
ferent perspective. Neither is it meant to denote a set of processes that are en-
tirely distinct and separate from the cultural and social processes that are
explored so well in some of the other chapters in this volume, for psychologi-
cal processes and cultural practices are inextricably linked. At the very least,
cognitive processes may be said to be the mechanisms through which the in-
fluences of culture operate. Therefore, although it may be useful to explicate
them separately, psychological and cultural influences on individual response
and action are not, in reality, distinct and separate. While I take psychological
processes as my starting point for this discussion, I also discuss the influence of
shared cultural values in an attempt to demonstrate how the cultural and psy-
chological work together in the persuasive process. Ultimately, a comprehen-
sive theory of visual persuasion will need to incorporate the insights gathered
from a variety of viewpoints and methodologies, including cultural, psycho-
logical, and textual studies, and attempt to explicate how the mechanisms
identified by these different methodologies work together in the production
of, reception of, and response to persuasive images.
To ask how images work to influence viewers’ beliefs, attitudes, and opinions
is ultimately to ask about the very nature of images and about how people re-
spond to them. Conventional wisdom says that representational images tend to
prompt emotional reactions and that, once the viewer’s emotions are excited,
they tend to override his or her rational faculties, resulting in a response that is
unreflective and irrational. Psychological research suggests that this conven-
tional explanation of the rhetorical power of images is broadly accurate in out-
line, though inadequate for explaining how persuasive images work.
More importantly, the simple description of the power of rhetorical images
as “emotional” has contributed directly to the relative neglect of such images
by the fields of rhetoric and argumentation, a neglect that has only recently
begun to be corrected. Argumentation scholars, especially, have always been
concerned not just with describing the ways that persuasion can occur, but
also with discovering and promoting methods of persuasion that are epistem-
ically useful and valid (van Eemeren 38). If images, by their nature, prompt ir-
rational and unreflective responses, then they are best avoided rather than
1. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF RHETORICAL IMAGES 27
studied closely, and they certainly have no place in the classroom, where the
goal is to help students develop useful and sound reasoning habits.
Until recently, the scholar interested in the serious study of rhetorical im-
ages faced a problem. If one accepted the description of visual input as being
largely “emotional” in nature, then rhetorical visuals would be largely dis-
missed as not worthy of serious study. The interested scholar would then be
faced with the task of explaining that people respond to visuals in much the
same way as they respond to verbal arguments, an assertion that would deny
much of the psychological research into persuasive images, not to mention
the everyday experience of nearly everyone who deals with images in persua-
sive contexts. (This perceived need has also contributed to the adoption of lin-
guistic terms for the study of images in an attempt to capture for images some
of the cachet that has largely been reserved for verbal elements, a tendency
which has, I believe, led to some misleading assertions about the nature of vi-
sual communication.) Only recently, now that simple binary distinctions such
as “emotional vs. rational” have been problematized in the theoretical litera-
ture and demonstrated as invalid by much of the empirical research into cog-
nitive and neurological processes, has it become acceptable to treat rhetorical
images as objects worthy of serious study without feeling the need to deny
their largely emotional nature.
dividual rhetor is faced with the danger that any particular element may be for-
gotten or get drowned out in a sea of information, anecdote, and argument.
To counteract this danger, a good rhetor will attempt to prompt audience
members to focus their attention on the specific elements that the rhetor
thinks will most benefit his or her case.
Convincing people to change their minds or to take a stand, especially on
important policy issues, can be exceedingly difficult for several reasons. For ex-
ample, many controversial issues are very complex, and arguments about
such issues may involve assertions about facts and principles that not every
novice audience member may feel confident to evaluate. We also know that
factors external to the argument can greatly influence the effectiveness of any
rhetorical appeal. For instance, audience members will often be influenced by
the tone in which the arguments are expressed and by various traits of the ar-
guers that might influence judgments about their credibility and sincerity. And
the effectiveness of any particular appeal on any complex issue will be greatly
affected by how much the appeal supports or conflicts with the beliefs, values,
and assumptions that the audience members already hold about relevant top-
ics. Many psychological studies of persuasion have found that, when faced
with opposing verbal arguments, a reader or listener will usually accept the
one that reflects or reinforces his or her already-held opinions and assump-
tions (see, for example, Evans; Johnson-Laird and Byrne; Kuhn; Lau, Smith,
and Fiske; Voss et al.). People often accept and come to defend a particular
viewpoint, not because they have carefully thought through and evaluated the
available alternatives, but because they identify with other people holding the
same position (Burke) or because challenging or denying the position would
challenge their own self-concept (Cederblom). With all of these factors com-
ing into play, it is easy to see that any particular appeal, no matter how logically
valid or relevant, may become insufficient, almost even irrelevant to the suc-
cess of the larger argument.
The challenge for a rhetor defending any particular position or forwarding
any particular proposal is to make the elements in the situation that are support-
ive of that position or proposal stand out for the audience members, to make
these elements more salient and memorable. This can be done partly by the sim-
ple act of explicitly naming and pointing out those elements: “By the very fact of
selecting certain elements and presenting them to the audience, their impor-
tance and pertinency to the discussion are implied. Indeed, such a choice en-
dows these elements with a presence” (Perelman and Olbrechts-Tyteca 116).
Presence, as the term is used by Perelman and Olbrechts-Tyteca, refers to the
extent to which an object or concept is foremost in the consciousness of the
audience members. Skillful rhetors attempt to increase the presence of ele-
ments in the rhetorical situation that are favorable to their claim because they
know that elements with enhanced presence will have a greater influence over
the audience’s attitudes and beliefs. But presence is not a binary phenomenon;
1. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF RHETORICAL IMAGES 29
the rhetor’s goal is not merely to create some presence where before there was
none, but rather to endow the elements in the situation that are favorable to
the rhetor’s case with as much presence as possible. In fact, the rhetor’s ulti-
mate goal, whenever possible, is to make the relevant object, concept or value
fill the audience’s entire “field of consciousness” (118). In other words, when
particular elements are given enough presence, they can crowd out other con-
siderations from the viewer’s mind, regardless of the logical force or relevance
of those other considerations. The rhetor’s hope is that this process will
prompt audience members to accept his or her claim based on one or two
pieces of powerful, vivid evidence, and not stop to think about issues such as
the relevance or actual importance of the evidence, or about what other argu-
ments and opinions should be brought into the equation and weighed before
making a decision.
Several verbal forms can be used to increase the presence of an object,
idea, or person, but the desired element receives the greatest amount of
presence from being directly perceived; an object or person is most present
to us when we can see it directly (117).1 (The most effective way to increase
an object’s rhetorical presence is to make it physically present—to actually
bring it into the room—but, of course, this is often not possible.) The phe-
nomenon of presence is inherently linked to visual perception. It has often
been remarked that a picture of one starving child is more persuasively pow-
erful than statistics citing the starvation of millions. In Perelman and
Olbrecht-Tyteca’s terms, the one child depicted in a photograph becomes
undeniably more “present” to us, whereas the million individual children
whose tragedy and suffering are summed up in a statistic are not. Although
we can all recognize this phenomenon from our own experiences, it is diffi-
cult to explain why this should be so.
If we assume that we are talking mostly about photographic images, then
we could say that the suffering portrayed in the photograph carries more
epistemic force than a verbal description because the existence of the photo-
graph proves the existence of its subject. As Barthes points out, a photograph
is, by definition, a captured reflection of an object or person that actually exists
or that existed at one time, so the photograph at least proves the existence of
the person or object, no matter how much the circumstances surrounding
that existence may be manipulated in the darkroom. (Let us bracket, for the
time being, any discussion of the new digital image manipulation techniques
that make such an assertion far from certain.) In Peirce’s terms (239–240), a
photograph is an “index” (as opposed to the other types of signs, “icons” and
“symbols”). Unlike icons and symbols, indexical signs would not exist if their
objects did not exist, so the very existence of the sign proves that its object also
existed. (Other indexical signs include bullet holes and footprints.) Messaris ar-
gues that the indexical aspect of photographs and of videotaped evidence
helps define the ways in which people respond to them.
30 HILL
cess visual images (Howard et al.; Rebotier; Sinatra). These mental images can
result in emotional responses similar to those that are prompted by the view-
ing of actual pictures.
Because imagistic language can prompt mental imaging and therefore
elicit emotional responses, it seems likely that using such language would in-
crease the rhetorical effectiveness of the message. The relationship between
the creation of mental images through reading text and the process of devel-
oping or revising one’s beliefs and attitudes based on these mental images has
been studied by psychologists as the concept of vividness. In psychological
studies, vivid information is identified as information that is emotionally inter-
esting and concrete (Nisbett and Ross). (Of course, describing vivid informa-
tion as “emotional” is a bit of a tautology, because one of the questions that
psychologists study is whether such information prompts more emotional re-
sponses than non-vivid information.) Vivid information takes the form of con-
crete and imagistic language, personal narratives, pictures, or first-hand
experience. Vividness is a matter of degree, of course, but the most vivid type
of information would be an actual experience (being attacked, being involved
in an accident, etc.), and the least vivid type of information would be informa-
tion that one is exposed to by reading or listening to abstract, impersonal lan-
guage and statistics. A comprehensive continuum of vividness might look
something like this:
(Block and Keller). In a study using a simulated jury trial, the participants
tended to vote in favor of the disputant who presented his or her case using
vivid (i.e., image-evoking) language (Wilson, Northcraft, and Neale).
Baesler points out that, although many studies have shown vivid evidence
to be more persuasive than non-vivid information, several other studies have
found no persuasive advantage for vividness. In fact, Frey and Eagly found that
vivid text may be even less persuasive than non-vivid text under some circum-
stances. Such inconsistent results are not uncommon in persuasion research
(as a glance through O’Keefe’s review of the research makes clear), and such
inconsistencies usually mean that more complex research designs are needed,
designs that attempt to ferret out some of the dizzyingly complex relation-
ships between the many factors that help to make up any rhetorical situation.
The results of a study that utilized a more complex design than most (Smith
and Shaffer) suggest that vivid language makes a persuasive message easier to
comprehend and more likely to be remembered, but only if the vivid elements
are clearly and explicitly relevant to the message itself. If the vivid images are
not clearly relevant to the claim being made and to the particular argument be-
ing forwarded, then the images may make the argument more difficult to pro-
cess and to remember by distracting the viewer from the argument being
presented. And arguments that are incomprehensible or not remembered
have no chance to influence a recipient’s opinions or beliefs.
Overall, the more sophisticated research designs tend to support the notion
that vividness enhances persuasiveness. Vividness itself, like any single persua-
sive trait, will not make a bad argument convincing, but it will, if properly em-
ployed, enhance the persuasiveness of a reasonably strong position. And
operationally speaking, vividness is almost a direct synonym for visualization,
whether one is creating mental images through the use of concrete language
or actually presenting a visual image to a viewer.
Vividness, emotional response, and persuasion have all been shown to cor-
relate with each other (Chaudhuri and Buck), but just asserting this fact does
not explain why imagistic language and actual images are more persuasive
than abstract verbal arguments, and it does not explain the role of emotions in
this process. Researchers have proposed several models to try to explain ex-
actly how this relationship between vividness, emotional responses, and per-
suasion works in the mind. For example, some psychological theories of
persuasion distinguish between two types of cognitive processing: “system-
atic processing,” which is “contemplative, analytic, and responsive to the argu-
mentative quality of the message,” and “heuristic processing,” which “occurs
whenever an individual relies on some shortcut decision-making rule to con-
struct an attitude toward the persuasive advocacy” (Dillard and Peck 462). The
very language that Dillard and Peck use to describe these two cognitive strate-
gies indicates that they place a higher value on systematic processing. Cer-
tainly, instructors of argumentation would prefer their students to be
1. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF RHETORICAL IMAGES 33
But using terms like heuristic processing almost seems like a strategy to avoid
discussing the difficult concept of emotions. And saying that people “choose”
or tend to “prefer” to make decisions based on their emotional responses (if
that is, indeed, what heuristic processing refers to) also seems misleading,
since powerful, visceral responses to emotional images and vivid stories
hardly seem like a choice that one has made. In short, although descriptions of
cognitive laziness and a preference for cognitive shortcuts might be useful for
helping to explain how images affect us, a full understanding of the rhetorical
power of images necessitates a discussion of emotion. Vivid images are valued
by rhetors and derogated by some argumentation theorists because they tend
to elicit strong emotions, and we do not need to perform psychological experi-
ments to know that strong emotions will often overcome and even inhibit ana-
lytical thinking.
Many psychologists consider emotions to be a cognitive recognition of and
response to a physiological reaction to some external stimulus (Dillard and
Peck). In other words, when we recognize (perhaps on some preconscious
level) a potential danger, that recognition results in a range of physiological re-
sponses (our hair standing up on end, increased adrenaline flow, etc.). Our
brain recognizes these responses and interprets them in a way that we recog-
nize and label as an emotion (e.g., anger, fear, sadness). According to some theo-
ries, then, an emotion is little more than a recognition of these physiological
34 HILL
responses (de Sousa 40, 51). (De Sousa recounts William James’ famous dic-
tum, “We do not weep because we are sad, but rather we are sad because we
weep.”) These physical responses that we call emotions are generally consid-
ered to be evolutionary adaptations that help us deal quickly and decisively
with dangerous situations.2
It’s relatively easy to understand how some of the more basic emotions
(e.g., fear, anger) might be evolutionarily designed to help us deal with sudden
potential dangers. Emotions such as these arise quickly and claim all of our at-
tention; it is virtually impossible to ignore them or, in many cases, to even
think about other matters until these emotions have been resolved. If the pur-
pose of the emotional response is, as some psychologists believe, to direct our
attention to a nearby danger, then it makes sense that we would be pro-
grammed to react quickly and decisively, without taking the time to analyze
the situation and evaluate all of the information that might be potentially rele-
vant. (By the time we accomplished such an analysis, it might be too late to
eliminate or avoid the danger.)
When we hear or read a description of a far-away danger (far away in either
location or time or both), then we have the luxury of taking our time in decid-
ing whether or how to act. But when we are exposed to visual information,
our body reacts much as it would if the danger represented in the image were
actually present. Our evolutionary response kicks in, and we are prompted to
make a quick decision and to take action without an extensive amount of anal-
ysis. In evolutionary terms, the existence of realistic representational images
has been a relatively recent development, so the tendency to respond differ-
ently to emotional stimuli that are clearly representational images—and
therefore posing no immediate danger—rather than actual, nearby dangers
has not yet developed.
Although the primal emotions may be a result of an evolutionary response
to personal danger, the specific stimuli that trigger these emotions can be per-
sonally and culturally conditioned. For example, fear is perhaps the most pri-
mal (and, evolutionarily speaking, the most useful) emotion of all. But the
specific stimuli that trigger fear (i.e., what one is actually afraid of ) will vary
widely across cultures and even across individuals within a culture. As Patricia
Greenspan puts it, emotions tend to “spill over and to fix on objects resem-
bling their appropriate objects in incidental ways” (18), resulting in some
highly idiosyncratic fear responses. (I know several people who report being
deathly afraid of circus clowns.)
Evolution can explain the existence of the more basic emotions, but it
seems clear that powerful cultural forces help to define such complex emo-
tional responses as guilt, love, and envy, and even more so when we consider
even more complex concepts, such as nationalism and prejudice—concepts that
are based on conscious reasoning of a sort, but that also rely on emotional re-
sponses for their power and that, I would argue, are largely defined by their at-
1. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF RHETORICAL IMAGES 35
Pepsi commercial “with the giggling children and frolicking puppies.”) Such
connections can be developed through verbal argument, especially through
the use of concrete visual language, but using actual images (which increases
the level of vividness and, therefore, presence) is almost universally considered
by professional persuaders to be advantageous when it is feasible to do so.
What makes such identifications insidious is precisely the fact that we usually
don’t think about them. Roy Fox claims that advertisers generally don’t want to
persuade people to buy their products, because persuasion implies that the audi-
ence has given the issue some thought and come to a conscious decision. In-
stead, advertisers want to transform people. They want to compel people to buy
a product without even knowing why they’re buying it—as a visceral response
to a stimulus, not as a conscious decision. And this is best done through images.
This description of the development of an automated, unthinking re-
sponse sounds suspiciously like classical conditioning, in which animals are
trained through repetition to associate an emotional or autonomic response
to an initially unrelated stimulus. Unflattering images of Pavlov’s dogs salivat-
ing at the sound of a bell come to mind, and many of us would no doubt like to
think that we are not so easily manipulated. Nevertheless, classical condition-
ing has been shown to work in humans, and research with advertisements has
demonstrated the phenomenon that psychologists call affect transfer, wherein
an emotional response from an unrelated object or event is transferred to the
product being sold, simply by showing an image of the product, followed by
an image of the emotional object or event, and repeating the procedure many
times (Kim and Allen). Again, what bothers many of us about this procedure is
that our attitudes, opinions, and even our actions are influenced without any
conscious processing on our part. In fact, most people are probably convinced
that such manipulations do not work on them. But advertisers and political
consultants know otherwise.
Using images to develop connections between initially unrelated concepts
does not necessarily involve the use of emotional subject matter (Kim and Al-
len), and images can even be used to prompt sustained, analytical thinking
(Scott). Images, like verbal text, can be used to prompt an immediate, visceral
response, to develop cognitive (though largely unconscious) connections over
a sustained period of time, or to prompt conscious analytical thought. This is
not to say that there is no meaningful distinction between the rhetorical use
and cognitive processing of images and verbal text—far from it. Rather, al-
though verbal discourse can be used to prompt listeners and readers to create
“mental images,” to instantiate values and stir up strong emotions, actual im-
ages tend to be more efficient forms for accomplishing these goals. This is
what excites professional persuaders and frightens many academic scholars
about rhetorical images.
But rather than continuing to avoid consideration of rhetorical images, we
must come to terms with them. By applying relevant theoretical concepts and
38 HILL
NOTES
WORKS CITED
Baesler, E. James. “Persuasive Effects of Story and Statistical Evidence.” Argumentation and
Advocacy 33 (1997): 170–175.
Barthes, Roland. Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography. Trans. Richard Howard. New
York: Hill and Wang, 1981.
Block, Lauren G., and Punam Anand Keller. “Effects of Self-Efficacy and Vividness on the
Persuasiveness of Health Communications.” Journal of Consumer Psychology 6 (1997):
31–54.
Burke, Kenneth. A Rhetoric of Motives. Berkeley, CA: U of California P, 1969.
1. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF RHETORICAL IMAGES 39
Campos, Alfredo, Jose Luis Marcos, and Maria Angeles Gonzales. “Emotionality of Words
as Related to Vividness of Imagery and Concreteness.” Perceptual and Motor Skills 88
(1999): 1135–1140.
Cederblom, J. “Willingness to Reason and the Identification of the Self.” Thinking, Rea-
soning, and Writing. Ed. E. P. Maimon, B. F. Nodine, and F. W. O’Connor. New York:
Longman, 1989: 147–159.
Chaudhuri, Arjun, and Ross Buck. “Media Differences in Rational and Emotional Re-
sponses to Advertising.” Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media 39 (1995): 109–125.
De Sousa, Ronald. The Rationality of Emotion. Cambridge, MA: MIT P, 1987.
Dillard, James Price, and Eugenia Peck. “Affect and Persuasion: Emotional Responses to
Public Service Announcements.” Communication Research 27 (2000): 461–495.
Evans, Jonathan St. B. T. Bias in Human Reasoning: Causes and Consequences. Hillsdale, NJ:
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1989.
Fox, Roy F. “Where We Live.” Images in Language, Media, and Mind. Ed. Roy Fox. Urbana,
IL: National Council of Teachers of English, 1994: 69–91.
Frey, Kurt P., and Alice H. Eagly. “Vividness Can Undermine the Persuasiveness of Mes-
sages.” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 65 (1993): 32–44.
Greenspan, Patricia S. Emotions and Reasons: An Inquiry into Emotional Justification. New
York: Routledge, 1988.
Howard, Robert, et al. “Seeing Visual Hallucinations with Functional Magnetic Reso-
nance Imaging.” Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders 8 (1997): 73–77.
Johnson-Laird, P. N., and R. M. J. Byrne. Deduction. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Asso-
ciates, 1991.
Kim, John, and Chris T. Allen. “An Investigation of the Mediational Mechanisms Under-
lying Attitudinal Conditioning.” JMR: Journal of Marketing Research 33 (1996): 318–328.
Kjeldsen, Jens E. “Visual Rhetoric—From Elocutio to Inventio.” Proceedings of the Fourth In-
ternational Conference of the International Society for the Study of Argumentation ( June
16–19, 1998). Ed. Frans H. van Eemeren, Rob Grootendorst, J. Anthony Blair, and
Charles A. Willard. Amsterdam: SIC SAT, 1999. 455–460.
Kuhn, D. The Skills of Argument. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1991.
Lau, R. R., R. A. Smith, and S. T. Fiske. “Political Beliefs, Policy Interpretations, and Politi-
cal Persuasion.” Journal of Politics 53 (1991): 644–675.
Messaris, Paul. Visual Literacy: Image, Mind, and Reality. Boulder, CO: Westview P, 1994.
Nisbett, Richard E., and Lee Ross. Human Inference: Strategies and Shortcomings of Social
Judgment. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1980.
O’Keefe, Daniel J. Persuasion: Theory and Research. Newbury Park, CA: Sage, 1990.
Peirce, Charles Sanders. Peirce on Signs: Writings on Semiotic by Charles Sanders Peirce. Ed. J.
Hoopes. Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina P, 1991.
Perelman, Chaim, and Lucie Olbrechts-Tyteca. The New Rhetoric: A Treatise on Argumentation.
Trans. John Wilkinson and Purcell Weaver. Notre Dame: U of Notre Dame P, 1971.
Rebotier, Thomas Paul. “Vision and Imagery: The Role of Cortical Attractor Dynamics.”
DAI: Dissertation 1999 59 (1999): 5129.
Scott, Linda M. “Images in Advertising: The Need for a Theory of Visual Rhetoric.” Journal
of Consumer Research 21 (1994): 252–273.
Sinatra, Richard. Visual Literacy Connections to Thinking, Reading and Writing. Springfield,
IL: Charles C. Thomas, 1986.
Smith, Stephen M., and David R. Shaffer. “Vividness Can Undermine or Enhance Message
Processing: The Moderating Role of Vividness Congruency.” Personality and Social Psy-
chology Bulletin 26 (2000): 769–779.
40 HILL
This book is about visual rhetoric, and this chapter is about visual arguments. I
take it as part of my task, then, to address the relationships among these three:
rhetoric, argument, and the visual. How can there be visual arguments when
arguments as we usually know them are verbal? And if there can be visual ar-
guments, what is their rhetorical aspect? Because arguments are supposed to
be tools of persuasion and rhetoric is often thought of as including (but not ex-
hausted by) the study and use of the instruments of persuasion, I begin by ex-
ploring the relationships among rhetoric, argument and persuasion. Then I
turn to the difficulties and opportunities that present themselves when consid-
ering visual argument in particular. The chapter ends by taking up the ques-
tion: What does being visual add to arguments?
Rhetoric and argument have been associated since antiquity, and in that
connection arguments have traditionally been thought of as verbal phenom-
ena. Aristotle, one of the earliest in European culture to study rhetoric sys-
tematically, identified the art of rhetoric with knowledge of modes of
persuasion (Rhetoric 1354a 13-14). The method of persuasion, he held, is “dem-
onstration,” and demonstration’s instrument is the enthymeme, which is a form
of argument (Rhetoric 1355a 5-6). An Aristotelian enthymeme is an argument
in which the arguer deliberately leaves unstated a premise that is essential to its
reasoning. Doing so has the effect of drawing the audience to participate in its
own persuasion by filling in that unexpressed premise. This connecting of the
audience to the argument is what makes the enthymeme a rhetorical form of
argument.1 But next, Aristotle took it for granted that the agent of persuasion
is the orator, and from that it follows on his conception that the principal tool
of persuasion must be the orator’s medium, namely, language. So, according
to one of the earliest and most influential accounts, the material to which rhet-
oric is to be applied is verbal argument.
The conception of rhetoric as essentially about speech has remained with
us to this day, although it has become more and more contested. As recently as
41
42 BLAIR
a decade ago, the French rhetoric scholar, Olivier Reboul, restricted rhetoric to
the use of language to persuade: “Here, then, is the definition we propose:
rhetoric is the art of persuading by means of speech.”2 Because non-argumen-
tative speech, or non-argumentative properties of speech, can be persuasive,
Reboul’s definition does not make a necessary connection between rhetoric
and argument, but it certainly does envisage speech as essential to rhetoric. In
the introductory chapter of their book on contemporary perspectives on rhet-
oric, Sonja Foss, Karen Foss and Robert Trapp urge a broader conception, pro-
posing to “define rhetoric broadly as the uniquely human ability to use
symbols to communicate with one another,” and they explicitly mention as
one possible instance, “an artist presenting an image on canvas”—in other
words, visual rhetoric (11). Even so, on the very next page they make this con-
cession to the tradition: “We believe that the paradigm case of rhetoric is the
use of the spoken word to persuade an audience” (12).
One task, then, is to explain how rhetoric may be conceived as extending
beyond the boundaries of the verbal, its terra cognita since antiquity, so as to in-
clude as well the visual; in other words, to show how there can be visual persua-
sion. That task is taken up in the other chapters of this book, so I do not need to
address it in detail. A second task, assuming there can be a rhetoric of the vi-
sual, is to make the connection between visual persuasion and argument—to
see how there can be visual arguments.
PERSUASION
This might seem to be a simple matter. In the first place, the power of things
visual to persuade us, to shape our attitudes, and even our beliefs and actions,
seems obvious. However, from this perspective a lot hinges on how “persua-
sion” is understood. It was Reboul’s view that rhetorical persuasion consists in
causing someone to believe (“faire croire,”) by means of speech (5). Now, if we
drop the connection with speech in order to allow for the possibility of visual
rhetoric, but retain the understanding of persuasion as a cause of changes in
belief (and let’s add changes in attitude, or in conduct), then what sorts of
causal instruments will we allow to count as persuasion?
Persuasion cannot be just any manner of influencing a person. Imagine
(what might already be possible, for all I know) that by manipulating neu-
rons or implanting electronic circuits in a human brain, neurosurgeons
could produce changes in the beliefs, attitudes, and behavior of the person
whose brain is modified in this way. The rapist loses his anger and misogyny;
the pedophile no longer has erotic interest in children; the self-sealing unrea-
son of the Holocaust denier and of the conspiracy theorist disappears.
Would we then classify such brain surgery as persuasion? As rhetoric? Surely
not, but if not, then—assuming persuasion is a kind of cause—what marks
persuasion off from other kinds of causal factors affecting beliefs, attitudes
2. THE RHETORIC OF VISUAL ARGUMENTS 43
However, just as not all influences that result in changes of behavior count as
persuasion, visual or otherwise, so too not all cases of persuasion count as ar-
guments. Consider the examples just used. To speak of the robber’s gun as an
“argument” is to make a joke or use a metaphor, even though it is persuasive
(or for a sensible unarmed person, it ought to be persuasive). It is reasonable to
hand over your wallet or purse, but the robber has not presented an argument
for doing so just by pointing his gun at you. My fantasy woman’s seduction
might have been persuasive, but stimulating an erogenous zone does not con-
stitute an argument. Such a stance might puzzle rhetoricians because, as Scott
44 BLAIR
Jacobs has put it, “rhetorical theorists have … tended to think of any mode of
communication as argument if it functions to gain assent” (263). But Jacobs
continues: “And that just will not do …. not all symbolic inducements are argu-
ments, and arguments are not the only way of gaining assent” (263). What dis-
tinguishes arguments from other kinds of “symbolic inducement”? It has to
do with how they function. Arguments supply us with reasons for accepting a
point of view. The fact that certain propositions are deemed true, probable,
plausible or otherwise worthy of acceptance, is considered to provide a rea-
son, or a set of reasons, for thinking that some claim is true, some attitude is
appropriate, some policy is worthy of implementation, or some action is best
done. Here is Jacobs again: “Arguments are fundamentally linguistic entities
that express with a special pragmatic force propositions where those proposi-
tions stand in particular inferential relationships to one another” (264); and he
continues, in a note appended to this sentence:
The canonical form that I have in mind here is captured in the speech act of
assertion. Among other things, in making an argument one commits to de-
fending the truth of a complex of propositions and to undertaking to get
the hearer to accept the truth of one proposition (call it the standpoint) as
being justified by the truth of other propositions (call those the arguments).
( Jacobs, note 4)
Visual Argument?
To be sure, no one owns the word argument. It is entirely possible to use the
word to refer to any form of persuasion whatever and thus simply to reject
outright Jacob’s ruling: “But that just will not do.” After all, who is he to say?
However, such a dismissal of Jacob’s point carries a cost. If you use the word
argument in a different way, so that it is not tied down to reason having and
reason giving, or to propositions with their truth values, then you lose con-
tact not only with argumentation scholarship but also with the way the con-
cept of argument has functioned historically and the way it works in
standard English, or in any corresponding language. You are then really talk-
ing about something different from argument in anything but a stipulated
sense of the concept.
This is an important theoretical point. Words and concepts have mean-
ings in historical contexts; they are situated in the conventions of their usage
communities. To be sure, community conventions, including conceptual
and linguistic ones, can change, and often should. But if words are stretched
too radically, they break their connection to their anchorage and drift any-
where, meaning anything. A good example is democracy. The former Soviet
Union called itself a democracy because its government claimed to repre-
sent the best interests of its people. But if a totalitarian dictatorship or oligar-
chy can count as a democracy by self-definition, then the concept of
democracy has lost its connection to rule by (as well as for) the people. Al-
most any system of government can then count as a democracy, and the
word democracy has lost its value as designating a distinctive type of political
system. The theoretical point I am making can also be used equally to justify
the introduction of new terminology. In trying to remove the sexism that is
built into the language, why not, for example, just get used to thinking of
postmen and stewardesses as both female and male? The answer many femi-
nists gave was that it was important to make the break from conventions that
needed changing, and so completely new terms were needed, “letter car-
rier” and “flight attendant,” that had none of the old associations of being ex-
clusively male, or exclusively female, occupations. With respect to the
concept of “visual argument,” I am trying to urge that we be cautious about
stretching the concept of argument too far, for similar reasons. We might
like the idea of calling any kind of visual persuasion an argument, but unless
we can make a connection to the traditional concept, it would be best not to
stretch the term argument to that extent. If there is no real connection, let’s
just use a new term, and leave argument to the domain of the verbal.
So the issue of whether there can be visual arguments is uninterestingly set-
tled by simply declaring any instance of visual persuasion to be an argument.
It is much more interesting if it turns out that, in spite of their historical associ-
ation with language, arguments in the traditional sense can be visual as well as
46 BLAIR
mous pre-World War II cartoon by the British cartoonist David Low in which
an evidently complacent Englishman is depicted in a lawn chair reading a
newspaper, sitting directly beneath a jumble of precariously balanced boul-
ders rising steeply above him. The bottom boulder, sticking out but wedged
under and holding up the rest, is marked, “Czecho.” Sitting directly on it are
boulders marked “Rumania” and “Poland” and together they support a large
boulder labeled “French Alliances,” which in turn supports a huge boulder la-
beled “Anglo-French Security.” A thick rope is attached to the out-thrust end of
the “Czecho” boulder and pulled up overhead and out of sight. Clearly a
strong pull on that rope would dislodge the “Czecho” boulder, causing the rest
to come crashing down on the Englishman below. The cartoon’s caption
reads, “What’s Czechoslovakia to me, anyway?”
Low is arguing that to regard the fate of Czechoslovakia as having no con-
sequences for England is mistaken. The reason Low offers for this proposition
is the conditional proposition that if Czechoslovakia were to fall to Germany,
that would initiate a chain of events (the fall of Poland and Rumania), which
would result in the fall of the French alliances and eventuate in the collapse of
Anglo-French security and that would have disastrous consequences for Eng-
land.7 I have just expressed Low’s visual argument in English and in doing so
have expressed two propositions—his conclusion and his premise. It was, at
the time, either true or false that “to regard the fate of Czechoslovakia as hav-
ing no consequences for England is mistaken,” and that “if Czechoslovakia
were to fall to Germany, that would initiate a chain of events (the fall of Poland
and Rumania), which would result in the fall of the French alliances and even-
tuate in the collapse of Anglo-French security.” (The argument has the unex-
pressed premise that “the collapse of Anglo-French security would have a
major impact on England.”) In short, to the objection that propositions cannot
be expressed visually the reply is that because it has been done in Low’s car-
toon, it is possible. (Notice that there is no ambiguity or vagueness whatsoever
about Low’s meaning.)
A second reply to the “no-propositions” objection is to point out that argu-
ments are used for primary purposes other than to cause belief change. We
also use arguments with the intention of changing the attitudes, or the inten-
tions, or the behavior of our audience. The structure of the arguing process is
the same. The arguer appeals to attitude-, intention- or behavior-commit-
ments of the audience, and tries to show that they commit the audience to the
new attitude, intention or behavior at issue. But attitudes, intentions and con-
duct do not have truth value. My preference for the Democrats over the Re-
publicans isn’t true or false; I just have it. Perhaps it is ill-advised, perhaps I have
no good reason for it (“we’ve always been Democrats”); what it is not is false
(or true). Yet because we do offer reasons to people to change their attitudes,
intentions and behavior, it is clear that there can be (even) verbal arguments in
which not all the components are propositions. Not all arguments must be
2. THE RHETORIC OF VISUAL ARGUMENTS 49
propositional. Hence, even if it is true that (some) visual images do not express
propositions, it does not follow that they cannot figure in arguments.
If these two replies to the “no-propositions” objection do not lay it to rest, I
will take it that at least they shift the burden of proof. And combined with the
replies to the “vague or ambiguous” objection, they clear from our path the
general theoretical objection that visual arguments are not possible, and leave
us free to consider the rhetorical properties of visual arguments.
Here let me add a stipulation. Although there can exist purely visual argu-
ments, most communications that are candidates for visual arguments are
combinations of the verbal and the visual. The words might be in print (as in
cartoons), or voiced (in the case of television or film). When I refer to “visual”
arguments in what follows, I mean to include these combinations of verbal
and visual communication. By “verbal” arguments I will mean exclusively ver-
bal arguments, with no visual element.
This chilling ad begins with a little girl in a field picking petals off a daisy,
counting. When the count reaches ten, her image is frozen and a male voice
50 BLAIR
The purpose of the ad—remember, this was at the height of the Cold War
—was to suggest that Goldwater was trigger-happy about the use of the
H-bomb, and thus that to elect him would be to place the nation in grave peril.
The ad did not mention Goldwater. It was thus a kind of visual enthymeme,
requiring the viewing public to supply Goldwater as the alternative to John-
son. Never mind that the ad was an indefensible slur on Goldwater; it was bril-
liant. It conveyed the impression that Goldwater might, on something as
arbitrary as a whim (the mere chance of which petal was plucked last), engage
the nation in a nuclear holocaust, thus causing the destruction of everyone, in-
cluding the innocent children who pluck daisies playing “s/he loves me; s/he
loves me not.” The inference that it would be a danger to the national interest
to elect Goldwater follows straightforwardly.
I have just expressed in verbal form the reasoning of the ad, but to be clear let
me set it out even more explicitly.
Goldwater might, on something as arbitrary as a whim, launch a nuclear
holocaust.
Such a holocaust would cause unspeakable horror for everyone, including
innocent children.
Hence, it would endanger the national interest to elect Goldwater.
To repeat, I do not for a minute suggest that this verbal expression of the argu-
ment is equivalent to the visual argument. For one thing, a number of equally
plausible alternative verbal renditions of the argument are available. For an-
other, and more importantly, this verbal extraction leaves out completely the
enormously evocative power of the visual imagery and symbolism of the ac-
tual visuals making up the ad. For instance, the juxtaposition of the child in its
innocence and the nuclear mushroom cloud has huge pathetic force that
words cannot capture. However, what the verbal construction does succeed in
doing is identifying how the visual ad contained within it a reason for not vot-
ing for Goldwater. And that, I contend, is what made the Democrats’ attack ad
an argument.
If this account is correct, then visual arguments constitute the species of vi-
sual persuasion in which the visual elements overlie, accentuate, render vivid
and immediate, and otherwise elevate in forcefulness a reason or set of reasons
offered for modifying a belief, an attitude or one’s conduct. What distinguishes
visual arguments from other forms of visual persuasion is that in the case of the
2. THE RHETORIC OF VISUAL ARGUMENTS 51
lectical aspect. The visual makes an argument in the sense of adducing a few rea-
sons in a forceful way. It might contain or present a didactic narrative—a story that
supports a point. But it does not permit the complexity of such dialectical moves
as the raising of objections in order to refute or otherwise answer them. This is a
serious deficiency in what Ralph H. Johnson has called the “manifest rationality”
that ought, ideally, to characterize argumentation. Johnson’s suggestion is that
when we try to convince others using arguments, we ought to mention the objec-
tions to our views that we know about and explain how we would answer these
objections. There should be no suppressed problems with our case. Johnson is
calling for a kind of “truth in arguing” —a “full disclosure” policy. If his ideal is one
we ought to try to meet, and if visual arguments cannot, as it seems they cannot,
incorporate this “dialectical” dimension of challenge and response, then visual ar-
guments will always fall short of dialectical rationality.
Understanding the logical dimension of arguments to be the support that the
reason(s) offered provide for the viewpoint that is supported by them, we can see
that visual arguments supply simple, minimalist support. The verbal expression
of the argument will have one or two premises, tending to be more or less syllogis-
tic in structure. The logic of the argument will not be complicated or subtle.
Understanding the rhetorical dimension of arguments to consist of the
various facets of its situatedness, it is plain that the visual is above all rhetori-
cal. To be effective, the visual properties of a visual argument must resonate
with the audience on the occasion and in the circumstances. The visual sym-
bolism must register immediately, whether consciously or not. The arguer
must know and relate not only to the beliefs and attitudes of the intended au-
dience, but also to the visual imagery that is meaningful to it. The arguer
needs also to be sensitive to the surrounding argumentative “space” of the
audience, because so much of the argument must remain tacit or unex-
pressed. Visual arguments are typically enthymemes—arguments with gaps
left to be filled in by the participation of the audience. The anti-Goldwater
“Daisy” ad is a clear example, with Goldwater the clear target of the ad but
never mentioned in it. So the arguer has to be able to predict the nature of the
audience’s participation. Given the vagueness of much visual imagery, the
visual arguer must be particular astute in reading the audience. Thus in a va-
riety of ways, visual arguments rely particularly on the rhetorical astuteness
of the arguer for their success. We may say, then, that visual arguments are
distinguished by their rhetorical power. What makes visual arguments dis-
tinctive is how much greater is their potential for rhetorical power than that
of purely verbal arguments.
One reason for using visual arguments is that there is no alternative way of
giving the argument permanence. In a largely oral culture with little literacy,
2. THE RHETORIC OF VISUAL ARGUMENTS 53
verbal arguments have only as much endurance as their currency in the oral
tradition. Thus we see the didactic visual arguments chiseled in the granite
“decorations” of the great European medieval cathedrals. A striking example
is the sculpture of the damned going to hell and the saved going to heaven to
be found in the tympanum over the south transept door of the high gothic ca-
thedral. The damned are depicted in graphic detail, being led or herded naked
down to the right, their bodies twisted in grotesque contortions, their faces
distorted and their open mouths screaming in pain. They are shackled, flames
lick at them, devils prod them with pitchforks, and some are tossed into great
cauldrons of boiling liquid. The saved, on the other hand, troupe trium-
phantly upward to the left, clad in gowns, their faces smiling with delight, with
those at the top being welcomed to heaven. The message is clear: These are
the fates awaiting the virtuous and the vicious upon their respective deaths.
The obvious implicit premise is that no one would want the fate of the
damned and anyone would want the fate of the saved. The tacit conclusion fol-
lows straightforwardly: Be virtuous and refrain from vice. Many of these de-
pictions of the argument have so far lasted, unmodified except by the weather,
for over 700 years. They are fixed in stone no less effectively than had they been
fixed in print.
Besides giving this moral argument a permanence, its visual expression
communicates something unavailable to the verbal version, whether it is com-
municated orally or in writing. No words can convey the horrible fate of the
damned or the ecstatic beatitude of the saved as dramatically, forcefully and
realistically as do the stone carvings. It is one thing to hear a description of
these respective fates; it is quite another, far more vivid and immediate, to see
them with your own eyes. So here is another reason for conveying an argu-
ment visually: one can communicate visually with much more force and im-
mediacy than verbal communication allows.
I think there are two related reasons for the greater force and immediacy of
the visual. First, visual communication can be more efficient than verbal com-
munication. In order to convey and evoke emotions or attitudes, the verbal ar-
guer must rely on his or her oratorical powers to cause the audience to exercise
its sympathetic imagination. There are three opportunities for failure in such
communications: The arguer can fail to be effectively evocative, the audience
can refuse to cooperate in the imaginative exercise, and the audience can, even
if trying, fail in its imaginative task. In the case of visual arguments, these
three chances to misfire reduce to one. The creator of the visual expression of
the argument can fail to give adequate or appropriate visual expression to the
feelings or attitudes to be conveyed, and in that case, the advantages of the vi-
sual expression of the argument are lost. However, should the visual expres-
sion succeed—as the medieval cathedral tympanum sculptures do so
marvelously—then the audience cannot help but become involved, and in just
the way the arguer intends. Hence the arguer does not have to rely on either
54 BLAIR
portrayed.) Yet others are mixtures of learned and biological responses, such
as heterosexual responses to the appearance of members of the opposite sex
considered beautiful. Sexual attraction is presumably at least partly
hard-wired, although there are clearly social factors in sexual attraction that
are culturally variable. Lean or stout, short or tall, tattooed or clear-skinned,
pierced or unadorned—these are variations in sexual attractiveness that any
student of other cultures, or indeed of our own, are bound to notice. The
point is that our responses—learned, innate, or a combination of the two—
are used by advertisers, and their effectiveness in advertising is well tested.
Thus, the use of such symbolism in visual arguments can almost guarantee the
ethotic and pathetic rhetorical influences that the arguer intends. And all it takes to
accomplish these rhetorical effects is the flash of a series of visual images.
For as long as we have had near-universal literacy and a tradition of print,
verbal arguments have been as permanent as we might wish them to be, and in
fact have greater permanency than the evanescent television screen or the
movie. So the motivation for visual arguments has not in our time been the ad-
vantage of fixing the argument in a stable medium. The evocative power of vi-
sual means of communication, especially television (but also movies, pictures
in magazines, and posters or billboards) is what has recommended the visual
as a medium of argument.
When the cartoonist is making an argument (and not every cartoon is in-
tended as an argument), the points asserted visually have a particular forceful-
ness and credibility when such iconic imagery is used, and the means used can
be analytically identified, as Edwards (chapter 8, this volume) shows in apply-
ing Perlmutter’s (1998) list of list of ten characteristics of photographs of out-
rage that can give them iconic status.
Films empower arguments visually largely by means of the construction of
credible narratives. When a movie is making an argument (and by no means is
every film intended as an argument), it tells a story that makes the argument’s
cogency seem inevitable. Oliver Stone’s JFK made the case that there was a
conspiracy to assassinate President Kennedy and to cover up the conspiracy. In
telling that story, it made the characters who believed in a conspiracy highly
credible, and those who denied it highly unbelievable. The film made the ar-
gument forcefully by presenting a narrative in which that conclusion was the
most plausible interpretation of the events portrayed. Black Hawk Down is a
more current example. It makes the case that the U.S. attempt to capture a lo-
cal warlord in Mogadishu during the Somalia intervention was an ill-con-
ceived plan by portraying dramatically the horrible consequences that
snowballed from just one thing going wrong (a soldier falling out of a helicop-
ter during the initial attack). The idea of narratives functioning as arguments
is familiar to us all. To give just one example, our countries often justify their
foreign policies in terms of narratives, the only plausible resolution of which is
the policy being defended. Thus the “Communist conspiracy” was a narrative
that justified Cold War policies. More recently, the Muslim fundamentalist
threat epitomized by the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon
on September 11, 2001, were woven into a narrative that justified the Bush ad-
ministration’s “war on terrorism.” To call these arguments narratives is not to
call them fictions or to challenge their legitimacy, although they might be
open to such challenges. The point is, rather, that as narratives they tell stories
that have “logical” resolutions, and hence function as arguments. Because pic-
tures, and especially films, both fictional and documentary, are wonderfully
suited to telling believable stories, they provide an excellent medium for visual
argument by means of narrative construction.
What the visual element adds to film or video, over, say, a novel or short story,
or over documentary prose alone, is that with film or video, we don’t just imag-
ine the narrative, we “see” it unfolding before our eyes. Seeing is believing, even
if what we are watching is invented, exaggerated, half-truths or lies.
The third and last type of visual argument that I want to discuss is advertis-
ing, and television advertising in particular. For the most part, we watch TV to
relax, as a diversion from our working lives. Television commercials thus in-
vade our private space and time and reach us when we tend not to be alert and
vigilant. Although we can control which programs we view, we cannot con-
trol which advertisements accompany those programs and it takes an effort to
2. THE RHETORIC OF VISUAL ARGUMENTS 57
“mute” the commercials. Moreover, advertisers can and do predict with a high
degree of accuracy the demographics of the audiences of any program, and
so they design their messages to exploit the vulnerabilities of the members of
that demographic group. Combine with these factors the huge influence of
repetition, and the attraction of the visual as the medium of influencing
choice becomes obvious.
My view of whether TV ads are visual arguments is not widely shared. My
initial point was to emphasize the evocative power of visual communication.
This power is thus available for visual arguments, whether static (print) or dy-
namic (television). But that does not imply that all uses of visuals in persuasion
are cases of visual arguments. It strikes me that although magazine and televi-
sion visual advertising often presents itself as more or less rational persuasion
aimed at influencing our preferences and actions, what is in fact going on in the
most effective ads is that the actual influence is accomplished behind this
façade of rationality.
Whether or not even to call it persuasion strikes me as moot, because it is
not clear that we have the capacity to reject the influence. When I think of a
rich custard cream sauce or creamy chocolate mousse, foods I adore, I cannot
help but salivate. (I am salivating as I write this description! Try thinking about
tastes you love without having your mouth water.) The only way to avoid it is
not to think of these foods. It might be that especially television advertising is
for most of us what chocolate mousse is for me—something whose influence
can be avoided only if we avoid exposure to it. If that is true, it is more like the
surgeon’s brain implant than even the robber’s gun. And then it is not persua-
sion, but unconscious causation, and so not rational persuasion, and so not ar-
gument, visual or otherwise.9
The Pepsi commercial with the giggling children and frolicking puppies
was, I want to argue, not a visual argument at all. It merely evoked feelings of
warmth and empathy, which were then associated with the brand. The objec-
tive of the advertiser, I expect, was to cause the audience to feel good about the
commercial, and then transfer that good feeling to the brand. Presumably the
hope (and probably it was an empirically confirmed conviction) was that the
good feeling about the brand would cause shoppers to reach for Pepsi on the
supermarket shelf when buying soda for their families. There was no reason
of any kind offered for preferring Pepsi to alternative colas or other types of
soda. To insist that this commercial be understood as an argument strikes me
as to be in the grip of a dogma, the dogma that all influence on attitudes or ac-
tion must be at least persuasion if not its subspecies, argumentation. What pre-
mises could possibly be reconstructed from the advertisement? That drinking
Pepsi causes little kids and puppies to be cute? Absurd. That Pepsi, like you and
I, thinks little kids and puppies are cute and so we, the consumers, should favor
Pepsi over other cola brands or types of soda, which don’t think kids and pup-
pies are cute? Far-fetched. Stupid as we consumers might be, we are not com-
58 BLAIR
constitute a poor case for their existence. I cannot claim that no TV commercial
can reasonably be construed as an argument. On the contrary, I construed the
Democrats’ “Daisy” political ad against Goldwater as a visual argument. But
“visual” plus “influence” does not add up to “argument” in every case.
CONCLUSION
It is time to sum up. Are visual arguments possible? It might seem not, since ar-
gument is paradigmatically verbal and essentially propositional, and visual im-
ages are often vague or ambiguous. However, we saw that vagueness and
ambiguity can be managed in verbal argument, and so are in principle man-
ageable in visual communication; moreover not all visual communication is
vague or ambiguous. As well, propositions can be expressed visually no less
than verbally. Argument in the traditional sense consists of supplying grounds
for beliefs, attitudes or actions, and we saw that pictures can equally be the me-
dium for such communication. Argument, in the traditional sense, can readily
be visual.
It does not follow that visual argument is a mere substitute for verbal argu-
ment. The spoken word can be far more dramatic and compelling than the
written word, but the visual brings to arguments another dimension entirely.
It adds drama and force of a much greater order. Beyond that it can use such
devices as references to cultural icons and other kinds of symbolism, dramati-
zation and narrative to make a powerfully compelling case for its conclusion.
The visual has an immediacy, a verisimilitude, and a concreteness that help in-
fluence acceptance and that are not available to the verbal.
While granting the persuasiveness of visual argument, we saw that in log-
ical terms, its structure and content tends to be relatively simple. The com-
plications of the dialectical perspective are not easily conveyed visually, and
the result is that visual argument tends to be one-sided, presenting the case
for or the case against, but not both together. Qualifications and objections
are not readily expressed. Where visual argument excels is in the rhetorical
dimension.
Rhetoric as related to argument, we saw, is the use of the best means avail-
able to make the logic of the argument persuasive to its audience. In com-
municating arguments visually, we need to attend particularly to the
situation of the audience. What is the setting, and how does it introduce con-
straints and opportunities? What visual imagery will the audience under-
stand and respond to? What historical and cultural modes of visual
understanding does the audience bring to the situation? Visual arguers will
answer these questions in creating their visual enthymemes, thus drawing
the viewer to participate in completing the construction of the argument
and so in its own persuasion. When argument is visual, it is, above all, visual
rhetoric.
60 BLAIR
NOTES
WORKS CITED
Aristotle. Rhetoric. Trans. W. Rhys Roberts. The Complete Works of Aristotle. Ed. Jonathan
Barnes. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1984.
Birdsell, David S., and Leo Groarke. “Toward a Theory of Visual Argument.” Argumenta-
tion and Advocacy 33 (1996): 1-10.
Blair, J. Anthony. “The Possibility and Actuality of Visual Argument.” Argumentation and
Advocacy 33 (1996): 23-39.
Engel, S. Morris. Analyzing Informal Fallacies. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1980.
Fleming, David. “Can Pictures be Arguments?” Argumentation and Advocacy 33 (1996): 11-22.
Foss, Sonja K., Karen A. Foss, and Robert Trapp. Contemporary Perspectives on Rhetoric. Pros-
pect Heights, IL: Waveland P, 1985.
Groarke, Leo. “Logic, Art and Argument.” Informal Logic 18 (1996): 105-129.
Jacobs, Scott. “Rhetoric and Dialectic from the Standpoint of Normative Pragmatics.” Ar-
gumentation 14 (2000): 261-286.
2. THE RHETORIC OF VISUAL ARGUMENTS 61
Johnson, Ralph H. Manifest Rationality: A Pragmatic Theory of Argument. Mahwah, NJ: Law-
rence Erlbaum Associates, 2000.
Perlmutter, David D. Photojournalism and Foreign Policy: Icons of Outrage in International Cri-
sis. Westport, CT: Praeger, 1998.
Reboul, Olivier. Introduction à la Rhétoric [Intoduction to Rhetoric]. Paris: PUF, 1991.
Tindale, Christopher W. Acts of Arguing, A Rhetorical Model of Argument. Albany, NY: State U
of New York P, 1999.
CHAPTER THREE
We learn from our construction of the past what possibilities and choices once
existed.—Gerda Lerner, Why History Matters
Within the vast field of objects that can be looked at, certain objects have been
elevated to a special class, the fine arts. What are the fine arts? As objects of
shape, form, and material, the fine arts encompass sculpture, paintings, pot-
tery, textile design, drawings, and prints. As ideas, over time, they have been
constructed as a category of things worth preserving and viewing. They de-
rive from the imagination, rather than serve as illustration, entertainment, or
propaganda. There appears to be a certain agreement about what constitutes
that which is “great,” an attribute “which defines and distinguishes certain
works from other forms of art” (Perry 15). These works edify. They please. In
this chapter, I explore the persuasive qualities of painting as a fine art.
No discussion of rhetoric and the visual arts can begin without allusion to the
Sister Arts tradition in literary studies. The founding maxim, fostering rich de-
bate over the centuries, is Horace’s declaration in the Ars Poetica, “Ut pictura
poesis,” [as a painting, so also a poem]. The 18th century German writer
Gotthold Lessing amplified and took issue with Horace’s construction. His own
contribution can perhaps be termed the most significant critical dictum over the
ages, for Lessing sought to keep the arts separate, warning that painting is an art
of spatiality, whereas poetry is an art of time. As Richard Wendorf comments,
however, “Lessing and a host of subsequent theorists have warned of the dire ef-
fects of these critical distinctions, but writers and painters have always been fas-
cinated by the relations that serve to join words and images” (1361).
63
64 HELMERS
While the investigation of the Sister Arts was practiced from the 18th cen-
tury onward (mostly notably by Walter Pater and John Ruskin in 19th century
Britain), it remained for the 20th century American literary critic Jean
Hagstrum to explicitly establish a critical tradition. Hagstrum announced his
intent to apply the techniques of literary criticism to the analysis of visual de-
piction in literature in the 1958 text titled The Sister Arts. His primary concern
focused on poetry that employed the rhetorical trope of ekphrasis, the art of
description. Aside from his magisterial study of the arts, Hagstrum also
coined the term pictorialism, which referenced a specific type of verbal depic-
tion in literature, that which created pictures in the mind’s eye of the reader.
Since Hagstrum’s work appeared, there have been many critics working fruit-
fully at the intersections of ekphrasis, pictorialism, poetry, and painting. Much
of that work turns on the rhetorical ability of the writer to call forth pictures in
the mind of the reader; thus its subject matter and the critical explications of
the critics are valuable to any rhetorician working at the intersection of visual
arts and language. Yet the critical products of that tradition bear little resem-
blance to what rhetoricians are now investigating and to the conclusions they
draw. Therefore, I offer a brief exposition here of how rhetoric creates its own
set of questions about reading the visual arts.
The primary difference between the Sister Arts tradition and visual rhetoric is
that rhetoricians are not working with correspondences between written works
and visual images, so much as they are asking how visual images are themselves
carriers of meaning. To borrow from Tony Blair’s work (chap. 2 in this volume),
visual images are construed not as capable of arguments, but as invested with the
ability to offer audiences propositions. A second important difference is that the
images rhetoricians study are not limited to the Western canon of the fine arts as
are the images offered through the Sister Arts tradition, but range through some
of the more popular arts such as advertisements, printmaking, and photography.
Third, visual rhetoricians consider the temporal and spatial implications of con-
text: the ways in which the meaning of a single image can alter dramatically due to
placement, context, cropping, and captioning.
Rhetoricians point to Kenneth Burke as an early visual rhetorician. In his
1966 publication, Language as Symbolic Action, Burke encouraged scholars to
analyze all symbolic forms, including “mathematics, music, sculpture, paint-
ing, dance, architectural styles” (28). Thus, rather than search for correspon-
dences between the word and the image (poetry and painting), a rhetoric of
the visual abstracts both text and image to the level of signs. Such a practice
moves away from—but does not violate—Lessing’s contention that one essen-
tial difference between poetry and painting is the medium. To adopt another
famous phrase, in Burke’s configuration, it is the message and the act of com-
munication that is more important than the medium. Another essential differ-
ence between the theories is that rhetoric does not focus on correspondences
between the arts, but on the image itself as a carrier of meaning.
3. FRAMING FINE ARTS THROUGH RHETORIC 65
As David Lowenthal notes, although the past could be said to exist in the pres-
ent through memory, history, and relic, “The ultimate uncertainty of the past
makes us all the more anxious to validate that things were as reputed” (191).
Validation amounts to construction of the past to be investigated. It is not that
there are no independent facts about the past, but that the researcher is instru-
mental in selecting the area to explicate and illuminate. We are always rewrit-
ing history, comments cultural critic Slavoj Zizek. We read the past as a
symbol of “historical memory … retroactively giving the elements their sym-
bolic weight by including them in new textures—it is this elaboration which
decides retroactively what they ‘will have been’ ” (56). The past is a gap that
readers must fill with that which they know at the time of viewing the artistic
work. Reading the past offers the readers choices: build a meaning around the
evidence presented on the canvas from existing knowledge or continue to in-
vestigate the circumstances of creation of the work.
Yet, in trying to recover the past, we produce misreadings because we infuse
the past with our desires. For example, I list some misreadings of Joseph Wright
of Derby’s 1767 painting, An Experiment on a Bird in the Airpump in a previous
study of his work (see Helmers, “Painting”). These ranged from interpreting
the natural philosopher at the center of the canvas as a Frankensteinian “mad
scientist” and believing that the young girls in the lower right corner were being
stereotypically represented as weak females. As David Bleich illustrated in his
study of readers of literature, Readings and Feelings, misreadings enable us to
learn about the readers themselves; however they don’t tell us much about the
past. Griselda Pollock’s Vision and Difference used a psychoanalytical model to in-
terrogate paintings of Dante Gabriel Rossetti, but the analysis is largely hypo-
thetical. Working with the analysis that Pollock started, Lynne Pearce posits two
types of readers of art in her work on Rossetti and the pre-Raphaelite Brother-
hood. One is a “naïve viewer,” whose primary interest is in representational con-
tent. The other is a “knowledgeable” viewer (like Pearce herself, or Pollock)
who is versed in technical conventions of paintings. Pearce favors the former, for
that viewer, through her “technical illiteracy,” has “the possibility of making for
the picture a narrative of her own choosing” (33). Whereas the knowledgeable
viewer is enslaved by interpretive explanations (34), the naïve viewer has opened
a liberating space for the subjects of the painting: they may be who they “might
be” rather than what they “ought to be” (43). Furthermore, narrative liberates
3. FRAMING FINE ARTS THROUGH RHETORIC 67
written materials (like Lewis’s own book) that identified main characters and
significant turning points in the tale. Without access to some frame of refer-
ence, the tapestry’s suasive qualities are diminished, if not nullified.
There is a significant body of art historical work that is sociological in nature
that can influence a rhetorical analysis. This type of inquiry, identified with Ar-
nold Hauser’s The Social History of Art (1951) and often termed “materialist art
history” (Perry 8), focused attention on written documents, such as exhibition
reviews, rather than on the biography of the artist or on the aesthetic properties
of a work or the tradition of connoisseurship that stressed the value of a particu-
lar work (Perry 9). An early rhetoric of the arts that is sociological or materialist
in focus can be identified in Gombrich’s influential work, The Story of Art (1950).
Gombrich asserted that no matter the era, artists were faced with practical prob-
lems that they needed to solve in order to create their works. All artistic produc-
tion is the result of decisions made by the artist and is created for particular
audiences (12): “They were made for a definite occasion and a definite purpose”
(13).2 Gombrich’s argument removed painting from an idea of “expression” to a
cultural problem that is indicative of rhetorical questioning. Human agency and
choice are essential as mediators between differing expectations and visual con-
cepts. Contemporary art historian Michael Baxandall makes a similar point. He
expresses the painter’s rhetorical imperative as the painter’s “Charge.” The
Charge derives from the painter’s need to act, “a relation between the object and
its circumstances” (42). The Charge must also take into account the painter’s
“Brief,” “local conditions in the special case,” or “objective circumstances” (30).
Together, Charge and Brief make up the particular circumstances in which the
image is created, but they also take into consideration the painter’s mind or atti-
tude toward the job or technique. From the many resources and possible atti-
tudes presented, the painter must make selections; thus, as Baxandall sees it,
painting is primarily a rhetorical act. Just as the artist worked within a cultural
situation that shaped the work of art, the viewer operates from within a cultural
situation that enables particular responses at particular times. Viewing is a trans-
actional process.
My intent, in this chapter, is to expand the notion that viewing is a transac-
tion enacted within a cultural moment through two specific examples of the
ways in which language-based acts create “frames” for viewing art. While the
physical frame is obviously one device that can be isolated for analysis, in this
piece I would like to expand the idea of “the rhetoric of the frame” into a tex-
tual and culturally situated metaphor so that it more closely resembles the
type of rhetorical work in which scholars in English and communications en-
gage. To draw language from Marxist critic Louis Althusser, what type of spec-
tator is “hailed” by paintings?3 And if hailing results in a moment of
“reification,” in which the subject recognizes that he/she is being addressed,
are the spectators paused in a moment of self-other recognition by technique,
subject, frame, gallery, catalogue, audiotour, or guidebook? Rhetorically speak-
3. FRAMING FINE ARTS THROUGH RHETORIC 69
famous and in its metaphorical sense as the light of knowledge, or insight. The
current exhibition space tells us very little. Wright’s An Experiment is located
between the Constables and the Gainsboroughs as an example of a certain pe-
riod in British art. What is compelling, nonetheless, is that the painting itself
poses questions through character and action and because of the remoteness
of the scientific experiment being conducted. Otto Von Guerlicke and Robert
Boyle invented the airpump, simultaneously and apparently independently, in
Holland and Britain during the mid-17th century. It continued to be a familiar
instrument of scientific inquiry well into the 19th century. The principle be-
hind it was simple and the instrument’s design was elegant. Air was pumped
out of a glass chamber in which a lighted candle or a rodent was placed in or-
der to demonstrate the necessity of air to life. Common enough in Wright’s
time, but in ours, who but a chemist or historian has heard of an airpump prior
to their exposure to the painting? Who is familiar with the works of Joseph
Wright? Certainly, the spectator need not be a historian of science or fine arts
in order to create a meaning from the painting, but once the meaning is cre-
ated, many unanswered questions remain. What is the irregular object within
the glass bowl at the base of the pump? Are these people members of a family?
Why is it so dark in the room? From the crucible of aesthetic and efferent read-
ings, initial responses tend toward the aesthetic and expressive: feeling that the
bird is being treated cruelly or believing that there is something powerful
about this painting.
A second tendency, when viewing An Experiment, is to see the painting as a
window onto the past, a documentary illustration of life in the mid-18th cen-
tury. In fact, traditionally, the audience construed the physical frame around
the canvas as a “window” into the image. Looking through the frame of exhi-
bition at the framed canvas involves an ekphrastic moment that refers to a mo-
ment or moments of offstage action. Although we, like the art patrons of the
18th century, look on the painting in a gallery, we imagine by the “mind’s eye”
what has happened to the bird, supplementing evidence with our own fears
for its safety and our desire for its well being. These mental activities stretch us
into the room where the experiment takes place and back to the earliest time,
to the (fictional) moment when the experiment was conducted. Although the
painting is viewed in the present, spectators are drawn into an early industrial
past in which familiar markers of place and occasion are absent. A spectator’s
Charge, to employ Baxandall’s configuration, is to select an interpretation of
the painting that brings the painting into their own story, their time, place, and
moral system of meaning. Spectators whom I observed in the National Gal-
lery often do just this, making moral judgments about the consequences of
the experiment addressed to other spectators in “now” time, but also address-
ing their judgments to the past.
Living in London in the 1750s, Joseph Wright was situated in a milieu of in-
quiry. In works published in the last 15 years, Iaian Pears and Lisa Jardine have
72 HELMERS
detailed the developing importance of sight, seeing, and collecting visual ob-
jects in the 18th century. Printing, engraving, painting exhibitions—even the
demonstration and sale of telescopes and microscopes—contributed to the
expanding knowledge of the natural and artistic world. Men of wealth and po-
sition took to the continent for the Grand Tour that would expand their ac-
quaintance with the arts and letters. Lacking a tradition of religious art and oil
painting, British painters traveled to Italy to learn the techniques of the mas-
ters Raphael, Rubens, and Titian. Returning to Britain, they began to create an
artistic class in society, one that encountered paintings not in Church, for that
flirted dangerously with Catholicism’s purported idolatry, but in academies
and in the home. Painting entered the public sphere as a commodity and a
means of social and economic exchange. The painters of the 18th century
were dependent, to great extent, on a wealthy merchant class or members of
the aristocracy for purchase. Gombrich draws attention to the “momentous
change” brought on by the establishment of academies of art in Paris and Lon-
don in the latter half of the 18th century:
[A]nnual exhibitions became social events that formed the topic of conver-
sation in polite society, and made and unmade reputations. Instead of work-
ing for individual patrons whose wishes they understood, or for the general
public, whose taste they could gauge, artists had now to work for success in
a show where there was always a danger of the spectacular and pretentious
outshining the simple and sincere. (380)
“Perhaps the most immediate and visible effect of this [shift in visual perfor-
mance] was that artists everywhere looked for new types of subject-matter” to
catch the spectators’ eyes (Gombrich 380). Artists of the time were “desperate”
to “grab visitors by the lapels with dramatic or topical subjects, strong colors, in-
ventive compositions, or—in the case of portraits—famous, glamorous, or no-
torious sitters,” writes art critic Richard Dorment (32). Exhibitions crowded
paintings together, frames touching, ceiling to floor and the exhibition floor
could be just as crowded. As an anonymous writer in the London newspaper
The Morning Chronicle of May 1, 1780 claimed, “Public exhibitions, which are
usually the subject of public conversations, become matters of interest to every
man who lives in the world, and wishes not to appear ignorant of what passes in
it” (Royal Academy Critiques). Pears amplifies this idea in The Discovery of Painting:
“The picture increasingly took on many aspects of being an intellectual fetish:
from having a function as an illustration of, or commentary on, religious devo-
tion and worship … the picture itself became the object of commentary and dis-
cussion …. by which individuals and groups measured themselves” (242).
Artists played to the demands of the public, as well. Thomas Gainsborough
wrote that the artist must “conform to the common Eye” and choose subjects
that the public “will encourage, & pay for” (qtd. in Dorment 35). It follows then,
3. FRAMING FINE ARTS THROUGH RHETORIC 73
that, rather than painting from his inner lights (a Romantic era notion that post-
dates Wright’s time by 30 years or more), Wright consciously worked within
canons of artistic expectation that framed his own situation as an artist within a
powerful system of status and commodity exchange.
Complicating this issue further were the art critics of Wright’s time, whose
overwhelming concerns were with mimetic qualities of the art (did they re-
flect reality accurately) and with the ability of the paintings to be narrated. Ap-
propriately—in a rhetorical gesture that joins the physical site of display to
active reception—the paintings were frequently called “performances.” For
example, a reviewer in London’s Morning Post in May 1780 commented on the
general lack of “technical terms of the arts,” but asserted that they were un-
necessary when one could speak about paintings “from that effect on our judg-
ment produced by a comparison between nature itself and the imitations of
nature.” Likewise, reviewers reported stories of the exhibition itself. A 1781
report testifies to the power that “likenesses” can have on the viewer:
Last Friday in the Royal Academy, a young lady of fortune was so affected
with a portrait that resembled her sister lately deceased, that she was
obliged to withdraw from the rooms, and has since continued extremely ill.
As there is nothing which captivates the senses, heightens the affections, or
elevates the ideas, more than painting, it is no wonder that a striking like-
ness of a deceased friend or relation, suddenly appearing, should excite the
most painful emotions. (Royal Academy Critiques)
This agreement between the power of representation and the power that was
manifest in a universe created by God is not to be overlooked. In the 18th cen-
tury, God as Author had yet to be replaced by science, although scientific ad-
vancement in England gradually opened up a space for secular and religious
debate. Citing Ronald Paulson’s work on Wright, Murray Roston positions
Wright at the center of the changing ideology of his time and singles out Air-
pump for its “sad awareness of the mutual exclusiveness of the older beliefs and
the new” (246):
What strikes the art historian most forcibly is the painter’s reversion to the
chiaroscuro techniques of Caravaggio to deepen the effect of mystery in
what is supposedly a rationally conducted experiment. Yet one must ac-
knowledge that such mysterious responsiveness to the emotional implica-
tions of the demonstration rather than its overt theme, the acquiring of
empirically tested knowledge, would seem to undercut the purpose of the
painting. (Roston 246)
The question then is where Wright’s sentiments lie, with the advent of science
as the “Guide to limpid Truth,” as one of Wright’s contemporaries phrased it,
or with the older belief in the God the Father and the Great Chain of Being.
74 HELMERS
Roston ultimately sides with science and technology to read the painting as a
“displacement of traditional faith by the rationalism of the laboratory” in
which God lies the “victim” (250). Yet, deconstructively, Roston’s reading of
the situation of An Experiment is a misreading, for it is based on a traditional
iconographical reading of the bird in the receiver as a dove, rather than as the
cockatoo that Wright actually painted. Extrapolating that the bird is a dove,
the traditional artistic symbol for the Holy Spirit, does shift interpretation to
the religious. Seeing the bird as a cockatoo, however, aligns Wright more
closely with the works of his neighbors in Holland, who were so fastidiously
concerned with the lush details of daily life and the exotic riches brought back
from the travels of explorers. In addition, our knowledge of Wright changes.
We can envisage him as a materialist painter, concerned with the details of his
own time and the economic and social conditions of his surroundings in
mid-century, rather than a painter of timeless theological ideals.
The periodical press and natural philosophers on the traveling lecture cir-
cuit through the country fostered the dissemination of scientific thought in
the 18th century. As Simon Schaffer points out, the traveling scientist was a
showman whose “task was to exploit control over these powers to draw out
and make manifest the theological and moral implications” of the experi-
ments for the audience (5). Drawing on the legacy of theater and perfor-
mance, the spectacle of science was used to enlighten and entertain. Joseph
Wright—like the traveling showmen—“publicized and exploited” the new de-
velopments in science. His scientist enjoins us to “behold,” drawing from a
popular poetical gesture of the 18th century. Not only did the century estab-
lish itself as a society of the spectacle, but also there existed a pervasive atti-
tude to teach moral and general “improving” principles. As John Warltire, one
of the other popular scientists and itinerant lecturers of the age noted, “the
Business of EXPERIMENTAL PHILOSOPHY is to enquire into and investi-
gate the Reasons and Causes of the Various Appearances in Nature; and to
make Mankind wiser and better.” Hence, to look and to see were signally impor-
tant in order to understand. For proper effect, the audience itself had to be ap-
propriately “enlightened” already, precluding the general classes of society.
The importance of this is that Wright was familiar with the lectures, the subse-
quent publications by the traveling philosophers, the experiments, the equip-
ment (his airpump is an exact replica of Benjamin Martin’s own portable table
model, circa 1765), and their popular interest among men of learning. And, if
we borrow from Roston, we might say as well that Wright was a knowledge-
able reader of the theological implications of his subject.
The price for admittance to a philosophical lecture was above that which a
working man or woman could pay, approximately 2.5 guineas for a public lec-
ture; for a private course, 3 guineas per person. The number of people at a pri-
vate experimental lecture was kept small. John Theophilus Desagulier, for
example, offered his lectures in coffee houses or in private homes. Philoso-
3. FRAMING FINE ARTS THROUGH RHETORIC 75
phers usually published the full text or a synopsis of their lectures in book
form. Benjamin Martin, an 18th century natural philosopher, inventor, writer,
and showman published an instructional book on using the portable table air-
pump titled The Description and use of a new, portable, table air-pump and condens-
ing engine (1766). His description of the types of experiments also includes a
morally improving discourse. The book is intended to:
elevate the rational Mind above the low Pursuits of sensual Amusements,
and the little Dignity than can accrue to human Nature from all the Docu-
ments of a Play or a Romance. False Taste, and Pedantry should be banished
to the Climes of Superstition and Despotism; and genuine Erudition fought
for from the BIBLE of NATURE only in this Newtonian Age.
To publicize his ideas further, Martin published an edition of The General Mag-
azine of the Arts and Sciences, Philosophical, Philological, Mathematical, and Me-
chanical that used a conventional dialogue between fictional and emblematic
characters, one Cleonicus, a young man returned home from university, and
his curious and sensitive sister, Euphrosyne. In two volumes, it is the first that
contains the dialogues The young GENTLEMEN’S and LADIES PHILOSOPHY; or
a particular and accurate SURVEY of the Works of NATURE, by way of DIA-
LOGUE; illustrated by Experiments and embellish’d with Poetical Descriptions. Mar-
tin’s publication adds another element to Wright’s Brief: Women of good
standing were educated in science as well as the polite arts of drawing, lan-
guages, and music. As Cleonicus explains to his sister, the fortunes of their par-
ents allowed them both to partake of a good scientific education:
Tis our Happiness that we have Parents whose Fortune enables, and whose
Temper inclines, them to bestow on us Education, and to train us up to
truley honourable and polite Life. I have all the Advantages of the Univer-
sity, and you of the Boarding-School. (Dialogue I, 1)
The conceit of the dialogue is that, whilst at home, Cleonicus will teach
Euphrosyne the wondrous experiments he has learned while away. “Philoso-
phy … is a peculiar Grace in the Fair Sex; and depend on it, Sister, it is now
growing into a Fashion for the Ladies to study Philosophy”4 (Dialogue I, 1).
Among the scientific experiments that the pair daily conducts are experi-
ments with the airpump. Martin had developed his own airpump and, in
something of a marketing ploy, he advertises its superiority within the pages
of the dialogue. Martin’s chief development to the pump was that his did not
leak; therefore, the experiments were much more successful than those con-
ducted in previous models. As he explains in The Description and use of a new,
portable, table air-pump and condensing engine, one of the most spectacular ex-
76 HELMERS
periments involved placing a small animal under the glass receiver, such as a
kitten, a rabbit, or a bird. Of course,
An ANIMAL (as Rat, &c.) being put under the Receiver, when the Air begins
to be exhausted, shews Signs of Uneasiness and Pain; as you continue the
Operation, the Animal convinces you of encreasing Pain and Agonies, ‘till
at length it expires in the utmost Convulsions. (XLI, 28)
Martin warns, the “tender-hearted” may find this experiment too horrific, and
the scientist should resort to using the pig’s bladder “to convey the intended
Ideas, without torturing the Animal for Amusement.”
Martin’s narrative hands us an explanation for the painting, a piece of writ-
ing that verifies not only the actions of the group assembled in Wright’s dim
chamber, but also of the emotions suffered by the women in the room. Yet,
without Martin’s convenient text, how much of this struggle between life and
death is evident in the painting? To what extent is the foray into educational
and scientific documents of the time necessary? As we can see, traditional art
history, such as the statements and interpretations offered by Nicolson and
Roston, is inaccurate, but our own ideas of the painting suffer from similar in-
accuracies. We all begin with the basic equipment of the canvas, the exhibition
space, the “already-said” (such as a knowledge that the painting is well-
known), the human tendency toward emotion, and the ability to situate this
scene within a sequence or narrative. The struggle between life and death in
captivity, ascribed in this painting to the bird, is a narrative that is familiar to us
all, and was familiar in Wright’s own time through, if not other sources, the
medium of the Bible. However, the vehicle for this death, the airpump itself, is
an arcane, unfamiliar object that requires some technical knowledge. The fact
of its appearance in this painting points to something significant: The painting
yields readily to rhetorical inquiry because of its documentary nature. It is a
window on its time by its refusal to engage in timeless allegory. Its existence ar-
gues for the power of painting to be reflective of society, to argue for the po-
tential of human works to better society.
plate, not the sea, but representations of the sea in its beauty and its
forbidding terror. In the words of Richard Grusin, “Nature provides the
prior condition for the … mimetic aim” of the exhibition (419) and is under-
stood as something “pre-existent” and “represented.” Three chiseled boul-
ders two to three feet in height angled from corners of this exhibit space.
Passing beyond this room into the environment of the sportsmen, one could
rest again on a rustic, camp-style, twisted birch or willow bench. A long, low
table in front of the bench held copies of art manuals on Homer and other
American naturalist painters. A copy of Henry David Thoreau’s Walden was
tucked amidst these works. A wooden rowboat rested again the far wall of
the room, before a contemporary, Home-Depot style wall mural of a moun-
tain lake. Into it several children climbed, bringing paper and pencils to draw,
not Nature, but strange monsters from the 20th century. Several wooden ea-
sels and artist’s benches were grouped together beyond the boat, and chil-
dren, again, occupied these easels. These props “staged” the exhibition.
They transformed the art into a theatrical space where the audience could
enact roles. The mind’s eye allowed the spectator to imagine oneself as a
tourist along the coast of Maine or a hunter tracking a deer in northern New
York woods. The distance between spectator and art was thus reframed by
contextualizing the artworks as windows onto a natural environment and
into the past. The props also made a direct, physical connection to the nostal-
gic props for sale outside the space of the exhibit at the gift shop. The Denver
Art Museum’s special Winslow Homer gift shop, like most of the major mu-
seum gift shops, commodifies art and memory by selling wicker creels and
wooden duck decoys that relate thematically to the subjects of Homer’s
paintings and give tangible presence to the two-dimensional paintings.
One common feature of exhibitions at major museums is the audiotour. In
this exhibition, the audiotour involved not only a voice interpretation of the
paintings, but folk-inspired music, of the type popular following the Ken
Burns documentary, The Civil War. A guitar plucked simple melodies; a violin
etched dance tunes. The music echoed Homer’s position as an American art-
ist, and thus performed a subtle political function in situating Homer as a his-
torian of the American past—rather than, say, positioning him in relation to
his European contemporaries. It also reinforced the dominant conception that
his works are about the (clichéd) “simpler time” in the past, a time before in-
dustrial progress and immigration altered the sensibilities of the country and
its people, a time before electric guitars and amplification. Yet, even without
the audiotour, the room was not silent. A persistent soundtrack washed about
the separate galleries. Seagulls cried as water rushed against the rocks on the
Gloucester, Massachusetts coast; crickets ticked amid the Adirondack scenes.
The museum had used an ambient sound nature track to recreate nature
within the walls of culture. The marketing material about the exhibit draws
attention to these innovative techniques in museum display:
80 HELMERS
Visitors will feel as if they are immersed in Homer’s world, as they experi-
ence several sensory elements designed to create an atmosphere consistent
with Homer’s works. The galleries provide an intimate feel and incorporate
ambient sound, environmental objects and artifacts, interactive areas with
easels to draw on and a life-size boat to sit in. (Winslow Homer)
The effect was like being in a film. Spectators were scenic “extras,” placed on a
set, given props, and asked to react to the fictions as if it were all real. The
sounds of wind rustling the leaves, of the plopping of a trout into a dusky
pool, of the birds chirping in the oak leaves nearly convince us that we are
there in a mythic and Arcadian past. There was a conscious decision to involve
spectators in a narrative of anti- or pre-urban life in this exhibition.
One of the more interesting complications of the curators’ theatrical approach
to “Facing Nature” is that American art historians consider Homer a narrative
painter. Homer trained himself as an illustrator of society events and leisure activ-
ities for popular magazines. His first works in oil were scenes of Civil War camp
life, which he drew from his experiences as a pictorial correspondent for Harper’s
Weekly. From these early paintings, through his late works depicting hunters,
trackers, and fisherman, there is a trajectory of narrative action. Life is suspended
between two points in a story, the past and the future. His actors, like the boys in
Snap the Whip, are moving toward a conclusion that is—and always will be—out-
side the frame (see Fig. 3.2). He paints “in prose” notes Geoffrey O’Brien, and
about his paintings there is “a persistent sense of incompletion” (15–16). The spec-
tator in our time reads the end of the narrative in their present.
One of the reasons that rereading a past becomes so easy in this exhibition
is that Homer believed that his descriptive scenes should speak for themselves;
he was, according to Nicolai Cikovsky, “reticent almost to the point of secre-
tiveness about the meanings of his creations” (qtd. in O’Brien 15). Yet, as Rob-
ert Poole notes (citing David Tatham) Homer does “speak to people across the
years”: “The outcome is always in doubt … Homer felt that viewers had an ob-
ligation to participate in the painting … His point was to raise more questions
than answers” (Poole 95, 98).
The result is that the paintings introduce storytelling for viewers, who retell
the events of the painting and assign psychological motives to the characters.
Even Poole, Associate Editor of National Geographic, can be found adopting
the storytelling mode:
What happens to the brook trout leaping clear of the water? Does the hook
give way? Or the deer swimming across a blue pond on a glorious October
day, pursued by hunter and hound. Does the buck escape? What did that
guide hear that caused him to turn his head away from the viewer? (95)
As Poole says, “Homer’s range covers a whole world of emotions, like those of
an accomplished actor, and the New York crowd that Poole observed at an
FIG. 3.2. Winslow Homer, 1836–1910, American. Snap the Whip (1872), Oil on canvas, 22 × 36 in.; 55.88 × 91.44 cm. Collection
of the Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown, Ohio.
81
82 HELMERS
exhibition warms to him. They point. They smile and poke their noses into the
paintings” (84). The exhibition in New York was theater. In Denver, the cura-
tors added the props and the soundtrack. Painting becomes performance art, a
Happening for the new century.
Michael Baxandall reminds readers that “we explain pictures only in so far
as we have considered them … Most of the better things we can think or say
about pictures stand in a slightly peripheral relation to the picture itself ” (1, 5).
As he explains, what art historians and observers have to say about a paint-
ing is more a representation of their own thinking about the painting. Thus,
the adjectives “glorious” (Poole), “tranquillity” (Poole), even “realist” are con-
cepts into which “Homer” is placed by his critics (as the metonymic represen-
tation of his oeuvre). Baxandall claims that the personal interferes to some
extent with historical understanding, a particularly post-structuralist claim.
Yet Baxandall’s comment is useful in the examination of “Facing Nature,” be-
cause the personal must reassert itself within powerful governing narratives
designed by the curators of the exhibit. The sounds of wind and sea “sound-
scaping,” designed to affect the emotions and draw the imagination, either are
resisted or are assumed into the interpretation of the paintings as, again, “real-
ist windows” on the world.
To some extent, Tony Bennet points out, all exhibitions and collections are
dialogues between presence and absence, cultural capital (in the sense of value
added) and the everyday. “What can be seen on display,” he notes, “is viewed as
valuable and meaningful because of the access it offers to a realm of significance
which cannot itself be seen” (35). The settings in which the displayed objects are
placed, furthermore, help to insert the viewer into the more significant realm
through representation. In other words, a gallery designs its space to reflect the
value it places on its objects. The National Gallery in London is somber, tasteful,
and serious. The Guggenheim in New York City is open, spacious, and architec-
turally significant in order to validate architecture as art itself.
The paintings, sculpture, or natural history collections that are on display
are meant to be “seen through,” Bennet asserts (35). The problem is that only
certain members of the class system are envisioned to have the ability to see
through to the “appropriate socially coded” level of seeing. This level of see-
ing places the art works into a historical, thematic, cultural arrangement—in
other words, class distinction allows those with greater cultural capital to dis-
cern that there is a rhetoric to exhibitions. Museums become instruments of
social control and of class division. They are places to separate the “popular”
from the “more significant.” The irony, then, is that Homer would be champi-
oned as a painter of the popular while exhibited in the traditional realm of the
elite. The accouterments of this exhibit refashion the museum as common
ground rather than elite space.
Raymond Williams, the British cultural critic, has described “culture” in
the earliest sense of use as “husbandry, the tending of natural growth” (“Cul-
3. FRAMING FINE ARTS THROUGH RHETORIC 83
Perhaps the previous case studies were a lengthy way of restating James
Heffernan’s assertion that the most “suggestive moment” of a painting is the
midpoint, “the point from which past and future action may be inferred as
cause and consequence of the action portrayed” (109). As he admits, this point
can never deliver “more than a partial meaning” (109) and it overlooks the
spectator’s own visual memory. In addition, narrative is acknowledged by
many critics as playing a role in the interpretation of paintings, yet it is not spe-
cifically theorized. As we saw, Pearce uses narrative as the mode of inquiry of
her naïve viewer, but narrative itself is neither naïve, straightforward, or trans-
parent. Tone and meaning depend on the axis of inquiry or the frame in which
the painting is viewed. Also, the notion of the naïve spectator, she who nar-
rates, is problematic because, although naïve about painterly symbolism, the
spectator may be quite sophisticated with narrative options, learned from the
realm of the visual and verbal cultural imaginary: film, television, drama,
dance, poetry, novel—even vacation photography and advertisements.
Drawing on the work of Michel de Certeau, cultural critic Marcia Pointon
notes that the fascination with the past also constructs a “stage” on which we
place characters and actions. “Because our access to the object, a painted can-
vas, is immediate, what is represented on that canvas seems, by extension, his-
torically graspable” (Pointon 9). In theater, as well, we focus on different
characters as they come to the fore; this conception allows us to understand
different lines of sight in painting and authorizes something of an inquiry-
based spectatorship in which the spectator raises questions and hypotheses. As
in literary studies, the painting/text can never be just one picture or have a sin-
gle meaning, because its construction depends on an unlimited variety of fac-
84 HELMERS
tors such as, for example, the inclination and/or capability of individual
spectators to create mental pictures—as well as their beliefs, outlooks, and im-
pressions—the particular historical moment, the prevailing ideology, the
composition of the audience, the ambient and intentional conditions that sur-
round looking (Moore 66, note 7). Looking indicates the way things could be
rather than proving the way things are.
The rhetorical meaning of a painting, then, appears to depend on percep-
tion and reception. Prior knowledge and the context of viewing the object will
condition perception. Reception depends not only on emotion and structures
of feeling, but also on the framing devices and cultural expectations being cre-
ated by the area of display. In the case of An Experiment, for example, focusing
our sight on the bird in the airpump may lead us to read the painting as an alle-
gory of life and death, that is, unless the bird is mistakenly identified as a dove.
In the latter case, the painting will become a Christian allegory, referring di-
rectly to the place of God and redemption in a secular society. If we move our
gaze to the right and become interested in the little girls who appear so fearful,
we might find that they are powerful girls indeed, for we have been directed to
pity by their glances. On the other hand, if we see the central figure of the nat-
ural philosopher as a commanding figure of evil and science gone awry, we
would have to eventually admit to a modern misreading of the figure of the
scientist in 18th century culture, for this figure is not the Dr. Frankenstein of
myth, but more likely an earnest traveling teacher, displaying the necessary
connection of breath to life. One of the faults of the fully framed exhibition,
“Facing Nature,” was its refusal to allow readings and misreadings to surface
amid the spectators. “Facing Nature” offered the stage and the offstage action
succeeded in redrawing the spectator, as well.
In conclusion, visual rhetoric as a method for studying the fine arts must
allow space for inquiry-based spectatorship. Interpretation is a process of ac-
crual in which past experiences merge with the evidence of the canvas to
construct a meaning. Nonetheless, that meaning will change over time as
the memory of the viewing event is recalled and the image is revisited in dif-
ferent settings.
NOTES
1. Although I will be advocating Pearce’s claim that the naïve viewer has a cer-
tain liberty of interpretation that is valid, I am concerned by Pearce’s argu-
ment that animating a character in paint is liberating for the character, for it
appears that we bring a new level of surveillance and control to the image
by having the textual subject “think what we wish her to think” (Pearch 43).
2. Pollock’s explanation of purpose is that the male viewers were enacting fe-
tishistic scopophilia.
3. My thanks to Lori Landay for this observation.
3. FRAMING FINE ARTS THROUGH RHETORIC 85
4. There is also a need to tame the potentially errant woman, for Euphrosyne
is not only the Muse of Good Cheer, but was often equated in 18th century
iconography with Bacchanalian revelry. She is potentially licentious, and
thus the discipline of science and the power of Enlightenment Reason, in
addition to Euphrosyne being located in the home, would hold her to the
path of goodness.
5. See the review of the new book, Art on the Line, for a comment by Richard
Dorment on how we must be retrained to see things as they were in the past.
WORKS CITED
Althusser, Louis. Lenin and Philosophy, and Other Essays. Trans. Ben Brewster. London:
Monthly Review Press, 2001.
Baxandall, Michael. Patterns of Intention: On the Historical Explanation of Pictures. New Ha-
ven: Yale UP, 1985.
Bennett, Tony. The Birth of the Museum. London: Routledge, 1995.
Bleich, David. Readings and Feelings: An Introduction to Subjective Criticism. Urbana, Illinois:
National Council of Teachers of English, 1975.
Burke, Kenneth. Language as Symbolic Action: Essays on Life, Literature, and Method. Berkeley,
CA: U of California P, 1966.
Calinescu, Matei. Rereading. New Haven: Yale UP, 1993.
Dorment, Richard. “Art on the Line: The Royal Academy Exhibitions at Somerset House,
1780–1836, Ed. David H. Solkin.” New York Review of Books 49 (13 June 2002): 32–36.
Elkins, James. The Object Stares Back: On the Nature of Seeing. San Diego: Harcourt Brace, 1997.
Gombrich, Ernst. The Story of Art. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1950; 1995.
Grusin, Richard. “Representing Yellowstone: Photography, Loss, and Fidelity to Nature.”
Configurations 3.3 (1995): 415–436.
Hagstrum, Jean H. The Sister Arts: The Tradition of Literary Pictorialism and English Poetry
from Dryden to Gray. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1958.
Halbwachs, Maurice. The Collective Memory. Trans. Francis J. Ditter, Jr. and Vida Yazdi
Ditter. New York: Harper and Row, 1980.
Hauser, Arnold. The Social History of Art. New York: Knopf, 1951.
Heffernan, James A. W. “Space and Time in Literature and the Visual Arts.” Soundings: An
Interdisciplinary Journal 70 (Spring-Summer 1987): 95–119.
Helmers, Marguerite. “Painting as Rhetorical Performance.” JAC: Journal of Advanced Com-
position 21.1 (Winter 2001): 71–95.
Homer, Winslow. Facing Nature. Denver Art Museum. 4 April 2001. <http://
www.denverartmuseum.org/homer/homer_exhibition.html>.
Jardine, Lisa. Ingenious Pursuits: Building the Scientific Revolution. New York: Nan A. Talese,
1999.
Jay, Martin. Downcast Eyes: The Denigration of Vision in Twentieth-Century French Thought.
Berkeley: U of California P, 1993.
Lerner, Gerda. Why History Matters: Life and Thought. New York: Oxford UP, 1997.
Lessing, Gotthold. Laocoön: An Essay on the Limits of Painting and Poetry. Trans. Edward Al-
len McCormick. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1984.
Lewis, Suzanne. The Rhetoric of Power in the Bayeux Tapestry. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1999.
Lowenthal, David. The Past is a Foreign Country. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1985.
86 HELMERS
Lyotard, Jean Francois. The Postmodern Condition. Trans. Geoff Bennington and Brian
Massumi. Minneapolis, MN: U of Minnesota P, 1984.
Manguel, Alberto. ReadingPictures:AHistoryof LoveandHate. New York: Random House, 2000.
Martin, Benjamin. The Description and use of a new, portable, table air-pump and condensing en-
gine. With a select variety of capital experiments, which, together with different parts of the ap-
paratus and glasses, are illustrated by upwards of forty copper-plate figures. London 1766.
—. The General Magazine of the Arts and Sciences, Philosophical, Philological, Mathematical, and
Mechanical: Under the following Heads, viz. I. The young GENTLEMEN’S and LADIES PHILO-
SOPHY; or a particular and accurate SURVEY of the Works of NATURE, by way of DIALOGUE;
illustrated by Experiments, and embellish’d with Poetical Descriptions. London 1755.
Moore, Jeannie Grant. “‘In My Mind’s Eye’: Postmodern (Re)visions of Hamlet.” Hamlet
Studies 22 (2002): 40–76.
Nicolson, Benedict. Joseph Wright of Derby: Painter of Light. 2 vols. New York: Pantheon
Books, 1968.
O’Brien, Geoffrey. “The Great Prose Painter.” The New York Review of Books 43 (29 February
1996): 15–16, 18–19.
Pearce, Lynne. Woman, Image, Text: Readings in Pre-Raphaelite Art and Literature. Buffalo: U
of Toronto P, 1991.
Pears, Iaian. The Discovery of Painting: The Growth of Interest in the Arts in England, 1680–1768.
New Haven: Yale UP, 1988.
Perry, Gill. “Preface.” Academies, Museums, and Canons of Art. Ed. Gill Perry and Colin
Cunningham. New Haven and London: Yale UP, 1999.
Pointon, Marcia. Strategies for Showing: Women, Possession, and Representation in English Vi-
sual Culture, 1665–1800. New York: Oxford UP, 1997.
Pollock, Griselda. Vision and Difference: Femininity, Feminism, and Histories of Art. New York:
Routledge, 1988.
Poole, Robert. “American Original.” National Geographic 194.6 (December 1998): 72–101.
Priestly, Joseph. An Essay on a Course of Liberal Education for Civil and Active Life. London: C.
Henderson, 1765.
Rosenblatt, Louise. Literature as Exploration. New York : Modern Language Association of
America, 1938; 1995.
Roston, Murray. Changing Perspectives in Literature and the Visual Arts, 1650–1820. Princeton,
NJ: Princeton UP, 1990.
Royal Academy Critiques &c. Vol. 1. 1769–93. London.
Schaffer, Simon. “Natural Philosophy and Public Spectacle in the Eighteenth Century.”
History of Science 21 (1983): 1–43.
Warltire, John. Analysis of a Course of Lectures in Experimental Philosophy; With a brief Account
of the Most necessary Instruments used in the Course, and the Gradual Improvements of Sci-
ence. Exeter: R. Trewman, 1767.
Wendorf, Richard. “Visual Arts and Poetry.” The New Princeton Encylopedia of Poetry and
Poetics. Ed. Alex Preminger and T. V. F. Brogan. Princeton: Princeton, UP, 1993. 1360–64.
Williams, Raymond. “Culture.” Keywords. New York: Oxford UP, 1976; 1983.
—. “Ideas of Nature.” Problems in Materialism and Culture. London: Verso, 1980. 67–85.
Zelizer, Barbie. Remembering to Forget: Holocaust Memory Through the Camera’s Eye. Chicago:
U of Chicago P, 1998.
Zizek, Slavoj. The Sublime Object of Ideology. London: Verso, 1989.
CHAPTER FOUR
87
88 GOGGIN
new ways of thinking about semiotic systems, Gunther Kress makes a power-
ful case for the hegemony of logocentricism:
In both a literal and figurative way, a rhetoric of the written word is visual, dis-
tinguishable from other forms of symbolic representation by the sense of
sight.1 Both images and words on script, print or digital pages engage the eyes.
When images and words appear together in one discursive space, they operate
synergetically. In this sense, written verbal rhetoric is visual rhetoric. In both
performance and circulation, such rhetoric is better contrasted with other
semiotic practices that engage senses apart from the visual, such as those of
touch as in Braille, or the ear as in audio performances whether live or re-
corded, or the tactile/ocular (e.g., the body and sight) as in sign languages or,
in the German term Gebärdensprache, gesture language.
If we shift attention to the material practice of creating/transforming
semiotic meaning, the clear divide between image and word becomes even
fuzzier. This shift raises important questions regarding the semiotic resources
for any given rhetorical situation. Anthony Giddens distinguishes between
two kinds of semiotic resources, what he terms “allocative” and “authorita-
tive.” The former refers to the raw materials and technologies for transform-
ing material into cultural meaning. The latter refers to the capacity to control
allocative resources, that is, access to and skill with materials and technolo-
gies. As Kaufer and Carley, drawing on Giddens, point out, “the author’s au-
thoritative resources consist of knowledge and position in the sociocultural
landscape, the sociocultural inheritance with which the author is currently
4. CHALLENGING THE GREAT DIVIDE 89
vested and brings to any current transaction” (137). For Giddens, it is the inter-
action between allocative and authoritative resources that permit meaning
makers to exert influence over social structures. In this dynamism, semiotic re-
sources are best understood as multiple complexes of technological condi-
tions and sociocultural landscapes that overlap like Venn diagrams. Of course,
certain material conditions and landscapes have been (and continue to be)
more privileged than others. Because certain groups of rhetors have been
barred from particular positions in dominant sociocultural landscapes—pri-
marily because of their class, gender, race, ethnicity, and sexual orientation—
they have had limited, and at times, no access to either dominant allocative or
authoritative resources. Forced to work with alternative allocative resources
on the margins of hegemonic sociocultural landscapes or in alternative
spaces, their discourses have typically been rendered invisible.
As Kress notes, “the issue of materials through which the semiotic mode is
realized is crucial for two reasons: because of their representational potentials,
and because of their cultural valuations” (“Multimodality” 191). In other
words, the materiality of constructing meaning is contingent on material re-
sources, cultural values and cultural positioning. These factors, however, shift
in response to kairotic conditions of time and place as well as technological,
economic, social, political and cultural forces. In short, complex contextual
forces both permit and limit resources, valuations and positioning, thus foster-
ing certain material practices while limiting others, and, as a result, both culti-
vate and restrict the range of possible rhetorical participants and the rhetorical
artifacts to which praxis may give rise or even be recognized.
All discursive practices may be best understood as material practices. That is,
for visual rhetoric, material surfaces (paper, stone, clay, canvas, metal, digital
space) are marked with a tool of some sort that releases a physical substance
such as ink or lead, or scratches, etches, carves or molds signs, or translates key-
strokes into electronic impulses and so on. The technologies of each vary in per-
mitting some possibilities for representation while constraining others. In
addition, access to technologies also varies tremendously. Moreover, the cul-
tural, social and political expectations for how particular kinds of meaning may
be represented (and, thus, “seen” or made visible) shapes what kinds of repre-
sentations are permitted. That is to say, the materiality of semiotic practices and
artifacts is socially, culturally and politically constructed (Street 170). The ques-
tion is: If all discursive practices are material practices, what is the range from all
available material practices that may be understood as meaning-making? Is it
the case that all material practices hold the potential to serve as semiotic re-
sources? Can hammering a nail into drywall, for example, be understood as a
meaning-making activity? Under what circumstances might such an act be per-
ceived as semiotic? What are the features that identify a material practice as a
meaning-making, knowledge-generating endeavor? Given the longtime schol-
arly privileging of the “word” in limited material terms—primarily scripted,
90 GOGGIN
rhetor could refer to them easily for inspiration or recall while working on a
new piece. The two most common types were spot and band samplers.
The spot sampler, also called the random spot sampler, contains a variety
of randomly placed stitches and geometric and naturalistic motifs. Figure 4.1
depicts a typical mid-17th-century English spot sampler that measures 30 × 11
inches, consisting of geometric and naturalistic designs (a rabbit, a deer, a pea-
cock and various types of flowers) wrought in a variety of intricate flat mass
(for filling in areas), shading (for giving depth) and outline (for emphasizing a
motif ) stitches.
The wide range of different kinds
of stitches was typical of samplers
from this time. Textile historian Joan
Edwards found in her study of 16th-
and 17th-century spot and band sam-
plers that each contained on average
about 36 different kinds of stitches, al-
though particular combinations of
these varied across needleworkers
and specific samplers (see also Toller).
The band sampler, as the term
suggests, generally consists of a se-
ries of repeated band designs that can
be used as borders or corners to em-
bellish any number of embroidered
items. Figure 4.2 shows a typical mid-
17th-century English band sampler
containing several complex designs
rendered primarily in double-run-
ning and knot stitches on linen mea-
suring about 23 × 5 inches.
On early band samplers, the rows
of repeated border designs followed
no particular order; a needleworker
used virtually every spare inch of ma-
terial, often turning the fabric 90 to
By the first half of the 16th century, however, some sampler makers began to
incorporate the alphabet in both spot and band samplers, and by the 17th cen-
tury, it along with numbers was increasingly stitched. The first known West-
ern sampler to include an alphabet is an early 16th-century German spot
sampler (Humphrey, personal communication). As Fig. 4.3 shows, in the top
left-hand corner, the sampler maker cross stitched in red silk one row of the al-
phabet minus the J and the U as was conventional until the end of the 18th cen-
tury; also missing (curiously) is the W. In this textile, the alphabet, consisting of
a mix of upper and lowercase letters, appears as one of many spot designs. It
sits, that is, among a series of random geometric and naturalistic spot motifs,
including religious icons such as Christ on the cross, political icons such as the
German Iron Cross, and domestic images such as the house situated behind
trees. Interspersed among the spot motifs are random band designs. This sam-
pler is a fine example of a commonplace textile notebook.
Around the time that this German sampler maker was plying her needle,
some needleworkers began to sign and date their work even as their samplers
continued to serve a heuristic function. In fact, the first known signed and
dated English sampler was stitched by Jane Bostocke in 1598; it is also the first
known English sampler to include the alphabet. Bostocke’s sampler is a transi-
tion piece that combines spot motifs, repeated band designs, the alphabet, a
signature and date in one place.8 Like the early 16th-century German sampler
in Fig. 4.3, Bostocke’s sampler was created as an invention resource. By the late
16th century, sampler makers thus began to incorporate a glottographic sys-
tem along with a semasiographic one. The question is: Why, after so many
centuries of not recording or practicing glottographic signs, even though
these appeared elsewhere in domestic, personal, religious and political needle-
work items, did sampler makers begin to do so?
Among the confluence of forces that operated on this meaning-making
practice, two powerful and intertwined influences are important for the pur-
poses of this chapter: the nascent print culture and the Protestant Reforma-
tion.9 In part, sampler making was influenced by, and in turn influenced, the
emergent print culture. It is probably no coincidence that it was a German
sampler maker early in the 16th-century who stitched the first known alpha-
bet on a sampler because the earliest known charted alphabet appeared in
Johannes Schönsperger’s, Ein New Modelbuch, the first printed pattern book,
which rolled off the nascent presses in Germany in 1524 (Lotz; Epstein “Intro-
duction”). The printed glottographic woodcut of the alphabet appears along-
side other charted geometric and naturalistic designs, treated as one of a series
of design possibilities. Many of these woodcut and engraved designs, and, in
particular, the woodcut of this alphabet, were later picked up and reused by
other printers in Germany, France and England as pattern books became in-
96 GOGGIN
in, shading, and outlining of these, and the colors, types of thread, and size
and kind of needles for generating threadwork patterns.
Each printed pattern could be rendered in multiple ways on fabric, depend-
ing on the materials and stitches used. The only constraints a needleworker
had to grapple with were the limits of the material and structure of the stitch
for producing particular designs— whether glottographic or semasiographic.
For example, although almost any color work or white work stitch may be used
to render alphabetic letters and numerals, some stitches are more effective than
others at producing clearly defined letters and numbers. Among the more com-
mon color work stitches used for letters and numerals are chain, cross, satin and
eyelet (Epstein, “Threads” 45–50), for these types of stitches lend themselves to
clean rendering of the lines and curves of the alphabet.
Pattern books both influenced threadwork designs and conversely drew
their designs from samplers stitched before the advent of print (Epstein “Nee-
dlework”). Moreover, the alphabets that appeared on samplers from the 17th
century on resonated with the fonts then used by printers, and in some cases,
continued to appear on samplers long after they became defunct in printing
(Epstein, “Threads” 50–51). Thus, there was an interdynamic relationship be-
tween the nascent print culture and sampler making, a relationship that be-
came even more prominent over time.
A second significant force that exerted pressure on sampler making begin-
ning in the 16th century was the emergence of the Protestant Reformation.
Particularly influential was Martin Luther’s doctrine of justification by faith
alone rather than by sacraments, mediation of Church or good works, and his
insistence on reading the Bible to give the individual greater and more direct
responsibility for salvation. The former tenets challenged, and eventually dis-
placed, religious icons and images like those stitched on the early 16th-century
German sampler in Fig. 4.3. The latter doctrine was both contingent on, and
buoyed by, the emergence of print technology that made the Bible and other
religious texts more widely available. Thus, the two forces of print technol-
ogy/culture and Protestantism were intertwined, fostering a rise in literacy.
The spread of Protestantism in England (with literacy as a byproduct) was se-
cured by Henry VIII when in 1534 he signed the Act of Supremacy, which re-
jected papal authority and created the Church of England. The tenets of
Protestantism were, therefore, fairly well entrenched by the time Jane
Bostocke stitched the first known alphabet and text to appear on an English
sampler in 1598.
As historians Patrick Collinson, Margaret Spufford, and Tessa Watt, among
others, have demonstrated, the Reformation led eventually to a displacement
and transformation of religious images, with text increasingly replacing visual
imagery. The transformation represented a radical discontinuity, a shift from
what Watt terms “images of piety” that “contained few or no words but spoke
the complex language of saints’ emblems and pictorial conventions … which
98 GOGGIN
the medieval audience had learnt to ‘read’” (131). The displacement of religious
images occurred gradually in stages, with the first generation of Protestants ad-
vocating an “iconoclasm,” the substitution of other acceptable (typically more
secularized) images for religious ones. Later Protestants advocated what
Collinson terms “iconophobia,” the “total repudiation of all images” (Watt 117).
The bifurcation of word and image, resulting from a changing relationship be-
tween the two, was thus both prompted and influenced by cultural and religious
politics that were supported by print technology.
Just as words were beginning to overtake images on printed materials, espe-
cially ballad broadsides and other cheap print sheets, so too did they begin to
appear with increasing frequency on needlework samplers wrought during
the same time period. As with print, the shifting relationship between image
and word occurred as a gradual series of displacements. Whereas in early sam-
plers, images (in the form of spot motifs and band patterns) dominated, in
later samplers, alphabetic and numeric symbols as one of a series of possible
patterns were introduced and slowly incorporated. Eventually textual signs
overtook images, so that by the 18th and 19th centuries, text dominated Eng-
lish and American samplers. But as with print, the change did not happen all at
once. Sampler making was slowly transformed as it participated in a web of
other semiotic practices and circulations, especially those of cheap print. Most
striking is how strongly sampler designs resonated with those of broadsheets,
chap books and other cheap print, and vice versa.
Figure 4.4 depicts a typical 17th-century English broadsheet that was used
to line an oak box, circa 1630.11
This broad sheet consists of a series of bands of alternating geometric and
naturalistic motifs with lines of text. The moral inscriptions read in part:
FIG. 4.4. Paper lined oak box, circa 1630. Courtesy Victoria and Albert Picture
Library, Ref. W.51–1926.
floral designs rendered in both color and white work alternate with bands of
text. This sampler closely resembles contemporary common broadsides that
may well have adorned the walls of Margaret Jennings’s home and certainly
would have appeared in public houses (Watt 192ff ).
The middle of Jennings’s sampler is devoted primarily to bands of white
work (the top wrought mainly in pulled stitches and the bottom in cut work),
with one band of the alphabet rendered in white satin stitch appearing toward
the bottom of this section. In the rest of her sampler, color work bands of text
are set off both figuratively and literally by alternating color work bands of de-
signs. The text reads:
LOVE THOV THEE LORD AND HE WILL
BE A TENDER FATHER VNTO THEE
FAVOVR IS DECEITFULL AND BEAUTY IS VAI
N BUT A WOMAN THAT FEARETH THE LORD
SHEE SHALL BE PRAISED GIVE HER OF THEE
FRUIT OF HER HANDS AND LET HER OWN
Here the text functions on two levels: first, as a visual design (i.e., as a band pat-
tern) and second, as a signifier of moral lessons—lessons that strongly echo those
advanced in the broadsheet in Fig. 4.4. Jennings engaged the very same semiotic
100 GOGGIN
Similarly, samplers of the 16th and 17th century were not finished products;
rather, wrought on the “scotch cloth” and “coarse linen” that was peddled by
chapmen, they served primarily as a means to an end.
In Jennings’s sampler, however, we begin to see the transition of sampler
making from invention to creation of finished artifact. Here, although the var-
ious designs certainly serve as a repository of complex stitches, the sampler it-
self serves not just as a means to an end but is beginning to become an end in
4. CHALLENGING THE GREAT DIVIDE 101
itself. The shift suggests a difference in purpose from that which came before
it, for example, that which guided the samplers depicted in Fig. 4.1 through
Fig. 4.3. By the late 17th century, as Jennings was stitching, sampler making
was on the cusp of a radical shift from invention to demonstration of knowl-
edge that resulted from a radical displacement of the praxis, the socialized
subject position, the purpose and the circulation of the textile.
During the 17th century and into the 18th, the purpose of sampler making
was substantively transformed from that of an invention tool (as a means to an-
other end) to that of demonstration of stitching skill (as an end in itself ). These
changes occurred as sampler making itself was displaced, moving out of do-
mestic and paid-labor spaces and into the schoolroom, and as new roles and
subject positions were occupied by needleworkers—novice stitchers be-
holden to master teachers as opposed to earlier experienced stitchers be-
holden to their own art.
Two major changes in band samplers over this period reveal the ways in
which sampler making was being displaced and transformed. First, the band
sampler shifted from a random series of bands squeezed in where space per-
mitted to a hierarchical pattern of bands that moved from simple to more
complex stitches. Such purposeful ordering resulted from the fact that sam-
plers were in the process of becoming primarily educational tools rather than
resources, and they were increasingly being worked by young novice stitchers
rather than experienced needleworkers (Humphrey Samplers; Parker). Over
this time, as in Jennings’s sampler in Fig. 4.5, text was beginning to be incorpo-
rated as part of a series of designs. Second, unlike earlier band and spot sam-
plers that recorded contemporary designs, some of the bands that appear on
late 17th-century samplers were taken from designs popular in previous cen-
turies (Parmal 8, 14). Since these patterns were not found on contemporary
clothing or furnishings of the day, they most likely were worked to demon-
strate that one had properly learned how to stitch rather than to record, prac-
tice or create designs that could then used for other new creations.
By the end of the 18th century, the displacement and transformation was
complete. Sampler making as an invention practice was erased. Samplers pri-
marily became decorative pieces of needlework, square in shape, and suitable
for framing and hanging. The displacement-transformation-erasure of sam-
pler making is obvious in Dr. Samuel Johnson’s 1799 definition of sampler as
“a pattern of work; a piece worked by young girls for improvement” (qtd. in
Krueger 8). Some 250 years after Palsgrave’s 1530 definition of “an example
for a woman to work by,” we see that samplers have been transformed into an
end product—“a pattern of work”—the subject position has shifted from
“woman” to “young girls,” and sampler making itself has become an educa-
102 GOGGIN
SEMIOTIC CIRCULATION:
SAMPLERS AS DEMONSTRATION OF SKILL
in the burgeoning privileging of the written word over other symbolic represen-
tations. That is, the practice and artifact were shaped by both iconoclasm and
iconophobia, to use Collinson’s terms, and by the resulting logocentrism or
“tyranny” of alphabetic bias, to use Harris’s phrase. In fact, a preponderance of
text over motif is one of the features that distinguishes 18th- and 19th-century
English and American samplers from those wrought earlier.
During this time, two broad families of samplers emerged that circulated
for different, though related, reasons. The first may be best described as picto-
rial or decorative samplers, namely, those that we most typically think of to-
day as quintessential samplers, and that most closely resembled broadside
ballads, chap books and other printed sheets. Pictorial samplers were stitched
to create a decorative picture (e.g., a pastoral or biblical scene) that typically in-
cluded one or more rows of the alphabet along with one or more verses. Pic-
tures and words were enclosed by a border of flowers or geometric patterns.
By the early 19th century, however, it was fairly common for sampler makers
to stitch long biblical and moral passages with sparse decorative borders.
These pieces, like other contemporary artwork, resonated with the visual lay-
out of cheap print of their day. As Watt notes:
Because samplers participated in, and drew on, these same visual/typo-
graphic designs, they also provide important clues to the web of semiotic
practices Watt describes.
Signed and dated by their maker, pictorial samplers were often framed in
expensive and elaborate ways by those in socioeconomic brackets that could
afford such luxury. In these, text and image converged into one semiotic cur-
rency, as samplers, mounted in prominent spaces on the walls of living and re-
ception rooms, circulated as proof of good breeding, upward mobility, moral
fiber, and virtuosity with a needle—though over time the last accomplish-
ment became less and less important than the former ones. These were the re-
frigerator art of early days. Parents proudly hung these as evidence of their
own role in educating their children well in moral, religious, political and secu-
lar arenas, and as display of their own wealth.
The second broad family of samplers may be best described as utilitarian
works. A variety of more utilitarian types of samplers became popular through-
104 GOGGIN
out the 18th century and well into the 19th century: for example, marking, plain
sewing, and darning samplers. Marking samplers typically consist of rows of
the alphabet and numerals rendered in different typographical fonts; plain sew-
ing samplers consist of typical utilitarian stitching techniques, such as basting,
seams, hems, buttonholes and buttons; darning samplers typically consist of a
series of different darning techniques used to repair worn spots and holes in a
variety of fabrics. To mimic torn and worn-out fabric, needleworkers cut differ-
ent kinds of holes in the sampler, and then used a variety of different kinds of
darning stitches to demonstrate their versatility in mending personal and house-
hold items. These plain-stitch samplers served as a domestic and domesticating
exercise undertaken particularly, though not exclusively, by young women, es-
pecially in the lower classes, to equip them with skills for positions that would
enable them to avoid potentially horrific circumstances—an escape well cap-
tured by Geraldine Clifford’s title, “Marry, Stitch, Die or Do Worse.” In turn,
these specimens could, and did, circulate as a material CV. Thus, like their deco-
rative counterpart, these samplers functioned as a demonstration of skill—an
end product. However, this family of sampler making restricted the stitcher-
rhetor to skills almost exclusively concerned with the marking or mending of
household or clothing materials created elsewhere. In this sense, these
stitcher-rhetors had a more limited access to allocative and authoritative
semiotic resources than their higher socioeconomic counterparts.
One of the most common of the utilitarian samplers was the marking sam-
pler on which young needleworkers would practice stitching various styles of
alphabetic letters and numbers that could be used to mark household and per-
sonal items. Figure 4.6 depicts a typical, though beautifully rendered, marking
sampler stitched by then 16-year-old Charlotte Eleanor Cullum in 1874 when
she was at the Bristol Orphanage.
This piece is one of a number of known marking samplers of fine quality
that come from the Bristol Orphanage Schools, founded in the 19th century,
where boys as well as girls were required to learn how to sew and knit. The top
half of the sampler is devoted to different styles of lettering in both upper and
lowercases as well as different styles of numbers similar to typographic fonts
then in circulation. The bottom half consists of neatly rendered small decora-
tive motifs (including a cow, a Bible, and several versions of a royal crown) as
well as a variety of borders and corner patterns. These motifs may be best un-
derstood as secularized, and therefore, safe, iconography. In this, as in other
marking samplers, semasiographic and glottographic are not distinguishable on
either a means of production or a circulation level. Not only are the means of
semiotic production the same but the circulation and its purposes are exactly the
same: proof that the needleworker could undertake a variety of stitching pro-
jects. In short, utilitarian samplers offered material evidence that the
needleworker could embellish and repair a variety of personal and household
items—could, in short, stitch word and image with pen of steel and silken ink.
4. CHALLENGING THE GREAT DIVIDE 105
I end this chapter with the metaphor of hemming raw edges because hems are
not permanent insofar as they can be ripped out, and then either turned up
higher to shorten a garment or let down to lengthen it. In samplers, old and
new, the edges are hemmed to prevent the background fabric from fraying as
an embroiderer plies her needle. Here I offer some final, although not last,
thoughts on the slippery and fluid relationship between visual and verbal rhet-
oric. Like a hem, I leave these open and invite others to engage in the issues I
tackle in this chapter.
In tracing some of the discontinuities in the history of sampler making, I
have shown how semasiographic and glottographic writing systems con-
106 GOGGIN
verged in both the means of creating and those of circulating needlework sam-
plers, and that the relationship between the two shifted over time. In short,
word and image combined to create a visual rhetoric in pens of steel and silken
ink. Thus, in this chapter, I have challenged the clear-cut division between
rhetoric of the word and rhetoric of the image to contribute to a more com-
plex definition of visual rhetoric. Perhaps, however, we need to reconsider the
term, visual rhetoric. As Kenneth Burke taught us, terms are filtered through
terministic screens that direct our attention to certain aspects and away from
others. Bifurcation of word and image—of visual and verbal rhetoric—per-
mits thinking about semiotic production, circulation and artifacts in particular
ways but also threatens to render invisible a whole host of other kinds of rhe-
torical practices, objects and participants because they do not appear on the
dichotomized radar screen. Because the phrase, visual rhetoric, has been so
saturated by the great divide, perhaps we need another term that will chal-
lenge us to consider not only distinctions but convergences between word and
image, and that will ask us to both visualize the word and word the visual. We
might flip the term, visual rhetoric, to rhetoric of the visual to signify that mean-
ing-making material practices and artifacts that engage in graphic representa-
tion are visual, whether the graphic is dealing in glottographic or
semasiographic systems or both.
In demonstrating the fluidity between image and word on samplers over
time, I hope to encourage others to explore all sorts of rhetorics of the visual
from a material perspective of semiotic resources and circulations—to use as a
starting point, in other words, not the artifact itself but the means of produc-
tion, and to trace this through the performance of the semiotic work. Doing
so requires historicizing the praxis and demonstrating that rhetorical con-
struction, artifact and circulation are pliant, radically shifting over time and
place in response to myriad social, cultural, economic, political, and techno-
logical forces. Disentangling the strands of influences and the threads woven
and distributed—threads combined and recombined—is well worth the effort
for helping us to understand the complexities of rhetoric of the visual both in
the past and today, and for directing our attention to important alternative rhe-
torical practices and spaces that have been until now ignored.
NOTES
1. See Harris, who argues persuasively that the history of writing is situated in
drawing as much as it is in speech. This history has been obscured by what
Harris calls a “tyranny” of alphabetic bias (8).
2. On the symbolic significance of embroidered motifs, see Sheila Paine.
3. The separation of visual arts from communicative arts represents a histori-
cal discontinuity, a by-product of modernity. Medieval scribes, for instance,
created both the illumination and the textual representations in incunabula
manuscripts—an intersection well exemplified by the very definition of
incunabula, which signifies both a “book printed before 1501” and “a work
of art or industry of an earlier period” (Webster’s Ninth New Collegiate Dictio-
nary 611).
4. For a useful history of particular stitches, see Christie’s Samplers and Stitches.
5. Here I use the term paid labor rather than professional because concepts and
practices surrounding both “profession” and “professional” did not
emerge until the 19th-century; see, for example, Burton Bledstein and
Randall Collins.
6. On commonplace notebooks, see, for example, Ann Moss, and Susan Miller.
7. Semiotic practices in needlework participated in, and resonated with, the
web of those in manuscript and print cultures. As Kaufer and Carley note,
“before print, the role of the individual author did not become visible un-
less a text was found to be a transgression of church or government inter-
ests. After print, the author became visible as a property holder” (136). It
was at this point that the author’s name took on a new role. Related to this
was the shift in the trust accorded to written documents during early mo-
dernity. As Clanchy points out, only gradually over 200 years between the
12th and 14th centuries were written documents permitted to stand alone
without corroborating oral oaths and testimonies or other material proof
(e.g., a dagger or ring; Memory, “Hearing”). Thus, signing documents held
little currency. The shift in status of the written document and authorial
claim to it resonates with a shift in the sampler as it took on a new status as
“document” rather than as heuristic, though this occurred much later in
the textilescape.
8. For an extended discussion of this sampler and its function as a transition
piece in the history of sampler making, see Goggin’s “Essamplaire.” Also see
Pamela Clabburn and Clare Browne.
9. Given the scope of this chapter, I trace only two of the many forces that con-
verged to radically redefine and transform sampler making. For a discus-
sion of other complex forces, see Goggin’s “Essamplaire.”
108 GOGGIN
10. Most of the earliest pattern books were printed not just for needleworkers
but for artisans of any ilk, including those who worked in metal, wood,
stone and other media. In this sense, embroidery was but one part of a
whole web of semiotic practices. Often the multimedia intent was signaled
by the titles. For example, the full title of Nicolas Bassée’s 1568 pattern
book is: New Modelbuch. Von Allerhandt Art Nechens vnd Stickens. Jetz mit
viellerley Mödel vnnd Stahlen/Allen Seidenstickern/vnd Neterine/sehr nützlich
vnd Künstlich Zugericht [New Pattern Book of all kinds of Forms of Sewing
and Embroidery. Now with Many Patterns and Samples/for all Stone Ma-
sons/Silk Embroiderers/and Net Makers/ Proven to be Very Useful and
Artistic; Epstein, “Introduction” 5–6]. Also see Ciotti, printed in 1596. The
popularity of these books for all sorts of artisans is well documented. As
Kathleen Epstein points out, between 1524 and 1700, “more than one hun-
dred and fifty different titles were produced … by various German, Italian,
French and English printers” (“Introduction” 3).
11. In separate presentations, both Edwina Ehrman and Carol Humphrey
(museum curators and textile historians) first called attention to the simi-
larities in the design features of samplers and broadsides and other cheap
printed sheets; Ehrman also used the broadside-lined oak box depicted in
Fig. 4.5 as an example in her presentation.
WORKS CITED
Attridge, Derek. “Innovation, Literature, Ethics: Relating to the Other.” Publications of the
Modern Language Association 114 (1999): 20–31.
Bernhardt, Stephen A. “Visual Rhetoric.” Encyclopedia of Rhetoric and Composition: Commu-
nication from Ancient Times to the Information Age. Ed. Theresa Enos. New York: Garland,
1996: 746–748.
Bledstein, Burton J. The Culture of Professionalism: The Middle Class and the Development of
Higher Education in America. New York: Norton, 1976.
Brittain, Judy. Step-by-Step Needlecraft Encyclopedia. New York: Portland House, 1997.
Brown, Shirley Ann. The Bayeux Tapestry: History and Bibliography. Suffolk, England: The
Boydell P, 1988.
Browne, Clare, and Jennifer Wearden. Samplers from the Victoria and Albert Museum. Lon-
don: V & A Publications, 1999.
Browne, Clare. “Samplers in the Museum’s Collection.” Browne and Wearden 7–11.
Burke, Kenneth. Language as Symbolic Action: Essays on Life, Literature and Method. Berkeley:
U of California P, 1966.
Christie, Archibald. Samplers and Stitches. 1920. London: Batsford, 1959.
Ciotti, Giovanni Battista. A Book of Curious and Strange Inventions, called the first part of
needleworkes containing many singular and fine sortes of cut-workes, raised-workes, stitches,
and open cutworke, verie easie to be learned by the diligent practisers, that shall follow the direc-
tion herein contained. London: J. Danter for William Barley, 1596.
Clabburn, Pamela. Samplers: The Shire Book. 2nd ed. Princes Risborough, England: Shire
Publications, 1998.
4. CHALLENGING THE GREAT DIVIDE 109
Clanchy, Michael T. From Memory to Written Record in England, 1066–1307. Cambridge, MA:
Harvard UP, 1978.
—. “Hearing and Seeing and Trusting Writing.” Perspectives on Literacy. Ed. Eugene
Kintgen, Barry Kroll, and Mike Rose. Carbondale: Southern Illinois UP, 1988: 135–158.
Clifford, Geraldine. “’Marry, Stitch, Die or Do Worse: Educating Women for Work.” Work,
Youth, Schooling: Historical Perspectives on Vocationalism in American Education. Ed. Harvey
Kamor and David B. Tvack. Stanford: Stanford UP, 1982: 223–268.
Collins, Randall. The Credential Society: An Historical Sociology of Education and Stratification.
Orlando: Academic P, 1979.
Collinson, Patrick. The Birthpangs of Protestant England: Religious and Cultural Change in the
Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. New York: St. Martin P, 1988.
Cope, Bill, and Mary Kalantzis, eds. Multiliteracies: Literacy Learning and the Design of Social
Futures. London: Routledge, 2000.
Dreesmann, Cécile. Samplers for Today. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1972.
Eaton, Jan. Mary Thomas’s Dictionary of Embroidery Stitches. 1934. Rev. ed. North Pomfret,
VT: Trafalgar Square, 1998.
Edwards, Joan. Sampler Making 1540–1940: The Fifth of Joan Edwards Small Books on the His-
tory of Embroidery. Dorking, England: Bayford, 1983.
Ehrman, Edwina. “Juda Hayle: A Study of an Ipswich Teacher and Her Pupils.” Conf. Sam-
pler Dames in England and America. Atlanta, GA. 12 May 2001.
Epstein, Kathleen A. “Introduction.” German Renaissance Patterns for Embroidery: A Facsim-
ile Copy of Nicolas Bassée’s New Modelbuch of 1568. Trans. Kathleen Epstein. Austin, TX:
Curious Works P, 1994: 3–19.
—. “Needlework and Pattern Books: An Examination of the Relationship Between Stuart
Domestic Embroidery and English Pattern Books.” Ars Textria 12 (1989): 51–63.
—. “Threads of Duty, Threads of Piety: An Analysis of Seventeenth-Century English Band
Samplers.” MA Thesis. U of Texas at Austin, 1991.
Giddens, Anthony. “Structuralism, Post-Structuralism and the Production of Culture.” So-
cial Theory Today. Ed. Anthony Giddens and Jonathan Turner. Palo-Alto: Stanford UP,
1987: 195–223.
Goggin, Maureen Daly. “An Essamplaire Essai on the Rhetoricity of Needlework Sampler
Making: A Contribution to Theorizing and Historicizing Rhetorical Praxis.” Rhetoric
Review 21 (2002): 309–328.
Harris, Roy. The Origin of Writing. La Salle, IL: Open Court, 1986.
Huish, Marcus B. Samplers and Tapestry Embroideries. 2nd ed. 1913. Rpt. ed. London: B. T.
Batsford, 1990.
Humphrey, Carol. Letter to the Author. 7 December 2000.
—. Samplers. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1997.
—. “Teachers and Traditions, Prints and Pedlars: A Sideways Look at 17th-Century Sam-
pler Groups.” Conf. Sampler Dames in England and America. Atlanta, GA. 12 May 2001.
Kaufer, David S., and Kathleen M. Carley. Communication at a Distance: The Influence of Print
on Sociocultural Organization and Change. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates,
1993.
King, Donald, and Santina Levey. The Victoria & Albert Museum’s Textile Collection: Embroi-
dery in Britain from 1200–1750. New York: Canopy, 1993.
Kress, Gunther. “Design and Transformation: New Theories of Meaning.” Cope and
Kalantzis 153–161.
—. “Multimodality.” Cope and Kalantzis 182–202.
110 GOGGIN
Krueger, Glee. A Gallery of American Samplers: The Theodore H. Kapnek Collection. New York:
Bonanza Books, 1984.
Lewis, Suzanne. The Rhetoric of Power in the Bayeux Tapestry. New York: Cambridge UP,
1999.
Lotz, Arthur. Bibliographie der Modelbücher. London: Holland P, 1963.
Lucaites, John Louis, and Robert Hariman. “Visual Rhetoric, Photojournalism, and Dem-
ocratic Public Culture.” Rhetoric Review 20 (2001): 37–42.
Miller, Susan. Assuming the Positions: Cultural Pedagogy and the Politics of Commonplace Writ-
ing. Pittsburgh: U of Pittsburgh P, 1998.
Moss, Ann. Printed Commonplace-Books and the Structuring of Renaissance Thought. Oxford:
Clarendon P, 1996.
Paine, Sheila. Embroidered Textiles: Traditional Patterns from Five Continents with a Worldwide
Guide to Identification. New York: Thames and Hudson, 1997.
Palsgrave, John. Lesclarcissement de la Langue Francoyse. 1530. Facsim. ed. Menston, Eng-
land: Scolar P, 1969.
Parker, Rozsika. The Subversive Stitch: Embroidery and the Making of the Feminine. Rpt. ed.
New York: Routledge, 1989.
Parmal, Pamela A. Samplers from A to Z. Boston: Museum of Fine Arts, 2000.
Sampson, Geoffrey. Writing Systems: A Linguistic Introduction. Stanford: Stanford UP, 1985.
Spufford, Margaret. Small Books and Pleasant Histories: Popular Fiction and its Readership in
Seventeenth-Century England. Athens: U of Georgia P, 1981.
Street, Brian V. Social Literacies: Critical Approaches to Literacy in Development, Ethnography
and Education. London: Longman, 1995.
Toller, Jane. British Samplers: A Concise History. Chichester, England: Phillimore & Co, 1980.
Wanner-Jean Richard, Anne. Patterns and Motifs Stitched and Ornamented on Textile Ground:
Catalogue of Samplers, St. Gallen Textile Museum. Trans. Vivan Blandford and Tony
Hafliger. St. Gallen, Switzerland: St. Gallen Textile Museum, 1996.
Watt, Tessa. Cheap Print and Popular Piety 1550–1640. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1991.
Wearden, Jennifer. “Stitches and Techniques.” Browne and Wearden 129–135.
Webster’s Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary. Springfield, MA: Merriam-Webster, 1987.
Young, Richard. “Invention.” Encyclopedia of Rhetoric and Composition: Communication from
Ancient Times to the Information Age. Ed. Theresa Enos. New York: Garland, 1996: 349–355.
CHAPTER FIVE
The death of Hitchcock marks the passage from one era to another …. I believe we
are entering an era defined by the suspension of the visual.
—Jean Luc Godard, 19801
developments in art and art history, perceptual psychology and neuroscience, cul-
tural studies, and a host of other disciplinary areas. With the gradual emergence
of digital filmmaking and on the heels of this visual turn, the contested nature of
representational realism has also been examined in many popular films, such as
The Usual Suspects (1995), The English Patient (1996), The Matrix (1999), Memento
(2000), Minority Report (2002), and many others. These are films that also make
identification an explicit theme. Although we can safely say that all films—as pro-
jections and sequences of images—function representationally to some degree,
films like these that self-consciously contest the relationships among realism and
identity make excellent subjects for the study of film rhetoric and thus for under-
standing the verbal and visual ingredients of identification.
In critical theory, the rhetorical or linguistic turn of the 1980s became the
visual turn of the 1990s. The rhetorical turn had heightened awareness of the
ways that our verbal means of representation cannot be easily (or rightly) sep-
arated from our ways of knowing. The verbal is implicated in epistemology so
fundamentally that any attempt to bring the mirror to nature, to use Richard
Rorty’s phrasing, must be seen as disingenuous or naïve because we under-
stand the world through mediating symbol systems. In its most general sense,
the visual turn simply asserts that symbolic action entails visual representa-
tion in the inseparable and complex verbal, visual, and perceptual acts of mak-
ing meaning. Who we are and what we know suddenly become intertwined
with questions about visual representation or about the relationship between
what we can see or imagine and what we can know. This visual, or pictorial,
turn is closely allied with the rhetorical turn because, in Kenneth Burke’s apt
phrasing, “A way of seeing is also a way of not seeing—a focus on object A in-
volves a neglect of object B” (Permanence and Change 49). Seeing is believing,
but believing is seeing as well. In the most detailed working through of the im-
plications of the visual turn for critical theory—Picture Theory: Essays on Verbal
and Visual Representation—W. J. T. Mitchell explains:
Whatever the pictorial turn is, then, it should be clear that it is not a return
to naïve mimesis, copy or correspondence theories of representation, or a
renewed metaphysics of pictorial “presence”: it is rather a postlinguistic,
postsemiotic rediscovery of the picture as a complex interplay between
visuality, apparatus, institutions, discourse, bodies, and figurality. It is the
realization that spectatorship (the look, the gaze, the glance, the practices
of observation, surveillance, and visual pleasure) may be as deep a problem
as various forms of reading (decipherment, decoding, interpretation, etc.)
and that visual experience or “visual literacy” might not be fully explicable
on the model of textuality. (16)
The interanimation, or interplay, of the verbal and the visual in the context
of film interpretation is certainly as complex as Mitchell suggests. In my view,
5. DEFINING FILM RHETORIC 113
a rhetoric of film would articulate the dimensions of this deep problem, with
the aim of suggesting ways through or around some of the central problems
that have vexed film critics for a long time—especially the nature of identifica-
tion and spectatorship as rhetorical processes. In my conclusion, I discuss the
visual component of identification specifically to show how film rhetoric
elaborates and exploits visual ambiguity to foster identification and thus pro-
vides insight into the rhetoric of film as an appeal to desire.
What constitutes film rhetoric? With reference to Hitchcock’s Vertigo, this essay
addresses that question by defining four approaches to film rhetoric, each of
which reflects and animates our broader understanding of visual rhetoric.
These four approaches share interests in identification and persuasion as rhet-
oric’s aims, yet their differences in application reveal substantial disagreement
about the nature of film rhetoric or about whether rhetoric itself is any more
than a means of textual analysis. In the last 10 years or so, however—and as
Thomas Benson notes—rhetorical criticism of film now entails more than at-
tention to its explicitly persuasive dimensions:
which is a phrase used by Burke to describe how our terms—or more gener-
ally the means of representation—direct the attention to one field rather than
another such that our observations of experience (all that can be known) are
implications of the particular terms themselves (Language as Symbolic Action
46). I conclude by considering what difference it makes for our interpretation
of Vertigo and film generally when we see rhetoric’s key term as identification
and ground that concept in the visual.
Each of the following categories—Film Language, Film Ideology, Film Interpre-
tation, and Film Identification—can be thought of as orientations or leanings (in
the sense of attitudes)—rather than precisely defined and practiced philo-
sophical foundations.
Film Language
Film Ideology
Film Interpretation
This approach treats film as a rhetorical situation involving the director, the
film, and the viewer in the total act of making meaning. Its subject is often the
reflexivity of interpretation, both as it is manifest on screen and in the reception
by the audience/critic. Like Nichols in his treatment of documentary film rhet-
oric, J. Hendrix and J. A. Wood, David Bordwell, Seymour Chatman, and
Bordwell and Noël Carroll each examine the film experience as a rhetorical situ-
ation.5 Bordwell is perhaps most concerned with the role of the critic in that situ-
ation. Chatman attempts to show that film interpretation should account for
audience reactions, the formal elaboration and function of genre, and the sym-
bolic representation of meaning on screen. Chatman, however, shies away from
rhetoric’s role in articulating the situational nature of film (or any text), prefer-
ring instead to imagine rhetoric as useful for translating linguistic tropes and
forms into their visual equivalents (Blakesley “Introduction”).
Film Identification
and psychoanalytic studies.6 Although the notion of the subject in film studies
has received its due share of attention, the meaning of identification, particu-
larly as it functions rhetorically, has yet to be closely scrutinized outside of the
psychoanalytic (Oedipal) terministic screen. For Metz, identification occurs in
the imaginary realm of the signifier, where film narratives create the condi-
tions for identification to occur in a secondary order of reality. It would be use-
ful, I think, to examine identification in the imaginary as a rhetorical process as
well as a semiotic process of decoding and encoding signs. Kenneth Burke saw
identification—and with it, the corresponding situation of division—as both
the condition and aim of rhetoric. The desire for identification, which Burke
calls consubstantiality, is premised on its absence, on the condition of our divi-
sion from one another. There would be no need for the rhetorician to pro-
claim our unity, Burke says, if we were already identical (A Rhetoric of Motives
18–29). Consubstantiality, with its root in the ambiguous substance (sub-
stance), may be purely an expression of desire, an identity of attitude and act
in a symbolic realm, much like Metz’s secondary order.
The aim of rhetoric, according to Burke, is identification. From the per-
spective of the audience, or the spectator, identification functions as desire, as
an assertion of identities, such that while there may be division or differences
among people and characters, we pursue that identification as one way of ex-
pressing (or, again, asserting) our consubstantiality. Pushed to its extreme, we
desire to become the other, to inhabit that psychological and physical space, to
take ownership of some kind, to walk in someone else’s shoes for awhile (to
put it in more familiar terms).
Film is an especially powerful medium for cultivating this desire for identi-
fication, and, of course, not just between film and spectator, but among char-
acters on screen. Hitchcock was especially interested in these processes of
identification, foregrounding not only the relationship between viewer and
film (so that our own desire for identification is never far from conscious
awareness), but also among his characters, many of whom seek identification
with a vengeance. In Vertigo, as we will see, Scottie’s pursuit of Madeleine is an
expression of this desire and a response to a challenge to the integrity of his le-
gally sanctioned identity as a police detective. His is a desire to transform the
self through the transformation of the other into the self. I will argue that
Scottie wants not only to possess Madeleine (thus competing with Gavin
Elster and especially the ghost of Carlotta Valdes), but also to be Madeleine, as
much as that can be possible. The tangled relations of identity in the film im-
plicate the viewer as well in this search for what we might call an analogical
self—an identity that is similar but somehow different. In film generally, the
projection of the visual field on or from a screen compels our attention this
way and that, with the rhetoric of identification manifest as a desire for orien-
tation—for sorting through, arranging, and forming visual cues that are ex-
pressions of attitude and identity. For that matter, seeing itself can be
118 BLAKESLEY
ready to go out to dinner, Scottie secretly notices that Judy is wearing the same
necklace he had seen on Madeleine and in the portrait of Carlotta. Instead of
taking Judy to dinner, he takes her back to the “scene of the crime” to force her
to admit what has occurred. At the top of the tower, which this time Scottie
has been able to reach, Judy confesses. They embrace, but then Judy is startled
by a nun emerging from the darkness and falls backward out of the tower and
to her death. The film ends with Scottie standing precariously on the ledge.
In my analysis of Vertigo, I want to focus primarily on Film Identification,
which entails the other three approaches under the terministic screen of rhetori-
cal theory. Vertigo positions its viewers, its characters, Hitchcock, and its cine-
matic style in a matrix of ideological practices and rhetorical appeals analyzable
as identification and division. Scottie is a representative figure for the neurosis of
pure yet imaginary identification. His madness midway through the film as he
falls into the wild zone of the feminine and his relentless re-imag(in)ing of Mad-
eleine/Judy in the latter half of the film are expressions of rhetorical desire,
ones that Hitchcock locates in the common desire of seeing and being seen.
Throughout the film, Hitchcock employs a variety of visual techniques (Film
Language) to focus our attention on the psychological consequences of this de-
sire for identification or identity. I will allude to some of these techniques as I
elaborate these mechanisms of identification, in addition to noting instances
when our consideration of the film might also slide into considerations of Film
Ideology (what does Vertigo reveal or repress?) and Film Interpretation. What is
the basis of disagreement, for instance, between Mulvey and Modleski on the
nature of the spectator of Vertigo, and how can this disagreement be mediated
by a more textured understanding of identification as a rhetorical process?
Identification becomes a central theme at the very start of the film, as the
Saul Bass/John Whitney credit sequence unfolds. The camera shows an ex-
treme close-up of a woman’s face (but not Kim Novak’s), slightly off-center to
the left. Already, we have transgressed the proxemic space of the familiar into
the intimate. The camera pans left, until we see “James Stewart” appear above
the woman’s lips, with the implication, perhaps, that she speaks the name, or
rather that he (or his character) will speak for her (see Fig. 5.1). Either way,
there is the implicit equation between Stewart’s character and woman in this
juxtaposition of the verbal and the image that presents or speaks it.
The credit sequence continues with the camera moving slowly up to show
the woman’s eyes. She looks to her left, then right, as if she feels she is being
watched, and then we zoom in to an extreme close-up of her right eye. To this
point, there has been just a hint of color visible, but suddenly everything is
tinted red as the eye widens in surprise (or fear). The title of the film emerges
from her eye, then Alfred Hitchcock’s name as director, and then we descend
inward as spiral-shaped images begin to slowly rotate and merge with the rest
of the credits. There is much that is suggestive about this opening sequence
and that sets a mood and a visual theme for the remainder of the film. There is
120 BLAKESLEY
FIG. 5.1. Opening credits, Vertigo. Copyright © 1986 Universal City Studios, Inc. Re-
stored Version © 1996 Leland H. Faust, Patricia Hitchcock O’Connell, and Kathleen
O’Connell Fiala.
the woman being scrutinized and written upon, in fear of being watched. The
close-up is so extreme it is unsettling. The camera pans across the woman’s
face and then descends into her eye where we see the verbal and the visual in-
termixed, with the credits juxtaposed to spiraling patterns suggestive of ob-
jects seen later in the film, such as the twirl in Carlotta/Madeleine’s hair. If we
translate this sequence into its literal equivalents, the spectator has not only
been watching this woman from an intimate distance but has entered her
mind, occupying the most private and inaccessible space of all. Even at this
early stage, we have been forced to identify absolutely—we are consub-
stantial. But that identification has to be earned, as Hitchcock knows, so we re-
treat from inside, the camera zooming out, and with the pace of the music
quickening, there is a cut to the film’s opening scene, the rooftop chase. For
the rest of the film, Scottie wants to return to that dark space—to find out who
Madeleine is, what secrets haunt her, what moves her, and what or who pos-
sesses her. Implicated as we are in this identification, Hitchcock appeals to the
viewer to want the same.
We next witness the rooftop chase and fall, with a “criminal” dressed in
white being chased by a police officer (in black) and Scottie (in grey). The criti-
cal moment comes when Scottie can’t quite make one jump and nearly falls to
the street below. He clings desperately to a drain gutter. We then see two
point-of-view shots: one of the police officer reaching out his hand to help
Scottie, and the other, when Scottie looks down in a famous example of the
dizzying reverse tracking/zoom shot. Even this early in the film, his vertigo is
our vertigo. The police officer tries to help, but falls to his death. The criminal
5. DEFINING FILM RHETORIC 121
escapes. The scene ends with Scottie still clinging to the drain gutter. As Robin
Wood shrewdly observes, this opening scene suggests the pattern of the quest
for identification to follow in the remainder of the film: the criminal is the Id
(which is set free); the police officer is the Superego (which is eliminated); and
Scottie is the Ego left hanging (in search of a stable self; 32).
The early insistence on the viewer’s identification with the image of the
woman—and by extension Woman as a categorical ambiguity—and our
identification with Scottie’s precarious situation raises a critical issue regard-
ing the role of the viewer and whether Hitchcock has scripted the viewer’s
experience as exclusively male. Scottie, as we see in this opening scene and in
the one immediately following in Midge’s parlor, is already searching for
identity, feeling emasculated by his vertigo and by the (woman’s) corset that
he wears. He speaks frequently of “wandering,” as if he is searching for
something to fill the emptiness of the self now that he has had to retire be-
cause of his vertigo. After Elster tells him the “ghost story,” Madeleine
quickly becomes the object of his desire, a purpose for his wandering. He ap-
peases that desire in his surveillance of her in the first half of the film, gradu-
ally reaching the point when he proclaims to Madeleine, just prior to her
apparent suicide, “No one possesses you. You’re safe with me,” while em-
bracing her tightly. At the time of her apparent death, Scottie identifies with
Madeleine totally, so the shock of that break drives him mad. What has he
seen? And how does this shocking elimination of the object of identification
affect him? (Recall also the shock felt when Marian Crane is murdered half-
way through Psycho.) What happens when the (male?) desire for identifica-
tion with the woman has been thwarted? In Wood’s view, by the end of the
film, the “total and unquestioning identification invited by the first part of
the film is no longer possible. We are too aware at that point that the fantasy
is fantasy, and too aware of it as an imposition on the woman” (35).
These are questions that vexed Laura Mulvey in the mid-1970s and then her
commentators in the 1980s and later. To build her case, Mulvey explains: “In
their traditional exhibitionist role women are simultaneously looked at and
displayed, with their appearance coded for strong visual and erotic impact so
that they can be said to connote to-be-looked-at-ness” (11). The woman is the im-
age, and the man is the bearer of the look. Mulvey sees Hitchcock as rehears-
ing this visual relationship in predictable ways and only grudgingly admits the
self-reflexiveness of this look:
In Mulvey’s view, Hitchcock forces the male perspective on the spectator, leav-
ing little possibility for any other. “Hitchcock’s skillful use of identification
processes and liberal use of subjective camera from the point of view of the
male protagonist draw the spectators deeply into his position, making them
share his uneasy gaze” (15). There’s no question that even in the opening cred-
its, the woman is the object-image, the mystery to be solved (presumably) by
the male. But there’s more than one-way looking involved, and it is the
viewer’s capacity for multiple identifications, born of conflicting desires, that
Hitchcock addresses. As Elkins notes in The Object Stares Back, even “just look-
ing” is hardly passive or one-way:
Looking is hoping, desiring, never just taking in light, never merely collect-
ing patterns and data. Looking is possessing or the desire to possess—we eat
food, we own objects, and we “possess” bodies—and there is not looking
without thoughts of using, possessing, repossessing, owning, fixing, appro-
priating, keeping, remembering and commemorating, cherishing, borrow-
ing, and stealing. I c annot look at a ny t h i n g — a ny o b j e c t , a ny
person—without the shadow of the thought of possessing that thing.
Those appetites don’t just accompany looking: they are looking itself. (22)
For Elkins, looking is the appetite functioning simultaneously with (or even
guiding) the perceptual process. Simultaneously, objects stare back, scripted as
they are (and as Mulvey suggests) to appeal to these ideological and physiolog-
ical appetites. What seems clear but often remains underappreciated in Hitch-
cock criticism is that we—the spectators—are watching and being watched,
spying on ourselves with the same degree of desire and intensity that we often
see acted out in his films. How better to express that stare back than to open
the film with a woman being watched, staring back at us? Although Mulvey
admits that Hitchcock makes the gaze wielded in Vertigo “uneasy,” she under-
emphasizes this reflexiveness in the film in the interest of reifying the ideology
of identification that she believes is formulated in psychoanalytic theory and
acted out through the phallocentric order of the Oedipal triangle. There is, in
other words, an inevitability to the relationship of the bearer of the gaze and
the image—an unequal distribution of power resulting from the patriarchal
order. And yet we also have the object staring back, both in the opening credits
and elsewhere in the film. The ease, uncomfortable or not, with which the
spectator (male or female) can assume the gaze and receive it, suggests the un-
derlying rhetorical motive at work in the act of seeing and being seen and that
Hitchcock foregrounds more than Mulvey will admit.
In The Women Who Knew Too Much, Tania Modleski argues that Mulvey does
not allow for this possibility of multiple identifications and that contrary to
Mulvey’s insistence on locating the spectatorial gaze in the male protagonist
of films like Vertigo and Rear Window, Hitchcock allows that perspective to
5. DEFINING FILM RHETORIC 123
shift in unexpected but prominent ways and thus suggests the plasticity of
identification. In Vertigo, for instance, although Madeleine is the object-image
for much of the first half of the film, equal screen time is afforded Scottie. We
are watching him as much as we are watching Madeleine through him, and we
do not necessarily view him from the perspective of the male’s gaze that has
been established and rehearsed in Scottie’s voyeuristic tracking of Madeleine.
The best example of this comes fairly early in the film when Scottie follows
Madeleine into the flower shop. He watches from behind a door as she picks
out a floral bouquet that we later discover is similar to the one Carlotta Valdes
holds in her portrait in the Palace of the Legion of Honor. For much of the
scene, we see from Scottie’s perspective with the use of the subjective camera.
Hitchcock even uses an iris filter to suggest further that we/Scottie are scruti-
nizing Madeleine. But then suddenly Madeleine walks toward the camera, and
Scottie, and there’s the urgent feeling that Scottie might be noticed. The shot
shows Madeleine reflected in the mirror on the door that Scottie hides behind
(see Fig. 5.2).
As Madeleine approaches the camera, we might expect once again to ob-
serve Scottie watching her—as Modleski suggests—in visual possession of the
woman (92). However, in this split frame, we see both Scottie and the reflec-
tion of Madeleine in the mirror, which is a distorted image of the “real” Mad-
eleine. Modleski cites Donald Spoto’s observation that Scottie and the viewers
may be seen as Madeleine’s reflection, and then notes that Spoto, however,
“does not pause to note the extraordinary significance of this observation,
which suggests that identification is ‘disturbed, made problematic’ [Robin
Wood’s terms] at the very outset of Scottie’s investigation” (92). We see (re-
flected) what Scottie sees, and we see Scottie watching her. At the same time
FIG. 5.2. The viewer watches Madeline and Scottie watching Madeleine simulta-
neously. Copyright © 1986 Universal City Studios, Inc. Restored Version © 1996
Leland H. Faust, Patricia Hitchcock O’Connell, and Kathleen O’Connell Fiala.
124 BLAKESLEY
and if we break the filmic plane, Scottie is watching us also. And what of the
reflection in the mirror? It is reflecting back a scene that we can only imagine,
somewhere in the numinal space we also occupy in front of the screen. What
of our reflection?
Indeed, it is this foregrounded process of identification that I think is the
central theme of Vertigo and that I believe best illustrates the nature of filmic
rhetoric. As Burke points out, there would be no need to identify with each
other, no occasion for rhetoric, if we were absolutely divided (A Rhetoric of Mo-
tives 22). But identification and division are ambiguously contemporaneous
such that there’s the urge to either assert identity or to elaborate its potential-
ity. Whether the means are verbal or visual, the rhetorical act involves imagin-
ing that such identity is possible and that its effects are real. Furthermore,
there is something strangely unsettling about this desire for identification that
Hitchcock also makes us feel. The act of total identification requires abandon-
ing thoughts of the self as a unique identity, and thus there is loss. When we’re
reminded of how eagerly we give ourselves over or how absentmindedly we
take possession of the other through the look, we realize the danger of total
abandonment. There is, as Woods argues, the “fear of spying” (passim). Finally
and from a rhetorical perspective, we are compelled to identify verbally and vi-
sually as a matter of course in social life. As Burke notes, a doctrine of consub-
stantiality “may be necessary to any way of life” and “a way of life is an
acting-together” (21). In acting-together, we “have common sensations, con-
cepts, images, ideas, attitudes” that make us consubstantial (21).
Identification is inherently an acting-together of subject–object, with iden-
tity a constructed middle ground in the symbolic (visual and verbal) realm
where individual identity can be played out, reformed, channeled, encoded, vi-
sualized, and even asserted as if it were a verbal and visual proposition. In Visual
Analogy: Consciousness as the Art of Connecting, Barbara Maria Stafford suggests
that this process is analogical. Analogy is “born of the human desire to achieve
union with that which one does not possess” (2). She proposes also that “the pro-
portional and participatory varieties of analogy are inherently visual. It requires
perspicacity to see what kinds of adjustments need to be made between uneven
cases to achieve a tentative harmony. It also presupposes discernment to dis-
cover the relevant likeness in unlike things” (3). Throughout Vertigo, Hitchcock
stresses this desire to connect and control the other with the look, which travels
in both directions between object–image and subject by, as I have already sug-
gested, making the object of fascination into a portrait, which can serve as an
empty repository for projections of identity. As we will see, when Scottie de-
scends into madness, he has recapitulated Madeleine’s dream, falling into the
darkness of the grave, where there is no other and no self.
This process begins prior to his initial surveillance of Madeleine around San
Francisco. Scottie goes to Ernie’s Restaurant, where Elster and Madeleine will
be dining, so that he can see the person he has been hired to follow. Already,
5. DEFINING FILM RHETORIC 125
FIG. 5.3. Madeleine at the Mission Dolores. Copyright © 1986 Universal City Stu-
dios, Inc. Restored Version © 1996 Leland H. Faust, Patricia Hitchcock O’Connell,
and Kathleen O’Connell Fiala.
126 BLAKESLEY
FIG. 5.4. Scottie is nearly caught spying. Copyright © 1986 Universal City Studios,
Inc. Restored Version © 1996 Leland H. Faust, Patricia Hitchcock O’Connell, and
Kathleen O’Connell Fiala.
FIG. 5.5. The Portrait of Carlotta. Copyright © 1986 Universal City Studios, Inc. Re-
stored Version © 1996 Leland H. Faust, Patricia Hitchcock O’Connell, and Kathleen
O’Connell Fiala.
(see Fig. 5.7). Midge herself is posed next to the painting, setting Scottie in the
position of painter. Midge has painted her own head onto Carlotta’s body (with
a prescient sense of the crisis to come in the challenge to photographic and rep-
resentational realism). Scottie can hardly bear to look. At this point, he is unwill-
ing and perhaps unable to corrupt the perfection of the image he has begun to
paint of Madeleine.
The repetition of this pattern of surveillance and portraiture rehearses the
desire of the voyeur for observing and constructing the object-image without
FIG. 5.7. Midge’s “Portrait of Carlotta.” Copyright © 1986 Universal City Studios,
Inc. Restored Version © 1996 Leland H. Faust, Patricia Hitchcock O’Connell, and
Kathleen O’Connell Fiala.
128 BLAKESLEY
being seen but still in danger of being seen. What happens when the object
stares back? Why is it so unsettling? (Midge’s bespectacled Carlotta stares back
at him and appears to make him ill.)
In Vertigo, we don’t experience that break when the observer becomes the
observed in as abrupt a fashion as we do in Rear Window, when Lars Thorwald
catches L. B. Jefferies spying on him through his camera, or when Norman
Bates stares back at us from his cell at the end of Psycho. The possibility for this
to happen in Vertigo is there nevertheless, and it gives the narrative its edge for
the first half of the film. When Scottie finally transgresses the observer–ob-
served boundary in his rescue of Madeleine from San Francisco Bay, he liter-
ally takes possession of her, bringing her back to his own apartment,
undressing her and putting her to bed, and then watching her with a desiring
eye as they sit by the fire.
After Madeleine’s death and the coroner’s inquest that legally absolves
Scottie but nevertheless makes him culpable for her “suicide,” he visits Mad-
eleine’s grave. In the next scene, we witness the famous nightmare sequence,
with its crude animation (by today’s standards), showing, among other things,
a point-of-view shot as we plunge into Carlotta’s grave (again, repeating the
imagery of Madeleine’s dream), Carlotta’s flower bouquet splitting apart,
washes of color from shot to shot, and the image of Scottie’s disembodied
head (see Fig. 5.8).
The dream sequence closes with a matte shot of Scottie’s falling body against
a bright white background. He awakens with a terrified look on his face. The
next scene takes place at the sanitarium, where Scottie is diagnosed as having
acute melancholia. There is a Freudian basis for understanding melancholy in
terms of subject–object identification that has some bearing on our understand-
FIG. 5.8. Scottie’s Dream. Copyright © 1986 Universal City Studios, Inc. Restored
Version © 1996 Leland H. Faust, Patricia Hitchcock O’Connell, and Kathleen
O’Connell Fiala.
5. DEFINING FILM RHETORIC 129
ing of Scottie’s “problem” at this stage in the film. As Modleski points out, Freud
described melancholy as an extraordinary diminution of the self, “an identifica-
tion of the ego with the abandoned object” (qtd. in Modleski 95–96). Scottie has
identified with Madeleine so thoroughly that in her absence, there is no
ego-identification or, as Freud would suggest, even self-reproach, because Scot-
tie is made to feel responsible for her death and, symbolically, his own.
There is another explanation as well, one that brings us closer to understand-
ing the motives for Scottie’s total identification with Madeleine, and thus, to an
explanation of his madness in terms other than those provided by the Freudian
terministic screen. As Elaine Showalter points out in “Feminist Criticism in the
Wilderness,” Edwin Ardener suggests that “women constitute a muted group, the
boundaries of whose culture and reality are not wholly contained by the domi-
nant (male) group” (471). The region of experience beyond or inaccessible to the
dominant group Ardener calls “the wild zone” (471). This wild zone is outside
of male consciousness and unstructured by language. It is muted and entirely
imaginary. It is the experience alluded to by Pop Liebl when he tells the story of
the “mad Carlotta, sad Carlotta.” In Helene Cixous’s formulation, the wild zone
is the Dark Continent where the laughing Medusa resides (Showalter 472). Scot-
tie’s descent into Carlotta’s grave, down the dark tunnel that Madeleine sees as
her destiny and her past, brings him ever closer to this imaginary wild zone. In
his nightmare, the Medusa’s head is his own, staring back and rendering him
speechless, for nothing can be or need be spoken once identification with the
other is total (and especially when the other is purely symbolic). This desire for
consubstantiality, or oneness—being with, being as—is acted out in an imagi-
nary realm of the symbolic that has been determined by the stories of Carlotta
Valdes told by both Gavin Elster and Liebl, then acted out by Judy in her role as
Madeleine. Elster and Judy have been acting out a drama written explicitly for
Scottie and designed to appeal to his vanity and to take advantage of his weak-
ness. Identification, here, becomes the expression of desire, an appeal grounded
in the narrative of woman as other, as unexplainable. Scottie’s madness results
from his crossing over into the realm of the wild zone, the symbolic space inac-
cessible to the dominant male cultural narrative and also beyond language. This
transgression is echoed later in the film in another form, when Judy’s role is dis-
covered because Scottie recognizes that she has taken the symbol of
Carlotta—the necklace—as her own. “You shouldn’t have been so sentimental,”
he tells her. It is this act that breaks the plane of the imaginary and the real and
helps Scottie realize that he has been played the fool and that his descent into
madness has been scripted from the start.
while before we begin to live the lives of the characters with them, to see our-
selves in them, or to laugh at them as if we were laughing at ourselves. In film,
however, identification is an insistent force, sometimes leaving the viewer no
choice but to identify or at least to play out the drama of identification. When
it works well, it induces submission, a relinquishing of power to the idea and
image of the other. What makes identification so powerful is its pliability—
the ease with which the viewer can shift identifications almost effortlessly, pro-
vided the film provides sufficient impetus to construct multiple identifica-
tions. The visual elements of film not only foster identification, but they
appeal to the capacity of the mind to assert its vision of the world even as the
active agency of this assertiveness remains hidden. The visual field seems
readymade—arriving in consciousness as fully formed visual experience. As
James Elkins, Richard L. Gregory, and many others note, however, the visual
field is never innocent or untainted by ideology or desire.7 What we see, even
at the moment of perception, is a consequence of what we’re looking for. As
Hitchcock knows—and Burke theorizes—the desire to assert identifications
on the visual world—the objects of sight—is not only necessary, it is insistent,
powerful, and, because of the unconscious ease with which that visual field is
shaped, always beguiling. Because the processes and compulsion of identifica-
tion assert themselves so readily, any film—in its capacity as visual representa-
tion—will wield this power, will direct the attention to A rather than B, or
make us believe that framed experience is all experience. A central proposition
of film rhetoric is thus that film’s visuality is not merely a language or a repre-
sentation of the real (a simulation), or even simply a sign of value or belief.
The visual functions as an appeal, an assertion that has been constructed and
placed by pointing the camera in particular directions at objects that have been
manipulated (staged), by developing, editing, and screening films in particular
ways, and even by marketing them to particular audiences. There is, in other
words, a rhetoric that elaborates and exploits visual ambiguity to foster identi-
fication, and that rhetoric will be operative whether a film’s director self-con-
sciously directs our attention to that process or not.
The concluding scene of Vertigo can help us see how complex these prob-
lems of identification can become. As Mulvey observes, we are compelled to
identify with Scottie and to view everything from his perspective. And yet it is
also clear that in foregrounding this process—in making us so compelled and
aware—Hitchcock wants us to see that other identifications are possible, even
if they are often repressed by ideological narratives or predispositions. Scottie
is also the object of our scrutiny—and even derision—especially in the latter
half of the film as he attempts to remake Judy into Madeleine. His authoring
of the object of identification is so obvious and forceful that it is unsettling. By
the end of the film, when Scottie stands on the precipice of the tower, Judy
having fallen to her death, we are compelled to identify with him even as we
may be ever conscious of Judy having fallen victim to his desire to reassert
5. DEFINING FILM RHETORIC 131
himself in his role as detective, as bringer of the law. We’re not shown Judy’s
body sprawled on the rooftop, as we are Madeleine’s, which would seem to
suggest that we no longer identify with her. However, the last subjective,
point-of-view shot of the film is through Judy’s eyes as she is startled by the
dark figure of the nun, so there is the sense also that we have fallen with her,
that we share her guilt, or that Hitchcock wants us to feel guilty. Scottie’s “pos-
session” of Judy, reminiscent of Carlotta’s presumed possession of Madeleine,
is also so assertive that although we may have forgiven his first failure to pro-
tect her in her role as Madeleine (still believing perhaps other-worldly posses-
sion had something to do with it), this time, Scottie is indeed to blame, having
just forcibly dragged her back to the scene of the crime. We have witnessed the
processes of identification even as we have experienced them, and we have
seen where the madness of consubstantiality—of total identification with the
other—can lead. Rather than simply reasserting the ideology of dominant
male (and visual) culture for its own sake, Hitchcock reasserts it to place it in
full view, as risky as it is, and was, to do so. It is in the duplicity, or multiplicity,
of identification that we can appreciate his accomplishment, and it is through
the terministic screen of film rhetoric that we can see this scrutiny of identifi-
cation as an expression of the human desire to connect, albeit symbolically
and visually, with each other.
NOTES
Terms: The Rhetoric of Narrative in Fiction and Film, 1990; and David Bordwell
and Noel Carroll, Post-Theory: Reconstructing Film Studies 1996.
6. See, for instance, Laura Mulvey, “Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema,”
1975; Kaja Silverman, The Subject of Semiotics, 1983; and Tania Modleski,
The Women Who Knew Too Much, 1988.
7. See Richard L. Gregory’s Eye and Brain: The Psychology of Seeing, 1997, for a
detailed account of how the visual field is actively constructed.
WORKS CITED
Auiler, Dan. Vertigo: The Making of a Hitchcock Classic. New York: St. Martin’s P, 1998.
Benson, Thomas W. “Rhetoric of Film.” Encyclopedia of Rhetoric and Composition: Commu-
nication from Ancient Times to the Information Age. Ed. Theresa Enos. New York: Garland
Publishing, 1996: 620–621.
—, and Carolyn Anderson. Reality Fictions: The Films of Frederick Wiseman. Carbondale:
Southern Illinois UP, 1989.
Blakesley, David. “Introduction: The Rhetoric of Film and Film Studies.” The Terministic
Screen: Rhetorical Perspectives on Film. Ed. David Blakesley. Carbondale: Southern Illinois
UP, 2003.
Bordwell, David. Making Meaning: Inference and Rhetoric in the Interpretation of Cinema.
Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1989.
Bordwell, David, and Noël Carroll. Post-Theory: Reconstructing Film Studies. Wisconsin
Studies in Film. Madison: U of Wisconsin P, 1996.
Brummett, Barry. Rhetorical Dimensions of Popular Culture. Tuscaloosa: University of Ala-
bama P, 1991.
Burke, Kenneth. Language as Symbolic Action: Essays on Life, Literature, and Method. Berkeley:
U of California P, 1966.
—. Permanence and Change: An Anatomy of Purpose. 1935. 3rd ed. Berkeley: U of California P,
1984.
—. A Rhetoric of Motives. 1950. Berkeley: U of California P, 1969.
Chatman, Seymour. Coming to Terms: The Rhetoric of Narrative in Fiction and Film. Ithaca:
Cornell UP, 1990.
Chisholm, Ann. “Rhetoric and the Early Work of Christian Metz: Augmenting Ideologi-
cal Inquiry in Rhetorical Film Theory and Criticism.” The Terministic Screen: Rhetori-
cal Perspectives on Film. Ed. David Blakesley. Carbondale: Southern Illinois UP, 2003.
Elkins, James. The Object Stares Back: On the Nature of Seeing. San Diego: Harvest/Harcourt,
1996.
Gregory, Richard L. Eye and Brain: The Psychology of Seeing. 5th ed. Princeton, NJ: Princeton
UP, 1997.
Heath, Stephen, and Patricia Mellencamp, Eds. Cinema and Language. Frederick, MD: Uni-
versity Pub. of America, 1983.
Hendrix, J., and J. A. Wood. “The Rhetoric of Film: Toward a Critical Methodology.” South-
ern Speech Communication Journal 39 (1973): 105–122.
Metz, Christian. The Imaginary Signifier: Psychoanalysis and the Cinema. 1977. Trans. Celia
Britton, et al. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1982.
—. Film Language. 1971. Trans. M. Taylor. New York: Oxford UP, 1974.
5. DEFINING FILM RHETORIC 133
135
136 STRACHAN AND KENDALL
the nation itself. In these symbolic representations, the identity of the candi-
date and the nation are merged. Hence, images of conquering heroes and mili-
tary leaders glorify not only the candidates’ past military experience, but the
military successes of the nation. Similarly, images of the yeoman farmer or the
frontiersman stand not only as a cue for a candidate’s socioeconomic status
and values, but as a patriotic identity for the entire nation—where the con-
cerns of average people are paramount and where even they, through individ-
ual merit, can rise to claim the mantle of leadership.
Politicians usually construct images that reflect core political values because
embodying exalted American values—such as individualism, freedom or equal-
ity—enhances their status, legitimizes their claim to wield power and justifies
their policy preferences. Moreover, such constructions increase their appeal to
the electorate. Citizens who want to embrace and uphold these patriotic values
can do so by accepting candidates’ conclusions and voting for them.
Yet, even though political images typically correspond to widely held core
values, it is important to note that they are not organic, but are constructed to
advance a particular agenda. The emotional appeal of these images to patri-
otic values encourages unquestioned acceptance of candidates’ images and
candidates’ patriotic definitions of the nation, as well as the stands on policy
positions that flow from these definitions. A classic example can be found in
the history of our nation’s earliest years, when “the very foundation of na-
tional survival in the era of the Constitution rested on the image of authority
and unity embodied in George Washington” (Melder 5). These images of au-
thority and unity served as shorthand cues for Washington’s character, but
also provided an identity for an emerging nation state. If one accepted the def-
inition of nationhood provided by Washingtonian images, one also rejected
criticisms launched by Anti-Federalists, who had argued vehemently against
the authority granted to the new national government.
Political rhetoric, or messages communicated with the intention of per-
suading the electorate, has included image construction since the beginning
of American history. Yet changes in the electoral arena and in communication
technology have moved such efforts to center stage. As other influences on
vote choice, such as party preferences, have declined, the electorate has come
to rely more heavily on candidate imagery. At the same time, candidates have
embraced image construction because it can now be accomplished with a far
greater variety of persuasive visual symbols.
Verbal or written rhetoric, which attempts to persuade with verbal symbols
or words including the full array of assertions and arguments, has historically
been the primary means of political persuasion simply because available
means of communication did not allow candidates to convey messages visu-
ally to a vast electorate. Hence, in the past, candidates’ linguistic construction
of political images was supplemented by visual symbols, which were por-
trayed on campaign novelties and in campaign brochures. Yet with advances in
6. POLITICAL CONVENTION FILMS 137
As the influence of partisan identification waned after the 1950s, many citi-
zens began turning to alternative cues—such as candidate images—when
making voting decisions. At the same time as shifting electoral circumstances
underscored the importance of political image construction, the invention of
television dramatically enhanced the candidate’s ability to accomplish this
task. As Morreale notes,
television is a particularly apt mediator of images in both the visual and psy-
chological senses of the term. The medium creates the impression of live,
immediate and transparent reproduction of the “real” and thus serves as a
substitute for viewers’ direct experience. (The Presidential Campaign Film 2)
their persuasive potential, it is little wonder candidates have seized the commu-
nication opportunities films provide and made their use an American campaign
tradition (Timmerman 364–373).
The Man from Hope presents testimonials by Clinton and various mem-
bers of his family. To reinforce their sincerity, the film incorporates soft
lighting, tight facial close ups and slow music. Meanwhile, still photo-
graphs supplement the meanings of the ongoing narration. When Clinton
opens the film by stating he was born in a small town called Hope, Arkan-
sas, a photograph featuring a tiny train station and his grandfather’s coun-
try store underscores his modest beginnings and small town background.
When Clinton’s mother describes how her son was affected by meeting
John F. Kennedy, archival footage of the event portrays a young Clinton, in
Washington DC representing Boys Nation, shaking the President’s hand.
When Clinton’s brother describes how his older brother was inspired by
Martin Luther King, Jr., footage of the civil rights leader delivering his “I
Have a Dream” speech appears on screen. Clinton’s recollection of the im-
pact Robert Kennedy’s assassination had on him is accompanied by still
photographs of the Senator. This series of visual presentations allows
Clinton, without explaining his positions, to link himself to past leaders
and the unfinished issue agendas they represent. Finally, Clinton’s charac-
ter as a family man is reinforced by footage of him playing sports and danc-
ing with his daughter Chelsea and of him relaxing with both Chelsea and
Hillary in a hammock.
While the film emphasizes character over issues, it does merge Clinton’s
identity with a patriotic vision for America. Parallels drawn between Clinton
as a unifying force in his own family and his agenda as a political candidate
make it clear that his relationship to his family serves “as a metaphor for his re-
lationship to his country” (Morreale, The Presidential Campaign Film 167).
“Clinton’s America is represented by his recollection’s of growing up in Hope,
Arkansas, where everyone was happy, safe and secure” (Morreale, The Presi-
dential Campaign Film 168).
Perhaps the most striking thing about these films, however, is the way
they conceal their political nature. There is little sign of conflict or disagree-
ment, and no sense that the candidates are engaged in a struggle over scarce
resources. Yet the political implicitly involves “the conscious, deliberate ex-
ercise of power among people for public ends” (Pitkin 213). Political rhetoric
is symbolic and arbitrary, with contested and changing meanings. As
Corcoran emphatically points out, in constructing political meaning,
“something is always at issue” (75). Convention films, in part because of
their persuasive visual appeals, downplay this conflict and encourage view-
ers to accept candidates’ versions of America’s future without critical analy-
sis. Candidate films, which both include a vision for America and allow
candidates to embody the patriotic values associated with that vision, ac-
complish this end more successfully than others. Comparing the Gore and
Bush 2000 convention films clearly illustrates what a difference incorporat-
ing a patriotic vision for the future can make.
142 STRACHAN AND KENDALL
As the 2000 general election neared, Vice President Al Gore was in dire need of
image reconstruction, and he could have helped to reshape his image with a
well-crafted biographical film. After a highly visible 8-year tenure as vice presi-
dent, Gore was a familiar public figure. Unfortunately for Gore, however, the
old adage “familiarity breeds contempt” tends to ring true for vice presidents.
Americans often subject their elected officials—especially prominent, power-
ful ones—to critical commentary and sarcastic humor. Such attention re-
minds both them and the electorate that politicians serve at the pleasure of the
people. For holding the second highest office in the executive branch, vice
presidents are criticized and lampooned by everyone from average citizens to
syndicated columnists and late night talk show hosts. Yet unlike presidents,
they cannot deflect charges by wrapping themselves in the honor and prestige
of the office of the presidency. Hence negative images created during a tenure
as vice president tend to stick. Recall, for example, the way George Bush was
labeled a “wimp” after serving as vice president in the Reagan White House.
Gore faced a similar dilemma, except he had been labeled a “stiff ” who was
incapable of displaying human warmth and spontaneity. During the election,
both editorials and letters to the editor addressed how “Al Gore could … erase
our perception of him as a stiff who underestimates voters’ intelligence”
(“The Gore Method” A-30). Even with the baggage of a negative image,
Gore’s bid for the White House was by no means a lost cause—a point under-
scored by poll results throughout the fall contest, and by the number of votes
he eventually received. Yet the convention represented the chance to reintro-
duce himself to the American electorate and to emerge from behind Bill
Clinton’s shadow. Gore had the opportunity to capitalize on the many suc-
cesses of the Clinton–Gore administration, and to present his own vision for
America’s future. His convention film began to address these image problems
and made a concerted effort to replace his stiff image with that of a spontane-
ous, fun-loving family man.
Yet, as anyone familiar with the most recent presidential race can attest,
Gore’s reintroduction at the convention did not solve the problem. The issue
of his image kept recurring, despite his campaign’s efforts to paint a more posi-
tive picture of Gore. Part of the problem seemed to be that Gore’s image con-
struction efforts became transparent. He adopted a different style of
interaction during each of the debates, and he was even criticized for changing
the type of clothes he wore. Both media pundits and his opponent’s support-
ers repeatedly pointed out inconsistencies in Gore’s behavior and accused him
of trying to portray an appealing, electable image instead of his true character.
For Gore, the campaign process highlighted “his search for both an identity
and a message” (Seelye A-26). Such criticisms eventually led to the Republican
mantra of “Who is the ‘real’ Al Gore?” Hence despite the persuasive opportu-
6. POLITICAL CONVENTION FILMS 143
nity presented initially by the convention film and later throughout his adver-
tising efforts and speeches, Gore’s attempt to reconstruct his image was
problematic.
At first glance, the Gore film appears well crafted. The film is structured as
a straightforward candidate biography. It is narrated by a credible figure, the
candidate’s wife, and her account of Gore’s accomplishments and character
are accompanied by persuasive visual proof. To introduce the film, Tipper
Gore informs the audience that she wants to “share a little bit more about Al,”
and that she is going to do so by sharing family pictures taken across the years.
She specifically refers to the film as their family photo album and then pro-
ceeds to share pictures from their lives together, beginning with high school
dances, progressing through marriage, her husband’s entry into political life
and the births of their children and grandchild. Unlike many modern conven-
tion films, Tipper’s account does not stray far from chronological order to
achieve dramatic impact. Although some of the photos may be out of order,
the narrative follows the true time line of Al Gore’s life, from the time he met
Tipper until his nomination.
This format may prohibit structuring the story of Al Gore’s life to achieve
the most dramatic impact. Yet the presentation flows out of the attempt to
simulate a family photo album, which enhances the authenticity of Tipper’s
claims about her husband. More than 100 snapshots of Al Gore, taken
throughout his lifetime, are presented throughout the film. The chronologi-
cal order of their presentation makes it appear unplanned. Meanwhile, the
sheer number of photos, and their candid quality, reinforce this appearance,
creating the impression of an accurate portrayal of Gore’s life. Yet the photo-
graphs presented throughout this film serve primarily as persuasive visual
proof of Tipper’s verbal claims. In this sense, the Gore film reverts back to the
efforts of earlier candidate documentaries, when the potential to use visual
cues to construct meanings independent of the film’s narration were
underutilized.
Throughout the chronological account, the Gore film incorporates two el-
ements typically found in convention films. Gore is portrayed as the arche-
typal American male whose populist appeal justifies his election to office. Yet
other important elements, such as a presenting the candidate’s vision for
America’s future and responding to audience needs, are glaringly absent.
Hence Gore commits, and perhaps even exaggerates, errors in crafting his
convention film that, according to Morreale have been endemic to Demo-
cratic presidential candidates, with the exception of Bill Clinton (The Presiden-
tial Campaign Film 178).
First, as expected, Gore is portrayed as the archetypal American male by
emphasizing his athletic abilities, connection to farming, dedication to coun-
try, and love of family. His life story even comes complete with heroic military
service, as Gore served in Vietnam.
144 STRACHAN AND KENDALL
The kiss, in combination with the film, is intended to introduce a new and
improved version of Al Gore to the American public. Although the film does
not address the audience’s patriotic values, and thus fails to evoke strong emo-
tional reactions to the candidate, it does present a favorable account of Al
Gore’s character. One might expect that this film would have launched a suc-
cessful effort to recast his image. Yet even this narrower agenda was not suc-
cessfully achieved. The American electorate never seemed to fully accept the
image of Al Gore as a fun-loving family man. Even at the end of the campaign,
Gore was described in news reports as “stiffer than ever, smiling but robotic …
turning into a caricature of himself, as if he were mimicking Darrell
Hammond’s Saturday Night Live parody of him” ( James A-29). The remaining
question is why, and that question is best answered by understanding how peo-
ple process political information.
with the service provided, and that their experience will end by paying the
tab—either to a member of the wait staff or to a cashier depending on the
quality of the establishment. In addition to this set of expectations, people
may also develop a normative judgment about whether eating out is an enjoy-
able experience or whether it is worth the expense.
Note, however, that the experiences used to develop these expectations and
judgments are not treated equally. People can learn how to behave appropri-
ately in a restaurant from several sources. They may learn through their own
direct experiences, or they may learn by gathering information from second-
ary sources. A friend, for example, may have gone to dinner and described the
experience in great detail. The learning opportunities provided by these two
sources of information vary considerably. Direct experiences allow people to
process rich details and cues from all of their senses. They can hear the sounds
of dishes clashing and cash registers ringing, see tables being cleared and
money being exchanged, feel the texture of the menu, and smell the aroma
and taste the flavor of the food. These perceptual experiences have a more dra-
matic, lasting impact than being told even the most vivid story—which ex-
plains why people often conclude the stories they tell with the line, “I guess
you just had to be there.”
Hence firsthand, direct experiences have far more influence on schema de-
velopment than secondhand, vicarious ones (Graber 90–91). Yet the invention
of television provided a new and far more persuasive way to learn from vicari-
ous experiences. The medium, with its appeal to visual and auditory senses,
comes closer to recreating the perceptual cues of real-life experiences. These
qualities help to explain why television is such a persuasive medium, especially
in the process of developing new schema. Timmerman touches on this pro-
cess when he describes the dramatic difference between merely hearing Bill
Clinton describe meeting President Kennedy as a youth, and actually seeing a
black and white photograph of the same event. He notes, “now we have seen
the event and we have interpreted it …. In the telepolitical age, pictures do not
lie” (364). Television’s ability to dramatically enhance the impact of vicarious
experiences supports the old adage, “seeing is believing.”
Yet the same pattern of information processing that makes people suscepti-
ble to such influence also protects them. Once a schema has been developed
and a judgment put into place, it is particularly difficult to change because peo-
ple engage in selective perception. To return to the example of restaurants,
people who have repeatedly received poor service or bad food when they have
gone out to eat will probably develop a schema for the experience that in-
cludes a strong negative judgment. It is not likely that they will easily abandon
this judgment, even if they see a televison advertisement for a new café or hear
their friends testify about how great the café’s food is. In short, when people
are exposed to information that contradicts existing judgments, they often re-
ject it, either by ignoring it or by finding a reason to disregard it (Graber 186).
148 STRACHAN AND KENDALL
This practice of selective perception helps to explain why the Gore film was
not more successful. First, most Americans have a well-developed judgment
about politicians in general. Socialization in American political culture repeat-
edly warns them to be wary of political actors’ motivations and to be suspi-
cious of political messages (Graber 202). So, even though the scores of
photographs presented in the Gore film painted an attractive picture, both
they and “the kiss” were automatically subjected to skeptical examination.
Gore opponents fed this existing cynicism by describing the efforts as a blatant
attempt to convince people that Al Gore was someone he was not.
Second, as previously noted, many Americans had existing judgments
about who Al Gore was. They thought he was a stiff man incapable of convey-
ing spontaneity and warmth. Altering such judgments is a difficult, although
not impossible, task. Past vice presidents, most recently former President
George Bush, have managed to alter negative images acquired during their
time in the limelight. The key to success in such a task is consistency. A conven-
tion film represents a powerful opportunity to convey a candidate image that
will help win an election. Yet a campaign consists of a series of messages com-
municated over a longer period of time. And in order to be effective, the mes-
sages communicated during this time span must be consistent. Hence it is
important that a convention film introduces an image that the candidate will
be capable of conveying throughout the duration of the campaign. The best
way to ensure this level of consistency is to carefully evaluate the candidate’s
strengths and weaknesses. Good campaign professionals develop images of a
candidate’s characters that are inherently true and that the candidate will not
have difficulty portraying. Perhaps the current era of advanced communica-
tion technology has increased this need for accuracy because it is more diffi-
cult for candidates to control all of the cues provided to voters about them.
Now, candidates not only need to have internally consistent campaign mes-
sages, but they need to promote an image that will not be contradicted by the
mass media or by their opponents. Shea notes that sometimes campaigns at-
tempt to shape candidate images solely based on polling data, but he warns
that “the hard truth is that this strategy too often fails because the [actual]
qualifications and capabilities … are not given enough heed” (40).
Here it seems the Gore campaign made its fatal mistake. Al Gore may very
well be a warm, spontaneous man in the privacy of his own home. Yet he has
consistently had difficulty portraying this side of his personality when he is in
the limelight. His convention film emphasized aspects of his character that he
was unable to live up to as the campaign progressed. This failure made him
vulnerable to opponents’ criticism of his efforts to construct a new image.
Moreover, this criticism was easy for the American public to accept because it
fits with the existing judgment that political messages should be treated with
skepticism. Gore’s convention film was unsuccessful first because it failed to
construct a patriotic vision for America’s future, and second because the im-
6. POLITICAL CONVENTION FILMS 149
whereas Laura Bush and Barbara Bush are featured prominently. Most con-
spicuously, George W. Bush does not capitalize on his role as Governor of
Texas. He never appears at the State House, and only once refers to running
for Governor of Texas; only Phyllis Hunter calls him “Governor,” and shortly
afterward refers to him as George. Throughout the film he is George. This
film’s effort to distance Bush from stereotypical masculine institutions and ac-
tivities may be a result of the Republican Party’s recent efforts to address the
gender gap by appealing to women voters. Similarly the emphasis on women
of the Bush family instead of on George Senior may have reflected the desire
to distance “W” from his father, making it clear that he was his own man.
In addressing why Bush is qualified to hold office, the film also emphasizes
that Bush is his own man. Like most Republicans, Bush’s film resolves the con-
flict between the desire for a man of the people and for a talented, heroic leader
by portraying him as a leader with middle-class roots. The film plays on the cul-
tural mythology of the West with Bush fulfilling the role of a cowboy and rug-
ged individualist. Because the film is largely self-narrated, and Bush cannot
make boastful claims about himself, this image is conveyed with visual cues.
Bush embraces his southwestern roots, appearing in an open-necked blue
denim shirt, jeans, and in some scenes, a cowboy hat. He is filmed casually driv-
ing around his ranch with a loyal dog, passing the crepe myrtles and cattle and
ranch buildings, narrating the film in his Texas accent. The entire film appears to
have been shot in Texas, further linking Bush to the traditional values of that re-
gion of the country. Yet, quite cleverly, the film’s references to Midland, Texas
are used to connect Bush to the middle class, even though he comes from a
wealthy family. Still photos of the community are portrayed as Bush and others
describe his life, growing up in Midland, going to public schools (though Bush
attended high school at an elite Massachusetts’ boarding school) and meeting
and marrying his wife, the school librarian. As Bush stresses the sense of com-
munity surrounding his upbringing, pictures of casually dressed people going
to barbecues or attending football games after church convey Bush’s identifica-
tion with average people despite his status as a leader.
Hope for maintaining (or re-establishing) such communities in America
pervades the film. Bush and others who speak exude optimism in both speech
and manner. They smile and laugh, recalling heartwarming stories of the past.
The emphasis is most conspicuous when the source of the film’s title is re-
vealed. While a still photo of a Midland sign on the outskirts of town is dis-
played, Bush indicates that the slogan of Midland—the small Texas town that
has been used as a metaphor for his image and is about to become a metaphor
for America’s idealized future—is “The Sky’s the Limit.” It’s “such an optimis-
tic slogan,” he says; it’s “how I feel about America.” Yet throughout the film, it
becomes clear that this optimism is reserved for an America that exalts the
core value of a Texas cowboy, of a rugged individualist—the value of individ-
ual responsibility tempered with compassion. In one particularly powerful
6. POLITICAL CONVENTION FILMS 151
tion of such problems, which some would argue require better social pro-
grams and more government intervention, the appropriate answer is to call
for more personal responsibility.
In most respects, The Sky’s The Limit conforms to the constraints of the conven-
tion film genre. It celebrates values through emotional appeals, using pictures not
only to document verbal assertions, but to construct independent meaning.
Through a strategic presentation of narration and testimony, surging music and
value laden visual cues, the film becomes a paean to America with George W.
Bush and his heroic image of rugged individualism standing for America.
Unlike the Gore film, Bush’s effort to construct his political image is less
hindered by the public’s information-processing patterns. First, fewer mem-
bers of the general public had established strong judgments about Bush before
the convention, so he had more opportunity to begin shaping opinions about
his personality and policy agenda. This is an easier persuasive task than chang-
ing pre-existing opinions. Information provided as the campaign season pro-
gressed contradicted some of the characteristics stressed in the Bush film. Yet
Bush’s campaign team used the film as an opportunity to prepare people for
one of his most apparent character flaws—his tendency to mispronounce
words—instead of trying to contradict or conceal it. At one point in the film,
for example, Bush stumbles over his words. Yet he and his wife laugh at his mis-
take; their relaxed demeanor reassures viewers that they can laugh at his mala-
propisms as well. Second, Bush’s emphasis on individual responsibility is a
traditional Republican position. Hence it met the public’s existing expecta-
tions for a Republican candidate, which enhanced Bush’s credibility. Finally,
Bush’s embodiment of a broadly held American value—individual responsi-
bility—also played on existing schema patterns about America and its people.
The image he presented could be easily integrated into the public’s existing be-
liefs, making it easy to accept and difficult to criticize.
CONCLUSION
WORKS CITED
Bush, George W. The Sky’s The Limit. Republican Convention Film, 2000.
Corcoran, Paul E. “Language and Politics.” New Directions in Political Communication: A Resource
Book. Eds. David L. Swanson and Dan Nimmo. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Pub., 2000.
Corcoran, Paul E., and Kathleen E. Kendall. “Communication in the First Primaries: ‘The
Voice of the People’ in 1912.” Presidential Studies Quarterly 22 (1992): 15–29.
Graber, Doris A. Processing the News: How People Tame The Information Tide, 2d ed. New
York: Longman, 1988.
Gore, Albert. Democratic Convention Film, 2000.
“The Gore Method.” New York Times, 2 November 2000: A-30.
James, Caryn. “The 43rd President: On Television – Critic’s Notebook.” New York Times 14
December 2000: A-29.
Kern, Montague. 30-Second Politics: Political Advertising in the Eighties. Westport, CT: Praeger,
1989.
Mackey-Kallis, Susan. “Spectator Desire and Narrative Closure: The Reagan 18-Minute
Political Film.” Southern Communication Journal 56 (1991): 308–314.
Melder, Keith. “Creating Candidate Imagery: The Man on Horseback.” Campaigns and
Elections, A Reader in Modern American Politics. Ed. Larry J. Sabato. Boston: Scott,
Foresman and Company, 1989: 5–11.
Morreale, Joanne. A New Beginning: A Textual Frame Analysis of the Political Campaign. Al-
bany, NY: State University of New York P, 1991.
—.“American Self Images and the Presidential Campaign Film, 1964 1992.” Presidential
Campaigns and American Self Images. Ed. A. H. Miller and Bruce E. Gronbeck. Boulder,
CO: Westview Press, 1994: 19–39.
—.“The Bush and Dukakis Convention Campaign Films.” Journal of Popular Culture 27
(1994): 141.
—.“The Political Campaign Film: Epideictic Rhetoric in a Documentary Frame.” Televi-
sion and Political Advertising, Vol. 2. Ed. Frank Biocca. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum
Associates, 1991: 187–201.
—.The Presidential Campaign Film: A Critical History. Westport, CT: Praeger, 1993.
Parry-Giles, Shawn J., and Trevor Parry-Giles. “Gendered Politics and Presidential Image
Construction: A Reassessment of the ‘Feminine Style.’” Communication Monographs 63
(1996): 337–353.
154 STRACHAN AND KENDALL
Pitkin, Hannah. Wittgenstein and Justice: On the Significance of Ludwig Wittgenstein for Social
and Political Thought. Berkeley: U of California P, 1972.
Seelye, Katharine Q. “The 2000 Campaign: On the Stump—The Speech.” The New York
Times, 24 October 2000: A-26.
Shea, Daniel M. Campaign Craft: The Strategies, Tactics and Art of Political Campaign Manage-
ment. Westport, CT: Praeger, 1996.
Smith, Larry David. “The Nominating Convention as Purveyor of Political Medicine: An
Anecdotal Analysis of the Democrats and Republicans of 1984.” Central States Speech
Journal 38 (1987): 252–261.
Smith, Larry David, and Dan Nimmo. Cordial Concurrence: Orchestrating National Party Con-
ventions in the Telepolitical Age. Westport, CT: Praeger, 1991.
Timmerman, David M. “1992 Presidential Candidate Films: The Contrasting Narratives
of George Bush and Bill Clinton.” Presidential Studies Quarterly 26 (1996): 364–373.
CHAPTER SEVEN
Gendered Environments:
Gender and the Natural World
in the Rhetoric of Advertising
Diane S. Hope
155
156 HOPE
DEFINING CHARACTERISTICS
great falls as a slim young woman (see Fig. 7.1). She stands under a rain-
bow—still and posed, the fertile shape of breasts and legs revealed by her diaph-
anous gown as it is transformed into cascades of water that fall from her
outstretched arms to the encircling river. She does not harness the falls; she is the
falls. Depicted as a voluptuous woman, the waterfall is a sign of nature’s unend-
ing fertility; she stands passively, a figure of seduction. In contrast, the poster
created for the 1915 Panama-Pacific International Exposition Brochure, titled
“The Thirteenth Labor of Hercules” (see Fig. 7.2) shows a male nude forcing
apart North and South America to create the Panama Canal. The muscular gi-
ant is braced between the continents. He uses his arms, hands, elbow, back, legs,
knees and feet to physically push the two land masses apart, allowing the waters
of the canal to pass under his massive body. “Niagara” is painted in greens,
whites and touches of yellow, the illustration of the titan is executed in reds,
browns, deep golds and bold lines. The masculine figure acts upon an awesome
environment—literally shaping it to his control, while nature feminized is a se-
ductive object of our gaze (Berger; Butler). The visual and rhetorical differences
in these two presentations of nature
reemerge in countless advertisements
throughout advertising history, but
are especially dominant in the later
20th century and into the 21st.
Scores of modern advertisements
repeat the visual patterns of gendered
environments. Described in broad
strokes, the dominant story of adver-
tising’s feminized environment is the
ancient story of nature as passive–se-
ductive woman, woman as fertile na-
ture. In these advertisements, nature
is the essential feminine-–images are
exotic and lush with icons of fertility
and female sexuality. Advertising’s
feminized environments use nature
as background for romance, eroti-
cism or nurturance to advertise prod-
ucts that promise to increase a
woman’s femininity. Further, as in
“Niagara,” many advertising images
merge natural scenes with a female form or body part, creating a visual meta-
phor of woman as nature, nature as woman. Examples abound.
Advertisements produced over the last half of the 20th century promoting
products to increase a woman’s femininity offer remarkably similar images of
nature as background to erotic fantasies. The ads use visual symbols of fertil-
ity, notably water and plants. All the ads target women and typically focus on a
female model: An 1945 advertisement for Woodbury soap pictures a (hetero-
sexual) couple on a beach, a beautiful woman is prone and passive on the sand
with her eyes closed as a man kisses her (Reproduced in Hill 233). A 1957 Veto
deodorant ad pictures a (heterosexual) couple on the grass, the beautiful
woman is prone and passive with her eyes closed as a man caresses her (Repro-
duced in Hill 233). In both ads, sand, sky, grass or ocean frame the scene. The
faces and bodies of both men are turned away from the camera to focus
7. GENDERED ENVIRONMENTS 159
viewer attention on the sensuality of the female model. A 1963 ad for Sego diet
drink alters the pattern somewhat and pictures a young (heterosexual) couple
in a rowboat moored near rocks on a large body of water. The man is standing
and has picked up the woman whose legs extend in the air; he holds her “play-
fully” as if to throw her overboard. The text line reads, “How slender you were
on that wonderful vacation … Would he think so now?” (Reproduced in Hill
127). Other ads do not picture women in the ads, but present nature as a place
for romance, glamour or nurturing. A long-running campaign for tourism to
Puerto Rico presents images of a tropical rainforest, a beach, the ocean or
palm trees as places for romantic interludes (“Puerto Rico”). A inside front
cover campaign for Parliament cigarettes displays tropical scenes in the moon-
light—social gatherings are depicted on a beach hut (“Parliament,” Time) or
inside a large grass (“Parliament,” Newsweek). An ad for Massachusetts vaca-
tions features a weathered, shingled, beachfront home that fills the left side of
the frame. Potted flowering plants poke from window boxes and line the deck
and porch. On the right is a fading sunset illuminating the ocean and beach
where two small figures are barely visible. The whole scene is permeated with
a pinkish hue except for an inset of three black and white photographs of a
blond child who extends her arms appealingly. “You are here to share 1,500
miles of cherished coastline.… To see how many shells one little girl can fit
into a pail,” reads the text in part (“Massachusetts Vacations”). Ads like these
promise social exchange, family nurturing or romance and promote travel to
natural sites as settings for relationship narratives. In these ads, nature is
feminized as background for the erotic, social or familial, traditionally associ-
ated with the essential feminine.
Some ads go further and explicitly merge images of nature with the female
body or body part to claim that woman and nature are one. An advertisement
for Naturally Blonde hair color circulated in 1971 is a full-page photograph of
a pale sand dune with blowing grasses and a distant sea. The textline, “The 18
colors of Naturally Blonde are the blonde colors found in nature,” crosses the
center of the image. An inset photograph of a pretty women’s face slightly
turned to show off her shining blond hair is captioned “I’m sand.” (Repro-
duced in Hill 103). As in the “I’m sand” ad for hair color, signs of femininity
and signs of exotic nature are frequently fused. An ad for Fidji perfume pic-
tures a woman’s face and a tropical island merged in a single image. Greatly
enlarged, the woman’s dark eyes hover over an island that appears to be float-
ing in mist. The sea hides the bottom half of the woman’s face in an appropria-
tion of a veil, a sign of exotic female “otherness”. The text reads: “Woman is an
island. Fidji is her perfume” (Reproduced in Williamson 107). A Hermes scarf
advertisement appearing as a two page spread in the New York Times Maga-
zine in 2001 merges woman with nature in a different strategy (“Hermes”).
The close-up image titled “Encounters with the Earth’s beauty,” features a
photograph of a beautiful woman’s face and head wrapped in a scarf; mon-
160 HOPE
arch butterflies “from the Americas” crawl off the pattern on the scarf to
merge with the model. One butterfly sits on her face, several rest in her hair,
another adorns her ear and neck. She has become home for the insects, is one
with them, is, in fact the “image of earth”. A final example is an ad for
Mikimoto Tahitian cultured pearls from 2001 that vividly demonstrates the
symbolic merging of passivity, eroticism and nature common to advertising’s
visual rhetoric of at the turn of the 21st century. The Mikimoto design is simi-
lar to many ads in its symbolization of fertile sexuality with wetness and water.
The display features a beautiful blond woman, even more sultry than “Niag-
ara,” kneeling in the ocean surf, posing passively for the camera. Nearly nude,
her legs are spread as the surf swirls around her knees and thighs, her lips are
parted in a posture of seduction and submission. The sea and sky frame her
sexual invitation (“Mikimoto”). As these examples demonstrate, the identify-
ing characteristics of a feminized environment are beauty, fertility and passiv-
ity. Wetness (rainfall, waterfalls, small streams, mist and ocean surf ); bowers
and canopies of trees, vines, flowers; fruits, birds, butterflies, sunsets and
moonlight signal the feminized environment. Although not necessary, a se-
ductive image of a woman is often present, frequently merged with aspects of
the natural world. Woman and nature are sites for erotic play or nurture of
men and children. Color palettes reflect the shades of the tropics, emphasizing
multihued greens of plants and water, golds, yellows and whites of diluted
sunshine, and muted pastels with small spots of bright reds, blues and purples.
Image focus is often soft.
In sharp contrast to feminized environments, advertising’s story of a mascu-
linized environment presents images of nature as a vast “pristine” wilderness,
frequently dry, rocky and barren, evoking the western landscapes of North
America. As in the 1915 poster for the opening of the Panama Canal, the essen-
tial masculine environment is a place of action, risk, individualism and chal-
lenge for male prowess. At the turn of the 21st century, ads for a number of
products but especially cars, sports utility vehicles, pick-up trucks and tobacco
present countless images of red rocks, canyons, deserts and sky. Advertisements
for Marlboro cigarettes provide the classic examples of masculinized environ-
ments in advertising rhetoric, persisting for over 35 years.1 The Marlboro man
advertises his death-defying habit as an endless machismo adventure against
scenes of natural beauty from the western landscape. A 1997 ad from the
long-running campaign is a two-page spread of steep red canyon walls that fill
the pages. Two cowboys are riding herd on wild horses in the bottom 1/8 of the
frame. The invitation to “Come to Marlboro Country” highlights the attractive-
ness of the mystical west for “real” men, and promises an identity far away from
urban routine and responsibility. In another ad, a bold blue sky is background to
the working cowboy who fills the frame. He walks in a desert canyon with his
saddle slung over his back, sunlight gleams off his belt buckle emblazoned with
a bucking horse. His hat, chaps and gloves indicate the work of a horseman.
7. GENDERED ENVIRONMENTS 161
Muscles bulge through his shirt and jeans. He is lean, sinewy and serious
(“Marlboro”). Not unlike the image of Hercules, the 21st-century cowboy has
work to do, and as in numerous images of “Marlboro Country” the male figure
acts upon his environment, exerting control through his physical prowess. The
“big country” defines advertising’s masculinized environment and excepting
the occasional cowboy or Indian, the space is there for urban man to play at ad-
venture. Ads using the imagery of mountains, deserts, cowboys and Indians are
scattered throughout the 20th century. A 1950’s ad for Schweppes Tonic Water
uses the European styled corporate icon, Captain Whitehead as a contrast to the
Native-American Indian: Pictured in the ad is a spacious plain, framed by a west-
ern mountain range, and Native American Indians on horseback drink a tonic
water prepared by the Captain (Sivulka 281). The horse, essential to the frontier
myth, is replaced by gasoline-powered vehicles in a variety of similarly con-
structed advertisements. A 1982 ad for a Buick sedan typifies a common ap-
proach by picturing the car on a western road, with mountains as background
(Reproduced at Adflip.com). But the dominance of masculinized environments
especially in ads for vehicles reached a peak in the late 1990s and early years of
the 21st century.
Pick-up trucks, sports utility vehicles, and cars sit atop mountains, ride
through desolate deserts, and descend into rocky valleys in countless adver-
tisements. Unlike the social environments of feminized ads, these ads fre-
quently feature environments with few humans or signs of habitation—
typically the vehicle is the focus of the ad, often even the driver is invisible. Im-
ages of vehicles in pristine environments make no pretense of nostalgia. No
one is seen working. Leisure, isolation and adventure mark the masculinized
environment: An ad for a Acura MDX pictures the car parked on a dirt road in
front of foothills and a distant mountain range. Emphasizing the achievement
of isolation, a photograph inset shows a cell-phone reading “no service”
(“Acura”). Often activity is restricted to driving or to forms of adventure that
carry some risk to the environment. An ad for Chevy Trailblazer pictures the
SUV up to its fenders in mud and rocks against a rocky mountain and stormy
sky (“Trailblazer”). In a 2002 Nissan ad campaign “Not that you would. But
You Could,” Nissan vehicles are boldly pictured in fragile environments. One
two-page ad for Nissan Pathfinder, positions two cars side by side on a vast
stretch of desert and dunes. Two men occupy each car. The driver of a mud-
died Nissan hands a relay baton to the driver of another. The text promises
that “an all-powerful, 240-horsepower 3.5 V6 engine instantly tames the most
unruly terrain, “Perfect for when you encounter those pesky Himalayas”
(“Pathfinder”). Another displays the car parked in a trout stream while one
man fishes from the window (“Pathfinder Two”). While such texts and images
can claim tongue-in-cheek humor, the features of these advertisements em-
phasize a mythic world where men play at heroics and a vast environmental
wilderness promises control and adventure. Nature is the object of conquest
162 HOPE
cadia theme in poetry and paining, Merchant describes the virginal, seductive
passivity of woman that came to dominate nature imagery. For example, a
16th century painting cited in her text is Lucas Cranach’s, The Nymph of the
Spring. The painting features a nude young woman asleep on a grassy bank of
a stream. She is surrounded by birds and flowers while deer calmly graze
nearby. Merchant writes: “This pastoral representation of a nymph of the
woods and meadows implies the passive role of nature: her quiver of arrows,
borrowed from the ancient huntress-goddess Diana, is laid aside, and she her-
self reclines invitingly on the ground” (9). Thousands of nymphs, bathers and
goddesses (including multitudes of Venuses and Dianas) from the ancient and
the modern world populate visual culture with images of woman as nature.
Icons of the passive–seductive female figure, surrounded by symbols of “natu-
ral” fertility in water, plants and animals are a staple of advertising’s rhetoric of
a feminized environment.
Discussing the “logic of appropriation,” Goldman and Papson write, “Pro-
ducing marketable commodity signs depends on how effectively advertisers are
able to colonize and appropriate referent systems” (9). The Marxist critic, Judith
Williamson, also discusses appropriation in terms of colonization. Her analysis
of the Fidji perfume ad previously described emphasizes the double effect:
Woman and colony become completely confused here. Fiji is an island but
has been appropriated as nothing but a perfume; while the wearer of per-
fume, Woman, has been turned into an island, generalized, non-specific,
but reeking of exoticism …. Woman is an island because she is mysterious,
distant, a place to take a holiday. (107)
Moreover if, as has been intimated, the exploration of America was a work-
ing out of the Manifest Destiny to pastoralize the wilderness, then those
who recorded this exploration were not insensate mercenaries of expan-
sionism, but worked in the context of a system in which Nature was a mani-
festation of God, perceived as immanent in its sublimity, and where the life
and structure of every part, great or small, symbolized the operation of di-
vine law. It was a ready convenience that the gentle, harmonious qualities
held to constitute beauty were thought of as feminine, and that within the
nineteenth-century pantheon, Nature was enthroned in the feminine gen-
der: already infused by God, awaiting the penetration of Man, which would
bring her to a state of submissive, wifely fertility. If there was to be a little
rape along the way, then that was more a necessary part of Nature’s school-
ing than a sign of philosophical confusion. (69)
7. GENDERED ENVIRONMENTS 165
The spirit of original title claims on the grounds of “discovery” and settle-
ment was maintained. Since land was also the basis of the male suffrage, Na-
tive Americans lost political rights along with their lands. Uniquely,
however, in the early Republican era, and perhaps uniquely in history, land
was seen as money and became a primary agent of economic development.
has begun to race along, while its density and intensity has escalated” (5). Im-
ages of unspoiled nature in association with gender are used to promote the
consumption of automobiles, vacations, computers, cigarettes, cosmetics,
pharmaceuticals, perfumes, financial services, jewelry, housewares, clothing
and other commodities. Although ads focusing on nature images are fewer in
number than those featuring images of people or products,3 advertising’s rhet-
oric of gendered environments is dominant in some of the most aggressive
campaigns in print. As we have seen, of particular significance are campaigns
to advertise automobiles, cigarettes, tourism, perfumes and cosmetics. For
these commodities, images of the natural world are frequent features of iden-
tity fantasies constructed through stories of masculinity and femininity.
7. GENDERED ENVIRONMENTS 167
regardless of class, sex, race, ethnicity or age, such typecasting of nature as essen-
tially masculine or feminine sanction beliefs that nature’s fertility is limitless and
exists for male conquest.
Advertising’s strategies of appropriated iconography and cultural ubiquity
together create a mythology of gendered environments. Emptied of history,
politics and experience, mythologies present themselves as timeless and eter-
nal (Barthes 109–159). Myths of gender and myths of nature are especially
powerful and enduring and lend themselves to static ideologies of power hier-
archies and status—necessary for an ethic of consumption to prevail. Trans-
ferring essentialist myths of gender to a mythologized natural world, the
visual rhetoric of advertising provides an “alibi” for the obvious connections
between commodity consumption and environmental degradation by pre-
tending that the natural environment, like gender, is immune to human agency.
In a rather blatant appeal to fantasies of timelessness and fortune, an advertise-
ment for an affluent real estate development community in Utah pictures
mountain ranges and wide-open vistas: “NOT SUBJECT TO CHANGE. NOT
NOW. NOT EVER. Wolf Creek Ranch. “Where Father Time Can’t Change
Mother Nature.” The ad text promises 45 buyers “spacious lots” of “160–1600
acres,” each with a view of mountain ranges, and secluded wilderness. “A con-
servation easement will protect 95% of the land from further development.
Forever” (“Wolf Creek Ranch”). Advertising’s strategy of visual rhetoric
works to obliterate the consequences of overconsumption by presenting
countless images of an immutable and mythical natural world, unassaulted by
the realities of environmental degradation and available to affluent consum-
ers as status markers of success (Hope). When such images are gendered, the
rhetoric reveals advertising’s continued reliance on static constructs of mascu-
linity and femininity to promote consumerism.
They had to persuade ambivalent populations that new modes of living re-
tained or promoted traditional values …. As social and economic chaos
overtook both Europe and the U.S.A., it became necessary to construct reas-
suring narratives and iconographies—in other words, to insist on the para-
dox that a self-conscious machine age retained stability even as it celebrated
technological change. (Meikle 143)
One of the ways modernity was “domesticated” was through the develop-
ment of new advertising strategies, a major source of cultural narratives and
icons. Advertising’s primary response was to design ads that exploited the in-
creasing separation between men’s roles and women’s roles promoted by in-
dustrialization and urbanization. “American advertisements can be said to
170 HOPE
of polling women as the primary consumers to test what the male producers
had wrought. As advertising began to focus on consumption rather than the
production of products, and as urban pollution increased, advertising ap-
pealed increasingly to the identification of a strongly gendered self context-
ualized by scenes of nature. Images of production and pollution soon
disappeared altogether from the mythological environments of modern ad-
vertising to be replaced with images of an unspoiled nature, increasingly
gilded with gender displays.
By the end of World War II, the commodity culture was fully entrenched.
Commodity advertising favored images of a natural world unaffected by mass
production. Advertising rhetoric continued to rely on constructions of gender
as the basis for consumer myths but with important changes in image making.
No longer did constructions of masculinity rely on signs of production and no
longer was woman the only sex designated as consumer. Indeed, all identity
stories including those of gender, status, work and citizenship were stories of
consumption, and in sophisticated commodity advertising, nature and con-
sumption were disconnected.
As “meaning -based models” of advertising theory emerged as an alterna-
tive to information-based theories (McCracken) and market researchers ac-
knowledged advertising “as an omnipresent communication arena in which
human reality is mediated” (Mick and Buhl 317) visual theory and art criticism
were promoted as underused tools for understanding and generating mean-
ing in market research on gender and consumerism (Schroeder and
Borgerson). To this end, advertising images are increasingly sophisticated vi-
sualizations of fantasies identified by market researchers as the fuel for com-
modity purchases. Alan Durning echoes myriad scholars when he writes,
“advertising increasingly resembles dreams” (119). But unlike the individual
dreams of the unconscious, the dreams of advertising are professionally pro-
duced, visual messages are circulated throughout the mass media with the
specific intention of increasing market share. Dreams of an unspoiled natural
world are prevalent in advertising’s rhetoric of consumerism. As Goldman
and Papson point out, “As noncommodified natural spaces become scarcer,
the sign of nature has been made a fundamental sign of the authentic” (156).
Through the images produced by creative teams, consumer advertising cele-
brates an ethic of “self-indulgence, frivolous wastefulness and decadent ex-
travagance” as it has since the early 20th century (Marchand 158). The
environmental scenes presented in advertising’s pervasive images mediate ex-
perience of nature: Advertising’s natural world is in turn erotic or challenging,
nurturing or wild, and has no connection to consumer ethics.
James Swain insists that modern culture “guides us to avoid contact with
nature,” and reports that the average American spends 84% of the time in-
doors (26). For many urban dwellers, advertising’s visual depictions of a myth-
ical natural are more prevalent than any lived experience of the natural
172 HOPE
Consumption produces pollution and waste and eats up land and natural re-
sources. For over three hundred years, Americans have consumed nature at
unprecedented rates. Such consumption, fueled by the forces of the market
and mass production, has over time eroded American’s connection to na-
ture and sense of reciprocity. By consuming more and more, it seems, we
are left with fewer places and ecosystems with which to connect. (59)
IN SUMMARY
NOTES
who reject the media label of anti-globalization as the “first step in dismiss-
ing the protesters ….” (147). I agree.
WORKS CITED
“Acura” Advertisement. New York Times Magazine ( June 16, 2002): back cover.
Adflip.com <http://www.adflip.com>. 9 September 2003.
Andrews, Malcolm. Landscape and Western Art. Oxford and New York: Oxford UP, 1999.
away.com. Advertisement. Archaeology (March/April 2001).
Barthel, Diane. Putting on Appearances: Gender and Advertising. Philadelphia: Temple UP,
1988.
Barthes, Roland. Mythologies. Trans. Annette Lavers. New York: Hill and Wang, 1972.
Bellafante, Gina. “Want to be a Male Model? Wear a Real Face.” New York Times 21 May
2002. A 20.
Berger, John. Ways of Seeing. New York: Viking, 1973.
Berry, Wendell. The Unsettling of America: Culture and Agriculture. San Francisco: Sierra Club
Books, 1977.
Brandt, Deborah. “On the Move for Food.” Women’s Studies Quarterly 29.1-2 (2001): 131-43.
Bristor, Julia and Eileen Fischer. “Feminist Thought: Implications for Consumer Re-
search.” Journal of Consumer Research 19 (1993): 518-36.
Burke, Kenneth. Language as Symbolic Action. Berkeley: U of California P, 1968.
Bush, Clive. “ ‘Gilded Backgrounds’: Reflections on the Perception of Space and Landscape
in America.” Views of American Landscapes. Eds. Mark Gidley and Robert Lawson-Peebles.
Cambridge and New York: Cambridge UP, 1989. 13-30.
Butler, Judith. Bodies that Matter. London and New York: Routledge, 1993.
Calder, Lendol. Financing the American Dream: A Cultural History of Consumer Credit. Prince-
ton, NJ: Princeton UP, 1999.
Carson, Rachel. Silent Spring. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1962.
“Chevy Suburban” Advertisement. Audobon (March/April 2002): inside front cover.
DeLuca, Kevin. Image Politics: The New Rhetoric of Environmental Activism. New York:
Guilford, 1999.
DeLuca, Kevin and Jennifer Peeples. “From Public Sphere to Public Screen: Democracy,
Activism, and the ‘Violence’ of Seattle.” Critical Studies in Mass Communication 19.2
( June 2002): 125-51.
Dijkstra, Bram. Evil Sisters: The Threat of Female Sexuality and the Cult of Manhood. New
York: Knopf, 1996.
Douglas, Susan J. “Narcissism as Liberation.” The Gender and Consumer Culture Reader. Ed.
Jennifer Scanlon. New York: New York UP, 2000. 267-82.
Durning, Alan Thein. How Much is Enough?: The Consumer Society and the Future of the Earth.
New York: Norton, 1992.
Ewen, Stuart. Captains of Consciousness: Advertising and the Social Roots of the Consumer Cul-
ture New York: Basic Books, 2001.
Frederick, Christine. Selling Mrs. Consumer. New York: Business Course, 1929.
Freeman, Carla. “Is Local:Global as Feminine:Masculine? Rethinking the Gender of Glob-
alization.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 26.4 (2001): 1007-37.
Galbraith, John Kenneth. The Affluent Society. 4th ed. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1984.
Goffman, Erving. Gender Advertisements. New York: Harper, 1976.
176 HOPE
Goldman, Robert and Stephen Papson. Sign Wars: The Cluttered Landscape of Advertising.
New York: Guilford, 1996.
Grieder, William. One World, Ready or Not: The Manic Logic of Global Capitalism. New York:
Simon & Schuster, 1997.
“Hermes” Advertisement. New York Times Magazine. (November 11, 2001): inside front
cover.
Hill, Daniel Delis. Advertising to the American Woman, 1900-1999. Columbus: Ohio State UP,
2002.
Hirschman, Elizabeth C. “Ideology in Consumer Research, 1980 and 1990: A Marxist and
Feminist Critique.” Journal of Consumer Research 19 (March 1993): 537-55.
Hope, Diane S. “Environment as Consumer Icon in Advertising Fantasy.” Enviropop:
Studies in Environmental Rhetoric and Popular Culture. Ed. Mark Meister and Phyliss Japp.
Westport, CT: Praeger, 2002. 161-74.
Jhally, Sut. The Codes of Advertising: Fetishism and the Political Economy of Meaning in the Con-
sumer Society. New York: St. Martin’s P, 1987.
LaFrance, Edward. Men, Media and Masculinity. Dubuque, IA: Kendall/Hunt, 1995.
Lilienfeld, Robert and William Rathje. Use Less Stuff: Environmentalism for Who We Really
Are. New York: Ballantine, 1998.
Malde, Harold E. Photograph. Nature Conservancy (May/June 2001): 28-29.
Manning, Robert. Credit Card Nation: The Consequences of America’s Addiction to Credit. New
York: Basic, 2000.
Marchand, Roland. Advertising the American Dream: Making Way for Modernity, 1920-1940.
Berkeley: U of California P, 1985.
“Marlboro.” Advertisement. Harper’s (August 2001): inside cover.
“Massachusetts Vacations.” Advertisement. New York Times Magazine ( June 2, 2002): 12.
McAllister, Matthew P. The Commercialization of American Culture. Thousand Oaks, CA:
Sage, 1996.
McCracken, Grant. “Advertising: Meaning or Information?” Advances in Consumer Research
14 (1988): 121-24.
McKibben, Bill. The End of Nature. New York: Random House, 1989.
McLuhan, Marshall. The Mechanical Bride: Folklore of Industrial Man. New York, Vanguard
Press, 1951.
Meikle, Jeffrey L. “Domesticating Modernity: Ambivalence and Appropriation, 1920-40.”
Designing Modernity: The Arts of Reform and Persuasion, 1885-1945. Ed. Wendy Kaplan.
New York: Thames and Hudson, 1995. 143-67.
Merchant, Carolyn. The Death of Nature: Women, Ecology, and the Scientific Revolution. New
York: Harper, 1980.
Mick, David Glen and Claus Buhl. “A Meaning_Based Model of Advertising Experiences.”
Journal of Consumer Research 19 (December 1992): 317-37.
“Mikimoto Tahitian Cultured Pearls.” Advertisement. New York Times Magazine (Novem-
ber 11, 2002): 4.
Naether, Carl. Advertising to Women. New York: Prentice-Hall, 1928.
“Parliament Cigarettes.” Advertisement. Time (May 20, 2002): inside front cover.
“Parliament Cigarettes.” Advertisement. Newsweek ( July 8, 2002): inside front cover.
“Pathfinder.” Advertisement. New York Times Magazine ( June 2, 2002): inside front cover.
“Pathfinder.” Advertisement. New York Times Magazine (November 11, 2002).
“Puerto Rico.” Advertisement. Smithsonian January 1996: 11.
7. GENDERED ENVIRONMENTS 177
Roszak, Theodore. Where the Wasteland Ends: Politics and Transcendence in Postindustrial So-
ciety. New York: Doubleday, 1972.
Schroeder, Jonathan E. and Janet L. Borgerson. “Marketing Images of Gender: A Visual
Analysis.” Consumption Markets and Culture 2.2 (1998): 161-201.
Shutkin, William A. The Land that Could Be: Environmentalism and Democracy in the
Twenty-First Century. Cambridge, MA: MIT P, 2002.
Sivulka, Julianna. Soap, Sex, and Cigarettes: A Cultural History of American Advertising. New
York: Wadsworth, 1998.
Stokes, Philip. “Trails of Photographic Notions: Expeditionary Photography in the Ameri-
can West.” Views of American Landscapes. Ed. Mark Gidley and Robert Lawson-Peebles.
Cambridge and New York: Cambridge UP, 1989. 64-77.
Swain, James. “Lessons from Ring Mountain.” Earth Keepers: A Sourcebook for Environmental
Issues and Action. Ed. Leslie Baer-Brown and Bob Rhein. San Francisco: Mercury House,
1995. 21-30.
“Trailblazer.” Advertisement. Time (May 13, 2002): back cover.
Weems, Robert E., Jr. “Consumerism and the Construction of Black Female Identity in
Twentieth-Century America.” The Gender and Consumer Culture Reader. Ed. Jennifer
Scanlon. New York: New York UP, 2000. 166-78.
Weston, Edward. Nudes. New York: Aperture, 1977.
Williamson, Judith. “Woman is an Island: Femininity and Colonization.” Studies in Enter-
tainment: Critical Approaches to Mass Culture. Ed. Tania Modleski. Bloomington: Indiana
UP, 1986. 99-118.
Wilton, Andrew and Tim Barringer. American Sublime: Landscape Painting in the United
States, 1820-1880. Princeton: Princeton UP, 2002.
“Wolf Creek Ranch.” Advertisement. New York Times ( June 21, 2002): F9.
Wolf, Naomi. The Beauty Myth: How Images of Beauty are Used Against Women. New York: Pe-
rennial, 2002.
CHAPTER EIGHT
179
180 EDWARDS
ing raised over the scene of a protracted and difficult battle in the war with Ja-
pan. Both photographs evoke values of collective effort and victory over
threat, with the 2002 photo obviously building on the established rhetorical
framework of its 1945 predecessor. An editorial cartoonist’s substitution of
the flag in the Iwo Jima image with a baseball bat to comment on a different
subject also exploits the existing framework of effort and victory, although
ironically. The alteration of elements in the cartoon does not alter the obvious
reference of Rosenthal’s Iwo Jima photograph because the compositional ele-
ments are both unique and familiar. Remembered and re-presented images
transcend their positions in relation to specific events and create larger rhetori-
cal frameworks that revive and reimagine the narratives that constitute cul-
tural myths.
Traditional rhetorical studies emanate from discursive texts; a more con-
temporary view allows for a range of textual possibilities ranging from Presi-
dential speeches to a constellation of “image events” staged by antiglobal-
ization activists.1 Although a single photograph or drawing may seemingly fail
to offer the discursive complexity of a speech or a series of enacted visuals,
rhetorical theory identifies modes of rhetorical presentation that are as con-
densed as pictorial images. Constructs such as culture types (Osborn) and
ideographs (McGee) promote specific vocabularies of terms that function
rhetorically as conditioning agents that guide human behavior and belief
(McGee 426). Similarly, specific visual images fit Osborn’s definition of
“depictive rhetoric” that dominates contemporary discourse as “strategic pic-
tures, verbal or nonverbal visualizations that linger in the collective memory
of audiences as representative of their subjects” (79). Although pictoral im-
ages seemingly capture a single moment, in the same way that an ideograph
such as liberty or freedom of speech denotes a particular concept, we might say of
pictures that, like the example of the ideograph, they “are more pregnant than
propositions could ever be” (McGee 428) in their reference to old events and
ideas and their adaptability to new contexts.
Not only do iconic photographs “represent their subjects” but they expand
representation. Lange’s portrait of a worried mother stranded among other
migrant workers and their families in a frozen pea field successfully repre-
sented the subject; donations of food and blankets gave the families tempo-
rary relief. Seen in subsequent presentations, the photo represents the
collective experience of the Great Depression, and has been appropriated in
visualizations referencing late 20th century social movements. A news photo
serves as a reminder of the event it captures, but also potentially serves as a
template that (like an ideograph) “guides, warrants, reasons, or excuses” an
orientation, summed up in a single term (for the ideograph) or image (for the
photograph).2 The template may be used by others, such as editorial cartoon-
ists, as visual source material that links past and present in narratives that expli-
cate values and ideals. To illustrate the point, this chapter investigates the use
8. IMAGES AND CULTURAL MEMORY 181
and re-use of a familiar photographic image from the news story of the assas-
sination of a President to reconstitute national narratives on celebrity, mourn-
ing, and regret.
CAMELOT REVISITED
One of the most enduring images from the days following the assassination in
1963 of John Fitzgerald Kennedy, then President of the United States, was a
photograph of his 3-year-old son, dressed in short pants and formal coat, salut-
ing in the November sun as his father’s funeral cortege went by. Although John
Kennedy, Jr. would later remark that he remembered little from that time, and
corresponding news film of the scene suggests the salute was neither sponta-
neous nor meaningful to the little boy, the public knowledge of the photo-
graphed act imbued it with special poignancy. The loss of a father’s presence in
the life of a little boy served as emotional analogy to a nation’s loss, not only of
a leader, but of a certain hope and innocence, as many writers were to recount.
This particular picture of the Kennedy child was only the latest in a parade of
media images portraying the young, attractive, and vital Kennedy family, and
all combined to produce a parasocial relationship with members of the First
Family. Theoretically, parasocial relationships are “defined as one-sided rela-
tionships with media personae” (Newton 152) that gain adherence through re-
peated presentation. Because the many published photographs of the
Kennedy children are reminiscent of familiar family scenes, and because pho-
tographs simulate reality—the visual equivalent of “being there” —the public
feels as though they know the children as in a real relationship. The power of
parasocial relationships is the increased sense of identification and empathy
we feel for public figures.
The famous photograph of JFK, Jr.’s childish salute is probably remembered
by everyone who witnessed media coverage of November, 1963, and even some
who do not, due to its status as one of several visual icons of the Kennedy era.
The image depicts a moment of remembrance and passage, as the presidential
hearse passes by, and a child’s salute stands for a national gesture of farewell. Its
uses transcend the historical context of JFK’s funeral cortege. At least two edito-
rial cartoonists, J.D. Crowe and Joel Pett, recalled the image in their artistic trib-
utes to Jacqueline Kennedy’s passing years after 1963.
The salute photograph/film was replayed in the media in the summer of
1999 with the news that JFK, Jr., along with his wife and sister-in-law, had met
with an untimely, accidental death. The image of the 1963 salute became part
of a flood of images of the deceased as child and man that wallpapered televi-
sion news for a week. But no single image seemed so everpresent as the salute,
particularly in print. It graced the cover of a commemorative edition of LOOK
magazine, was reproduced on the cover of TIME two weeks in a row, and was
appropriated by at least 25 American and Canadian cartoonists within the
182 EDWARDS
space of a few days. The photograph also became part of the visual news-
tream when an anonymous mourner left a copy on the mounting flower altar
outside Kennedy’s New York residence. The memorial copy of the photo-
graph was captured in close-up in an Associate Press photograph and printed
in countless newspapers. The image was not just reprinted, but assumed to be
remembered, as references to it were made in verbal reminiscences. Kennedy
images such as the funeral salute, wrote journalist Richard Reeves, are “as fa-
miliar as family snapshots, most famously the Oval Office photograph of him
at the age of 2 … and on his third birthday, saluting the American flag draped
over his father’s coffin” (21). Garrison Keillor, writing in TIME, referred to “the
aching sadness of … the little boy’s salute” (102). Editorials in such newspa-
pers as the San Francisco Chronicle (see “Camelot Buried at Sea”) and the New
York Times (see Morganthan) remarked on the memorability of the picture:
“As a nation, we remember John-John, a three-year-old in short pants saluting
his father’s coffin, a memorable image of a terrible day” (A24), wrote one
Chronicle editor. An acquaintance of the young Kennedy’s, Robert M.
Morgenthau, considered the picture of the 3-year-old’s salute a “shadow” im-
age that the grown JFK, Jr. always lived in. News accounts referred to the poi-
gnant picture from the past. Actress Cicely Tyson recalled seeing the salute at
the funeral and the power of the resulting image; not only its visual reappear-
ance in print form, but also its use in calling forth a recollection of a chronolog-
ically remote national tragedy, the salute became a touchstone for the media’s
intense coverage of the plane crash (see Zelizer Covering).
Along with the grief evident at mourning sites and implied in the relentless
coverage of every available aspect of the lives of the lost and of other mem-
bers of Kennedy’s extended family, there were concerns over the nature and
motivation for a perceived “national grief ” for one who had no direct connec-
tion to the lives of most Americans, who was largely unknown except as fod-
der for celebrity magazines (and whose own magazine was not immune to
celebrity coverage). In this context, the “national grief ” was declared inau-
thentic, even objectionable.
The media attention to JFK, Jr.’s plane crash was driven by a number of
factors, including the celebrity appeal of the accident victims, the emotional
engagement in a story of untimely and sudden, inexplicable death (follow-
ing similar stories of the death of Princess Diana 2 years earlier and the vic-
tim’s father in 1963), and the necessity to fill 24-hour news venues with
interesting stories. The availability of images from the Kennedy presidency
and assassination aftermath, especially images featuring the young Kennedy
scion, provided news film where little was available from the crash itself, and
served to define the story of the plane crash and implicitly justify the exten-
sive coverage. In utilizing the familiar and poignant image of a fatherless boy
saluting his father’s funeral cortege, news outlets and editorial cartoonists
linked the tragic and premature deaths of father and son and established the
8. IMAGES AND CULTURAL MEMORY 183
PHOTOGRAPHS AS ICONS
by a linkage between its material and discursive dimensions, and the power
created by that linkage draws us to a photograph’s many meanings, both now
and then” (Remembering 8). In using the 1963 photograph, as well as other im-
ages, the news media poses a situation that requires a distinction between how
a photograph was understood at the time and how it might be understood in
the current day.
I propose that the “salute” photograph exhibited two different functions
between 1963 and 1999, although elements of both exist across time. In 1963,
the “salute” photograph, as noted before, was one of many memorable and
repeated images stemming from the assassination and subsequent related
events, what Zelizer has termed “assassination lore” (Covering 166). Pictures of
Jackie’s blood-stained skirt at the swearing in of Kennedy’s successor, wit-
nesses pointing up at the schoolbook depository, from where gunshots were
heard, Zapruder’s film footage of the bullet’s impact on the President’s brain,
Jack Ruby’s gunshot fatally hitting Lee Harvey Oswald—these are just a few of
the images frequently re-presented and readily recalled, although, arguably,
the picture of John-John saluting his father’s casket was one of the most signif-
icant. As an example, Time-Life chose the image as one of two most appropri-
ate with which to conclude the end of a memorial volume titled, Life in
Camelot. (The other photograph pictured the President walking on the beach.)
(Kunhardt) In this way, unlike the images of horror, the “salute” photograph
also links us in content to a happier recollection of Camelot, and the antics of a
small boy reacting to his living father. The “salute” image also belongs to a
group of images that contradict the horror of the assassination. Some of these
images were also replayed in 1999: JFK, Jr., peeks out from under his father’s
desk or dances with his sister in the Oval Office. The small boy runs to greet his
father on the tarmac,3 and so on. These images did not horrify us so much as
they comforted us with a memory, however poignant, of a good man living a
good life. Of course, the dissonance between the happy family scenes and the
assassination invoke outrage, but the symbolic aspects of the “salute” photo-
graph spoke to us in 1963 about the enduring nature of life and hope for the fu-
ture as much as sadness for the present. Even the innocence of the boy’s
prompted gesture speaks to the idea that future generations will not feel the
pain of the moment, and that they will have the capacity to restore hope and
optimism to the country. In her noted study of media coverage of the 1963 as-
sassination, Zelizer cites a number of revealing instances that indicate the “sa-
lute” photograph played a special role in remembering the narrative that
contrasts innocent idealism with violent reality.4
The pathos and remorse prompted by the “salute” picture readily transfer
to the apolitical tragedy of the 1999 plane crash, and translate to a national re-
gret over promise denied. This narrative is accomplished through the media’s
linkage of the 1999 plane crash to the 1963 political assassination, as well as to
other premature deaths suffered within the Kennedy family. No rational argu-
8. IMAGES AND CULTURAL MEMORY 185
ment ties the events together. The deaths are random and unconnected. Even
when they are similar in the details—two murders, three deaths in a plane
crash—there is no link between them in shared modes of dying. Instead, the
“salute” photograph functions to engender outrage—not simply the outrage
that accompanies a premature and (apparently) avoidable accident, but the
outrage that “this can be happening again”—to the Kennedys, to us. The “sa-
lute” photograph connects the past and the present through its symbolic twin
expressions of outrage and regret.
Perlmutter’s examination of photographs of outrage—photos that de-
picted horrifying international news events and are presumed to have had an
effect on public opinion that altered events—is useful in establishing the rhe-
torical act of fitting the 1999 plane crash into the narrative of outrage about
the 1963 assassination. Although Perlmutter disputes the commonplace of
photographic determinism—that photographs can drive public policy—he ob-
serves that certain photographic images that capture news events can evoke
strong reactions and become a vortex for political and cultural discourse.
Perlmutter’s work is applicable to the sympathy function (itself, a form of
“outrage” against fate) performed by the 1963 “salute” photograph in more
current contexts, especially the death of JFK, Jr. In asking how certain photo-
graphs achieve iconic status, Perlmutter identifies eleven characteristics of
outrage-provoking photographs, at least ten of which are applicable to this
image of sorrow:
(1) Celebrity. This criterion refers to the fame of the photograph. There is an
underlying suggestion that such a photograph has been widely published or
viewed, as familiarity is a condition of its resonance apart from the depicted
event. “The celebrity status of a picture is often signaled by the fact people as-
sume others must know of it” (12). In the case of the “salute” photograph, not
only had it been widely seen in 1963, but it was arguably the most prominent
still image used to mark and memorialize the 1999 air tragedy. The image was
featured as the cover of a LIFE special issue published immediately after the
crash, while TIME magazine ran it 2 weeks in a row, first in a grainy, sepia-
toned close-up of JFK, Jr.’s face and arm, his head obscuring the TIME cover
logo (August 2, 1999), and the following week as an inset—again obscuring
part of the TIME logo—on a cover featuring a contemporary portrait of the
deceased subject.
(2) Prominence. The positioning of the “salute” photograph on TIME and
LIFE covers illustrates this criteria of iconic photographs, “one of the least am-
biguous qualities of the icon” (12). Perlmutter argues that prominent news
placement results in a greater likelihood of featuring in our collective mem-
ory. Although no study was done by this author to determine the extent to
which the “salute” photograph was accorded special prominence in 1963, its
prominent display in 1999 fulfills another aspect of iconic status through
prominence. Perlmutter notes that initial prominent display makes it more
186 EDWARDS
likely that the same image will be repeatedly featured in subsequent publica-
tions, such as history books, “because they are thought to sum up a great
event” (13). While JFK, Jr.’s death was unconnected to his father’s assassina-
tion, the use of the “salute” photograph in the context of 1999 appears to draw
a connecting thread between the two events.
(3) Frequency. Frequency of publication or appearance, argues Perlmutter,
contributes to an impression of power regarding an iconic image. In the public
mind, repeated observations of a picture become equated with a picture’s de-
serving quality. In the 1999 plane crash aftermath, not only was the “salute”
image the most widely published and recalled image of JFK. Jr.’s boyhood, it
was the image most frequently appropriated by editorial cartoonists to mark
the occasion of his death. This utilitarian aspect to the “salute” image, that it
provides a means by which commentators can frame the occasion and articu-
late a response, adds particular dimension to the picture’s status as an icon.
(4) Profit. Perlmutter notes that in the business aspect of journalism, an
oft-published image generates profit for the image’s producers. No study has
been made of the profit potential of the “salute” image, either in its original
context or in recent usages and appropriations. But more relevant to the “sa-
lute” photograph is Perlmutter’s amplification of the profit criteria to con-
sider the cost to the subject in terms of disregard for suffering. The 3-year-old
boy in the photograph cannot fully comprehend the enormity of the ritual he
witnesses, but the public memory of that event, and of the saluting child, fixed
JFK, Jr. in the nation’s imagination as the child of Camelot, an image the
grown man could not share.
(5) Instantaneousness and (6) Fame of Subjects. Perlmutter marks two seem-
ingly contradictory characteristics of photographic icons, those that catapult
relative unknowns into celebrity status through the rapid dissemination of the
image in the media, and those that are famous because their subjects are fa-
mous. The “salute” photograph clearly embodies the second category, yet there
is something in it, and in the cultural prescriptions of inheritance, that endorses
the persona of the fatherless boy in a way not matched by his sister’s persona.
(7) Transposability. Again, we see in the “salute” image a clear example of
transposability in its replication across media. This quality is so effective in the
“salute” photograph that, not only was it the most commonly appropriated
image used by editorial cartoonists to mark the death of JFK, Jr., but some car-
toonists used it to respond to Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis’s death in 1994.
(8) Importance of Events. The assassination of the President in 1963 was re-
garded as an end to an era of innocence and hope among the American peo-
ple. Few momentous events in the 20th century have been similarly associated
with an image, or a set of images, as profoundly regarded as those that marked
the Kennedy assassination. The transference of the 1963 image of a child’s sa-
lute to his death as a man in 1999 carries with it the memory of the earlier
event and imbues the plane crash with a significance and poignancy far be-
8. IMAGES AND CULTURAL MEMORY 187
yond its actuality. A young, handsome, wealthy man from a well-known fam-
ily perishes in an unremarkable plane crash, along with his wife and his wife’s
sister. But the visual analogy to his father—a handsome, wealthy, and power-
ful man, cut down before his full life expectancy by an event that causes calam-
ity in the nation—creates a resonance and a reliving (for those old enough) of
what was lost in 1963.
(9) Metonymy. Perlmutter observes that iconic images act metonymically,
summing up a situation so as to represent a larger idea. “The inclination to
present a picture as an explicit or implicit metonym is almost overwhelming,
for journalists, scholars, and politicians. Yet, in truth, no picture ever says it all”
(17). The media seemed to employ the “salute” photo in 1999 to contextualize
a tragic event that would have been unremarkable except for the enduring
fame of the subjects. The visual references to a 36-year-old photograph pro-
vided justification for extensive news coverage by linking the contemporary
with historical significance. The “salute” photograph bears no direct relation-
ship to a current news event; its relationship to a past event is obscured by the
lack of signifying detail. However, the presumption of familiarity with, not
just a funeral procession, but an entire process of grieving, dreams lost, and
changes in history’s course is assumed. Those of us old enough remember
“where we were when we heard Kennedy was shot,” are likely to remember
the national feeling (expressed through the media’s interpretive lens) better
than our own.
(10) Primordiality and/or Cultural Resonance. Although the “salute” image
may not reflect a classical historical scene that Perlmutter references, the sa-
lute to a military superior or a fallen hero is sufficiently ingrained in the public
consciousness that it lends its own symbolic overtone to JFK. Jr.’s salute to his
father. The situation is made all the more poignant by the boy’s childish oblivi-
ousness to the import of events, not just the loss of a father, but the nation’s
loss of a dynamic leader, of whom much was expected. In making some allu-
sions to the similarity in format of some iconic news photos to classic paint-
ings, Perlmutter notes that every icon adds to the total cultural expression of
its familiar incarnations. Edwards and Winkler have argued elsewhere that vi-
sual images function as ideographs in this same sense; each application of an
image repeats, intensifies, and reifies its meanings. Although the “salute”
photo does not bear a similar relationship to a past image, it recreates itself in
every appropriation and re-presentation over time.
(11) Striking Composition. Perlmutter argues that one important feature
linking visual icons is that they express “the decisive moment” when elements
such as lighting, expression, and position coincide to make a memorable com-
position (18). The “salute” photograph is an interesting case; because of its ori-
gins as film footage (as a number of stilled image icons are), it can be presented
in a number of ways. Not only has there been variance in the angle of the shot,
but there is particular variance in range. The close-up that graced the covers of
188 EDWARDS
Time and Look in the summer of 1999 highlighted the figure of the boy stand-
ing in his short coat, almost awkward, yet precise, in displaying the salute. Al-
though the background can be darkened (especially in cartoon renditions), the
photograph accentuates his vulnerability by the juxtaposition of adult legs
and hands that contrast with the boy’s small size. As the photograph’s range
expands, we see the figures of his sister, his uncle, and his veiled mother, but
this father’s caisson remains out of view. Perlmutter notes that almost all icons
have a quality of spareness and simplicity. The boy’s light-colored winter coat
against the dark morning attire of the adults, the brightness of the sun falling
toward his face, are elements that allow the image to speak its pathos in crop-
ped close-up as well as more medium-range shots. Even in visual renditions
that include the other family figures, JFK, Jr.’s salute is so unique, even incon-
gruous, that along with his size and light clothing (visual presentations shared
by his sister, as well) he remains the focal point for each rendition of the image.
It is not the scene of the family that is remembered in the verbal accounts of
this photograph, it is the image of the boy and his salute. His face and the ac-
tion are directed at the unseen President, forever linking the two in our imagi-
nation and memory. In its repeated use of the picture in 1999, the media links
the President and his son symbolically, engendering a narrative continuity be-
tween two disparate events.
father, the narrative inevitably takes on mythic dimensions. Even more than
the cable news networks’ constant replays of film related to the assassination
of a President to fill an implicit demand for visual content related to an unfold-
ing story that was relatively devoid of eventfulness, cartoonists adopted the
imagery of a presidential assassination as an explanatory strategy for under-
standing the unexplainable.
John Kennedy’s plane crash was not the first event where cartoonists recog-
nized and exploited the potential for visual continuity between the myth of
Camelot and its more contemporary translations. Five years prior to the acci-
dent that killed JFK, Jr., at least two cartoonists used the “salute” image to
frame memorials of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. The image supercedes the
logic of its content. In 1994, JFK, Jr. was an adult, not a 3-year-old child, his sis-
ter mourned their mother’s death as well, there was no public funeral proces-
sion, and Mrs. Onassis was well beyond the relative youth of her slain husband
when she died. In appropriating the image, these cartoonists invoked collec-
tive memory to express, not outrage, but regret. Although noting a point of
passage in a national narrative, Mrs. Onassis’s death could hardly be seen as a
final moment. The presence of the boy, now a man, militated against narrative
closure even as it alluded to the narrative of Camelot and the Kennedy legacy.
The events of 1999 would suggest closure (in spite of the survival of Caro-
line Kennedy) as well as outrage over the repetition of the narrative kernel.
Some cartoonists accentuated the media-constructed linkage between 1963
and 1999, not only by using the 1963 image as a touchstone, but by visually
linking the boy and father in heaven. Others assisted in the framing of the
plane crash as a national tragedy, rather than a family tragedy, by incorporat-
ing the image of Uncle Sam in the salute image.
The reproducibility of (news) photographs facilitates their reappearance in
new journalistic contexts, however distanced from the events that prompted
their original appearance. In recontextualizing images, the media provides a
symbolic association between phenomena by metaphor or allegory. The
parodic appropriation of existing images by cartoonists reconfigures the paro-
died subject from an object of ridicule to an object of veneration. That is, the
parodied original is held up as an implied ideal to which other situations are
compared. Similarly, cartoonists who employed images such as the “salute” in-
voke the idealism inherent in the 1963 image of regret (which, nevertheless, im-
plies a sense of optimism) to provoke the outrage against fate in 1999. Although
the use of the “salute” image differs from other similar examples of visual ap-
propriation in cartoons in that it is self-referencing (back to JFK, Jr. and his famil-
ial history) rather than other-referencing, the cartoonists’ appropriation still
articulates an ideal that frames current events against historical memory.
Cartoon appropriations of famous photographs carry the symbolic and
connotative associations of the photograph into new territories. While
MSNBC and CNN news directors juxtaposed the unique image of 1963 with
190 EDWARDS
the vaguer images of 1999 (e.g., the site of the crash and contemporary pic-
tures of the victims), cartoonists were able to reinvent contexts by translating
and transforming the present through the lens of the past. A logical reversal
takes place as a grown man is returned to his form as a child in order to provide
commentary about his death. The attitudes displayed by cartoonists exhibited
various perspectives on the rhetorical implications of the image as a framing
device. For some cartoonists, the singular recognizability of the boy’s short
coat and salute gesture served to visually denote and memorialize JFK, Jr. Typ-
ical examples of denotative cartoons show the saluting child in a bare land-
scape with his name enscribed below, or standing on a foundation of clouds, or
wearing angel’s wings. The image of JFK, Jr. as a child is more recognizable
than he is as a man. In spite of significant media coverage of his adult life, he is
known to us primarily in the parasocial relationship established through his
childhood photographs. Were his father not a president of mythic proportion,
his death would not invite extensive commentary. This idea is advanced in car-
toons that depict a heavenly reunion of father and son. (At least two cartoon-
ists employed the image of John-John running to greet his father on the
tarmac to suggest reunion in the afterlife.) The continuity of time is disrupted
in these examples. The departed President is pictured much as he was at the
time of his death, but the son morphs backward to his childhood (see Fig. 8.1),
reframing the 1999 tragedy in the terms of 1963. It is not the deaths of John
Kennedy, his wife, or his sister-in-law that are noteworthy, it is only the long-
ago assassination that continues to define collective acknowledgment of the
Kennedy family. In the hands of cartoonists such as Locher, John, Jr.’s death
becomes a rhetorical device that visually returns us to history and the mythic
narrative of promise cut short. The horrific assassination is erased and a new
narrative is inserted where the child is reunited with his father. (“I’m coming,
Daddy,” the child promises in a cartoon by Steve Benson. “Dad … wait on
me,” the child says in a cartoon by Marshall Ramsey.) And time moves forward
in a new way, as the President now returns his son’s salute.
Other cartoons refer to the “salute” image as remembrance of things past,
rather than a reconciliation and renovation of the past. For Horsey, the “sa-
lute” image is a photograph in a scrapbook about the tragic drama of the Ken-
nedy family. Similarly, Breen depicts the country, in the incarnation of Uncle
Sam, reviewing a scrapbook where the salute photo appears. Brice McKinnon,
a Canadian cartoonist, presents the salute image as a photograph washed
ashore. Wright is most suggestive in referring to the place of the salute image
in the collective memory (see Fig. 8.2). In his cartoon, the image floats within
the mind of the people—again, incarnated in the image of Uncle Sam, who al-
ludes to the lasting power of the images: “Some memories just won’t go
away,” he ponders.
In the most potent reference to collectivity, the image of the saluting child is
presented as an image of America. In these cartoons, JFK, Jr. is not the subject
FIG. 8.1. Locher’s father-child reunion recalls the narrative of 1963.
FIG. 8.2. Wright’s cartoon testifies to the lasting power of images in the national
consciousness.
191
192 EDWARDS
of reflection, but the means, in much the same way as embodiments of the
child going to heaven return us to the past. Three cartoonists employ different
visual strategies for this transference. While Plante labels his boy “JFK Jr.” the
boy wears swim trunks and looks out to sea. The reader is positioned behind
the boy, a positioning that invites us to step into the experience of the salute
and look toward the tragic scene of 1999 rather than survey the saluting boy
on that November day long ago. Rogers blends the stance and character of the
saluting boy with the image of Uncle Sam (see Fig. 8.3). In both cartoons, JFK,
Jr. ceases to exist as “other” (the distance invoked by celebrity) and we sub-
sume or are subsumed by the stories the boy represents.
More dramatically, Darrin Bell depicts the entire scene surrounding the sa-
luting boy, labeling him “America” as the salute is directed toward the coffin of
John F. Kennedy. Cartoonists and news producers use the image of the salute
as a rhetorical device to recall and restructure the narrative of two family trag-
edies and a national tragedy that are remembered through iconic images.
CONCLUSION
Questions about media practice in the age of celebrity spectacle often revolve
around the pack mentality and the relentless push to define events as significant.
In the case of the death of JFK, Jr., such questions are germane, considering the
monumental coverage of the story. But my purpose has been to examine the vi-
FIG. 8.3. Cartoonists condense images of the past with national symbols in current
contexts. (ROB ROGERS reprinted by permission of United Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
8. IMAGES AND CULTURAL MEMORY 193
sual rhetorics inherent in that coverage. The frequent invoking of the “salute”
photograph as well as other historical images of Kennedy and his family mem-
bers served to justify coverage by positioning the plane crash as part of a larger
narrative that involved a nation, as well as a family. Critics may be right in la-
menting that our grief was false because we did not know John F. Kennedy, Jr.
and he played no critical role in public life. But, in the end, grief was not directed
toward the victims of a plane crash as sea. Rather, the invocation of the mythic
narrative of the Kennedy promise and end of that promise prompted a mourn-
ing that was directed inward. As a nation, we mourned our own destiny, remem-
bered through media images that returned us to that earlier time. In a sense, we
mourned the symbolism inherent in the “salute” picture, guided by the media’s
use of that picture as a framing mechanism.
Shortly after the plane crash off Martha’s Vineyard, Richard Reeves specu-
lated on the future of history, suggesting that what will count as history in the
future are those events that leave a trail of visual record in their wake. “Mass or
popular history will be based on the images preserved on film, video, or new
technologies … How we see ourselves will depend not on what we are for-
mally taught or made to read, but on what we see or what we can be shown”
(21). Reeves’s comment overlooks one part of the dynamic, and that is, in the
showing, the media constructs history as an interpretation of events. When
visual images from history are replayed, no matter how connected to events
they appear to be on the surface (as with a childhood image of a downed pilot),
the use of such images connects two messages, from now and then, linking to-
gether the “truth value” of a photograph and its symbolic value in harmoni-
ous resonance.
NOTES
WORKS CITED
But here is the challenge to our democracy: In this nation I see tens of mil-
lions of its citizens—a substantial part of its whole population—who at this
very moment are denied the greater part of what the very lowest standards
of today call the necessities of life. I see millions of families trying to live on
incomes so meager that the pall of family disaster hangs over them day by
195
196 FINNEGAN
day. I see millions whose daily lives in city and on farm continue under con-
ditions labeled indecent by a so-called polite society half a century ago. I see
millions denied education, recreation, and the opportunity to better their
lot and the lot of their children. I see millions lacking the means to buy the
products of farm and factory and by their poverty denying work and pro-
ductiveness to many other millions. I see one-third of a nation ill-housed,
ill-clad, ill-nourished. (130–131)
This vivid litany fresh in his listeners’ minds, the eternally optimistic Roosevelt
hastens to add, “It is not in despair that I paint you that picture. I paint it for you
in hope—because the Nation, seeing and understanding the injustice in it, pro-
poses to paint it out” (131). In describing the conditions of the present and de-
fining a plan for the future, Roosevelt speaks with a visual rhetoric, relying on
the trope of ekphrasis to describe the scene, to literally make the audience see
through his eyes.1
Now let us consider another document from early 1937 that also visualizes
conditions of poverty for its audience (see Fig. 9.1). In March 1937 LOOK, the
new and popular picture magazine, published a two-page feature on condi-
tions for sharecroppers in the American south (“Children of the Forgotten
Man!”). The feature used six images made by government photographers
working for the Historical Section of the Farm Security Administration (FSA),
an agency charged with managing and alleviating chronic rural poverty in the
United States. As framed in the LOOK feature, the FSA photographers’ images
visualize to a great extent that which Roosevelt’s second inaugural address
paints in words. Using the trope of the “forgotten man,” LOOK vividly visual-
izes Roosevelt’s anxiety about current conditions of chronic poverty.
Both Roosevelt’s speech and the LOOK layout are explicitly rhetorical docu-
ments in that they are products of what Thomas Farrell calls “the collabora-
tive art of addressing and guiding decision and judgment” (1)—though we
could certainly argue about what specific judgments or decisions each would
guide us to make. Both constitute visual rhetorics as well, Roosevelt relying
upon ekphrasis in the context of a Western linguistic tradition steeped in
ocularcentrism, LOOK deploying techniques of graphic design alongside the
products of photographic practice.2 Yet, apart from these similarities, we
probably would not consider these documents to be very similar; indeed, the
differences might matter for a rhetorician interested in constructing a critical
account. From the point of view of methodology, we may feel more comfort-
able engaging Roosevelt’s textual picture drawn in the second inaugural than
we are engaging the FSA’s pictorial text in LOOK magazine.3 In the case of the
LOOK feature, it may simply be less clear as to how we should proceed.
In the early 1990s, when I began work on the rhetorical aspects of visual cul-
ture, library searches of relevant databases turned up few responses to the
search term, visual rhetoric. Today, however, a similar search suggests that vi-
FIG. 9.1. “Children of the Forgotten Man!” LOOK, March 1937, pp. 18–19. Image courtesy of the Library of Congress.
197
198 FINNEGAN
gues for a method of doing rhetorical history of visual images that accounts
for images as history as well as images in history. In doing so, it poses the question,
“What is the place of rhetorical history in visual rhetoric?” Although others
have proposed schema for the rhetorical study of images, this account is differ-
ent in that it seeks explicitly to demonstrate how the rhetorical historian might
engage the visual.5 In what follows, I model a way of doing rhetorical history
of the visual by turning to the example of FSA photography as it was mobi-
lized in LOOK. Through that analysis, I argue that those interested in visual
culture may benefit if they mobilize the tools of rhetorical history to sort out
three moments in the life of an image for which a critic must account: produc-
tion, reproduction, and circulation. Using the example of the LOOK layout, I
demonstrate how the rhetorical historian of images might make just such an
accounting and how that accounting may deepen our understanding of the
history in and around this body of photographs.
both the third and the fourth senses of rhetorical history. Thus in what follows I
study the history of the sharecropper feature as a rhetorical event (Zarefsky’s
sense #3) by accounting for the origins of LOOK magazine, tracing the story of
the production and reproduction of the FSA photographs, and tracking the key
terms invoked in this particular arrangement of images and text. I also engage in
the rhetorical study of the feature as an historical event (Zarefsky’s sense #4) by
exploring the LOOK feature as one response to the complex problems of Depres-
sion-era poverty, both practical (how shall we care for the poorest of the poor?)
and representational (how shall we attempt to make people care about the
poor?). In doing so, I situate LOOK as it circulated in the context of Depres-
sion-era discourses about poverty, provide insight into public attitudes about
poverty during the Depression, and illustrate the unique way visual images con-
tributed to the rhetorical politics of the age.
Production
“Keep Informed!” the March 1937 cover of LOOK trumpeted (see Fig. 9.2). In-
side, on pages 18 and 19, six FSA photographs appeared in a feature titled,
“Children of the Forgotten Man! LOOK Visits the Sharecropper” (Fig. 9.1). Al-
though, as I elaborate, the picture magazines made possible mass circulation
of the FSA photographs, the picture magazines themselves were made possi-
ble by rapidly changing technologies of photographic production and repro-
duction after World War I. Although photographs had for years been
reproducible in magazines and newspapers, it was not until the mid-1930s that
photographs could be reprinted in magazines with the quality and in the quan-
tity that came to be associated with Life, or, to a lesser extent, LOOK.8 In addi-
tion, the kinds of photographs reproduced in LOOK and Life and other picture
magazines were different from images previously available. Beginning in the
1920s in Germany, changes in photographic technology created a revolution
of sorts in photographic production and reproduction. The new technology
of the “miniature” 35-mm camera made it possible for photographers to
make large numbers of images quickly and relatively unobtrusively. The cam-
era’s fast shutter speed, small size, and use of roll film (rather than cumber-
some plates) made it easy to, as one Fortune magazine article put it, “shoot
from the hip and get your man” (“U.S. Minicam Boom” 160). Furthermore,
the development of 35-mm photography coincided with the introduction of
the flash bulb, making it even more possible for photographers to make good
quality images in less-than-ideal conditions (Carlebach 160–165).
The profusion of images provided much-needed fodder for the picture
magazines. Life debuted in late 1936, LOOK just a few months later in early
202 FINNEGAN
FIG. 9.2. Cover of LOOK magazine, March 1937. Image courtesy of the
Library of Congress.
1937. By 1938, it was reported that there were 13 picture magazines being pub-
lished in the United States. In addition to Life and LOOK, these included Focus,
Picture, Click, and See (Edwards 102). LOOK, in particular, was nearly as popular
as Life, but considered Life’s working-class cousin because of its poorer techni-
cal quality; it was published on lower quality paper of the type used in newspa-
per Sunday rotogravure sections. In addition, early on the magazine became
known for having “salacious” content; after its debut, The New Republic ridi-
culed LOOK as “a combination morgue and dime museum, on paper” (“Pic-
ture Papers” 197). Editorially, the magazine lived up to its demand that readers
“LOOK,” providing a steady diet of celebrity gossip, self-help articles, and fea-
9. RHETORICAL HISTORY OF THE VISUAL 203
tures that emphasized the odd and/or salacious (“Auto Kills Woman Right Be-
fore Your Eyes!”). But despite the magazine’s early taste for curiosities, LOOK
nevertheless reflected the new ideology of the picture magazine in that it
sought to use photographs to tell narratives about real people in specific situa-
tions, but always in ways that cultivated universal interest.9
In some ways, LOOK would appear to be an odd outlet for the FSA photo-
graphs. From 1935 to 1943, the Historical Section, a division of the FSA, con-
ducted a photography project designed to document American life during the
Depression and chronicle New Deal efforts to relieve rural poverty. Photo-
graphs by the likes of Dorothea Lange, Walker Evans, Ben Shahn, Arthur
Rothstein and Russell Lee were used not only to demonstrate that profound
rural poverty existed, but also to illustrate potential solutions. Such images
were circulated widely to government and media outlets, their goal to educate
and influence public opinion on issues related to rural poverty. In early 1937,
the new picture magazines offered the possibility of mass circulation for the
images, making it possible to expose hundreds of thousands, perhaps even a
million, readers to the issues facing the rural poor. Until the picture magazines
appeared on the scene, the Historical Section’s photographs had not appeared
in periodicals with circulations much over 25,000; thus although it was an un-
likely marriage, Historical Section chief Roy Stryker pursued with interest
publication of the photographs in magazines like LOOK.
Before the first issue of LOOK had even hit the newsstands, LOOK founder
Gardner “Mike” Cowles, Jr. contacted Roy Stryker for pictures: “I should
much appreciate it if you would mail me a fairly large number of pictures
which show the worst conditions in the south, pictures which might run under
the caption ‘Can such conditions possibly exist in the United States?’ ” (23 Nov.
1936). Stryker replied promptly, providing Cowles with a set of photographs
and offering even more: “At the present time we have a photographer working
in Iowa and Illinois on material concerning farm tenancy. As soon as his pic-
tures begin to come in, I will see that you receive some of this material as I am
sure that it would be useful” (2 Dec. 1936). Although we have no way of know-
ing what pictures Stryker sent to Cowles, we do have the March 1937 share-
cropper feature as LOOK published it (Fig. 9.1).
At this point, it may be useful to point out several moves I am making in my
attempt to account for the ways the FSA photographs were used in the LOOK
feature. First, in keeping with the third sense of rhetorical history (the historical
study of rhetorical events), I have attempted to account, albeit very briefly, for
the forces that made magazines such as LOOK possible in the first place, the
history and goals of the FSA’s project, and LOOK’s interest in the Historical
Section’s photographs specifically. In doing so I have turned to secondary ma-
terial that has enabled me to reconstruct the technological developments that
made LOOK and other publications feasible, primary source material discuss-
ing the origins of and reactions to the picture magazines, and the archival ma-
204 FINNEGAN
terial of the Historical Section (Stryker’s letters back and forth with Cowles).
In short, I have sketched an account of production that seeks to answer the
question, “How did these photographs end up in this magazine at this particu-
lar moment in time?” Though there is clearly more that may be said, what I
have outlined thus far should at least suggest a few ways that tools of rhetorical
history (such as the archive) may be used to make an account of the produc-
tion of images.
Reproduction
distorted in pain or tears; he is clearly in distress. Each image in the feature is ac-
companied by a caption; this one states in part, “Alone and Hungry: This is no
child of destitute European peasants. He is an American whose parents work all
day in the fields of our ‘Sunny South.’ He is the son of a cotton sharecropper.
America has eight million like his parents” (“Children” 18). The shocking image,
combined with this caption, makes the child a visual synecdoche, encouraging
the reader/viewer to see him not as an individual child, but as representative of
literally millions of others living in similar destitution.
There is strong shock value to this photograph, thanks not only to its con-
tent but to LOOK’s distortion of photographic scale in the layout. The image
appears crude and not particularly respectful of its subject; yet Roy Stryker
wrote approvingly to LOOK’s Mike Cowles of the layout of photographs in
the sharecropper feature and mentioned this image specifically: “I think the
placing of that little boy in the burlap clothes in a prominent position as you
did was extremely effective” (6 Feb. 1937). Stryker’s reply is disconcerting, but
as I will note later, not surprising given the institutional constraints that
Stryker faced in attempting to keep the FSA’s photography project alive.
All of the images in this feature reject the formal pose of the photographic
portrait in favor of more “candid” subject matter. A search of the negative
numbers of the images reveals that most of the photographs were made with
the relatively new 35-mm technology, which produced visual effects different
from those of larger format cameras.11 One of the primary effects of the use of
candid, somewhat crude imagery is that the feature constructs for the
reader/viewer a stance of surveillance. We are positioned to look in on the gi-
ant image of the crying child dressed in the burlap sack or to surveil the preg-
nant mother and her children in the doorway. Cropping also encourages
surveillance through the use of odd, cookie-cutter shapes. The images of the
African-American children, in particular, demonstrate the strange rhetorical
impact of such cropping. In the top left corner, an African American girl is iso-
lated in a circular cutout frame. The cropping of the photograph, coupled
with the layout of the image in a circular shape, isolates the girl and makes her
appear as though she is under surveillance—seen as if through the camera’s
circular lens.
Another theme of the feature is a focus on children. Few images in the fea-
ture show children with adults. The dominant figure is a crying child, with no
adult anywhere present. The irony of the title “Children of the Forgotten Man!”
is clear, because the sharecropper himself, the “forgotten man,” is utterly ab-
sent in the photographs. The mothers, while present, appear passive and anx-
ious. An Arthur Rothstein photograph of a pregnant mother leaning in the
doorway, with three children of various ages gathered near her, is captioned,
“More Children Indoors: Sharecropper children are often hungry. Under-
sized, scrawny, with large heads, misshapen bodies, they are easy prey of dis-
ease” (“Children” 19). Using vivid and crude language, the caption implies
206 FINNEGAN
that the mother, though present, cannot care for her brood. The hint of “more
children indoors” suggests slyly that the place is literally overrun with chil-
dren, that the perhaps excessively fertile mother cannot care for her “scrawny”
and “misshapen” offspring. In fact, a check of the Historical Section file in the
Library of Congress reveals that there are several images made by Rothstein
of this family; they show only one additional child not featured among the
group of three here, not the unspecified large brood implied by the caption.
As a result of the feature’s emphasis on children, the reader/viewer’s direct vi-
sual encounters with the poor happen with the children, not the adults. The
impulse on the part of editors is obvious: Use children to create pity in the
viewer, and sympathy for the plight of the poor, by showing those most inno-
cent and helpless in the face of poverty. Yet, at the same time, the emphasis on
children in both features has the effect of infantilizing (and thus disempow-
ering) the poor, particularly the non-White poor.
The two images of African-American children demonstrate this point most
vividly, and suggest another aspect of this feature’s rhetorical stance: its reli-
ance on dramatic captions to accompany the images. LOOK uses both images
and captions to point out that although tenancy impacts both Black and
White, the “news” is that Whites are suffering. We can see this most vividly in
the photograph of the three boys at the water pump. The barefoot children
stare at the camera from inside of an oddly cropped image that, like the image
of the African-American girl, frankly invites surveillance. The caption below
the image reads:
Many Sharecroppers are Negroes
But not as many in proportion to whites as there used to be. Fifteen years
ago 65 out of 100 croppers were Negroes. The tables are turned now and
there are 60 whites and only 40 Negroes in every 100 sharecroppers.
(“Children” 19)
Here the images of Black children are deployed to reference the shift toward
greater White tenancy, erasing the children’s experience at the same time that
it is presented visually. Although White adults do appear in the guise of the
passive mother, no African-American adults appear in the feature; they may be
the truly “forgotten men” and women LOOK so dramatically announces. The
feature’s reliance on images of Black children not only functions to erase the
Black experience of tenancy from consideration, but it does something more
insidious by erasing the African-American adult experience entirely. Thus
LOOK not only infantilizes the poor, but particularly the African-American
poor, reinforcing plantation-era stereotypes about dependence and the “child-
like” nature of the Black laborer.
The text not only infantilizes the poor and reinforces an interest in White
sharecroppers, but it does so with often vivid crudeness. Indeed, the “factual”
9. RHETORICAL HISTORY OF THE VISUAL 207
The caption here refers obliquely to the Southern Tenant Farmers Union
(STFU), actively organizing in the South (particularly in Arkansas) at the time.
Another caption goes on to suggest that the STFU has also “meant eviction for
hundreds of sharecroppers. They wander the rutted roads, no shelter, no re-
lief, no food. Some are living in tents and old autos” (19). But unionization, one
potential solution readers might infer for themselves, is immediately dis-
missed by LOOK as a hopeless and downright dangerous option.
Although the photographs published in LOOK had great potential to expose
viewers to the FSA’s plans, the picture story itself suggests that, really, there is
nothing to do but look. The magazine positions the reader/viewer to be a pas-
sive spectator, to see and consume images and text in a vacuum devoid of con-
text or history. The cumulative impact of the feature, then, is that there is no
difference between the American sharecroppers and the “savage” taking a
wife in Zululand. Sharecroppers are just as much a “curiosity” to be looked at,
a “them” to be surveyed, as are the “savages” of Zululand or the celebrity cen-
terfold in the bathtub. Although LOOK’s picture stories were ostensibly meant
to educate readers and generate sympathy for the poor, the content and layout
of the feature largely undermine such goals. By constructing the picture story
as a closed, relatively ahistorical narrative, LOOK constructs a rhetoric of pov-
erty that keeps the reader on the outside “LOOK”ing in.
Yet again, at this point let us break away from my sketch in order to deter-
mine where we are in the construction of a rhetorical history of the LOOK
208 FINNEGAN
feature. In the last several pages, I have moved beyond issues of production to
consider issues of reproduction, attempting to understand the feature’s place-
ment within the magazine itself and the themes raised by its peculiar ar-
rangement of images and text. Yet we cannot stop here, for we have yet to
take account of circulation. In moving to the realm of circulation, we attend
to the feature in terms of the way it fits into broader social, political, and in-
stitutional discourses about poverty circulating during the Depression. The
move to circulation, as we shall see, allows us to tap into the “elusive” yet vi-
tal realm of Zarefsky’s fourth sense of rhetorical history: the rhetorical
study of historical events.
Circulation
LOOK’s marriage of the FSA photographs with vivid, largely ahistorical cap-
tions produces a rhetoric of poverty that makes certain narratives about the
poor available while curtailing the availability of others. As I have just briefly
sketched, the sharecropper feature says little, if at all, about the causes of the
poverty depicted in the images, nor does it suggest much in the way of solu-
tions to the problems so vividly visualized. LOOK’s failure to do so is partly the
result of the generic constraints of the picture magazine. LOOK was never
meant to be a “news” magazine. Bookended by picture stories that reflect
LOOK’s primary investment in human interest stories—celebrity entertain-
ment and “curiosities”—the sharecropper feature stands in isolation from the
current events of the day. Each picture story, even the sharecropper story, is
presented as a hermetically sealed narrative. The reader is not encouraged to
go beyond the narrative for further investigation of the issues, for this is not
the function of the magazine. LOOK’s primary interest is in showing—in en-
couraging (indeed, commanding) the viewer to LOOK. Realization of these
limitations of the genre of the picture magazine is vital if we are to understand
how the LOOK feature operates within broader public attitudes about rural
poverty as well as in terms of the institutional goals of the FSA.
The LOOK feature needs to be understood in terms of how it participates in
a complex web of discourses about poverty during the Depression. Neil
Betten argues that discourses about poverty in the United States have histori-
cally operated along a continuum between the “hostile view” and the “envi-
ronmental view.” What Betten calls “the hostile view” treated poverty as a
moral flaw, “a sickness freely chosen through laziness, drinking, extravagance
and sexual vices” (3). These rhetorics of poverty resounded with echoes of
what William Ryan has called “blaming the victim”—if one were poor, one
had somehow caused that poverty. A second view, the “environmental” view,
9. RHETORICAL HISTORY OF THE VISUAL 209
argued that poverty was not always the result of an individual’s failings, but of
structural inequities in the socioeconomic system. By the early 20th century,
for example, progressive-era social reformers were coming to define rural
poverty in terms of the oppressive nature of the socioeconomic structure of
the farm tenancy system that left sharecroppers at the bottom of the eco-
nomic ladder.
It might be tempting, then, to suggest that the LOOK feature simply com-
municates a “hostile view” of poverty that blames the victim and suggests
moral failings are the cause of the sharecroppers’ poverty. Although, as I have
shown, there is evidence for such a reading, such a conclusion would not re-
flect the complexities of Depression-era rhetorics of poverty. As many schol-
ars of poverty discourse have shown, an era’s conception of poverty is not
“either/or.” Robert Asen argues that a range of views about the poor appear
and reappear throughout American history, “subjected to alternative inflec-
tions, recombinations, and reversals as advocates have deployed the discourses
of poverty in a shifting and conflicted terrain” (25). For example, just as the
LOOK essay seems to invite a hostile reading of the sharecroppers’ plight
through its use of vivid images and dramatic text, it also suggests a more envi-
ronmental view through its deployment of the powerful trope of the “forgot-
ten man.” Revived by Roosevelt during his 1932 presidential campaign, by
1937 the forgotten man was a powerful symbol of both the promise of Ameri-
can capitalism and its apparent failure; the forgotten man is not to blame for
his poverty, but rather is someone swept up by forces largely beyond his con-
trol. The trope of the forgotten man was rhetorically available not only in po-
litical discourse, but in art and popular culture, too; by the late 1930s,
references to the “forgotten man” were quite frequent in the visual arts, mov-
ies, and popular songs.
Such ambiguous blending of the hostile and environmental views persisted
in government, as well, often influenced by the paternalism for which Roose-
velt was so legendary. Though Roosevelt championed the right to economic
security for all citizens, Roosevelt and his New Deal appointees agonized over
“the dole.” In his second inaugural address, Roosevelt described “the need to
find through government the instrument of our united purpose to solve for
the individual the ever-rising problems of a complex civilization”—thus seem-
ingly invoking an environmental view of poverty. Yet Roosevelt also consis-
tently spoke of his preference for work relief over “cash” relief because he
feared creating a population of dependent individuals (127). Often, such con-
flicting views of poverty were articulated by members of the public as well,
with bizarre inconsistencies. In 1938, the FSA participated in a photography
exhibit in New York City. Many of the agency’s most powerful images of the
poor were hung, and visitors were provided comment cards on which to write
their reactions. One visitor wrote, “Wonderful pictures! Pitiful sights! They
need help sooner than many worthless W.P.A. [Works Progress Administra-
210 FINNEGAN
tion] workers” (“FSA Picture Comments” 18–29 Apr. 1938). In one sentence,
the viewer managed both to praise and pity the individuals in the exhibit, who
were apparently the blameless and deserving poor, and caricature WPA work-
ers who, apparently, were not.
Despite recognizing these complex rhetorics of poverty circulating during
the Depression, we might still wonder why Roy Stryker would have pursued
publication of the FSA photographs in the pages of a magazine such as LOOK.
I noted previously that Stryker approved of the ways in which the images were
arranged in the sharecropper feature. In addition, he even praised the use of
crude and vivid captions. He wrote to Mike Cowles, “May I compliment you
on the frank captions which you attached to these pictures. You certainly ‘shot
the works’ on your captions here” (6 Feb. 1937). Why would Stryker endorse
such representations of the poor? The question may be addressed by turning
to what we know about the agencies for which the photographs were made
and the institutional constraints facing Stryker as he struggled to keep his pho-
tography project afloat.
The FSA, and its predecessor the Resettlement Administration (or RA), was
founded on the assumption that the very structure of American agriculture
needed to be radically changed if rural poverty were to be conquered. A 1935
government pamphlet introducing the Resettlement Administration observed,
“American agriculture is undergoing fundamental changes.” These changes
were changes to the very socioeconomic foundations of agriculture: “Rapidity
of communication and transportation, mechanization, scientific advances, the
decreased growth of population, spoilation of land resources have developed a
new set of national economic concepts and problems” (Resettlement Adminis-
tration 1). Part of the Historical Section photographers’ job was to account for
these changes by visualizing their effects on individuals. The Historical Section’s
goals, however, were often not shared by those in power in Washington. The
Historical Section was consistently threatened with extinction, its goals ques-
tioned by those in Congress in charge of the budgets of the FSA. Why, many in
Congress wondered, did the FSA need to spend so much time, energy, and
money on making “mere photographs”? Surely there were other ways to spend
money. Given such institutional constraints, Stryker’s apparent appreciation of
the images in LOOK must be understood at least in part as his desire to protect
the Historical Section by demonstrating the relevance of the work to the largest
number of people possible.
Another reason why Stryker might not have found the representation of
the poor in LOOK to be particularly objectionable is that the FSA photographs
circulated in a number of different contexts, so the images themselves would
not necessarily be tied in the minds of the public to a single rhetoric of poverty.
The images were used to illustrate government publications and exhibits, dis-
played in the art contexts of museums and galleries, and published in numer-
ous periodicals. For example, the social welfare journal Survey Graphic
9. RHETORICAL HISTORY OF THE VISUAL 211
In this essay I have proposed and modeled a way of doing rhetorical history of
the visual that accounts for three key moments in the life of photographs: pro-
duction, reproduction, and circulation. Although it may be easier to envision
how one might do a rhetorical history of a more traditional text such as Roose-
velt’s second inaugural address, the path one should take when engaging visual
culture may seem less obvious. Yet perhaps the differences are not so great after
all if we utilize the tools of rhetorical history itself. I have suggested a way that
we might invigorate our study of visual culture with a methodology that ac-
counts for both the history of images as rhetorical events and the rhetoric of im-
ages as historical events. For those of us interested in “defining visual rhetorics,”
the issue of methodology would seem to be particularly important. A definition
of visual rhetoric(s) alone cannot be useful unless it simultaneously suggests a
way of seeing that combines an understanding of the unique qualities of visual
discourse with a rhetorical sensibility that can account for how visual discourse
comes to mean something in the public sphere. It is my hope that I have at least
gestured toward one productive possibility here.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The author wishes to thank Michèle Koven, Charles Hill, and Marguerite
Helmers for their helpful feedback on earlier drafts of this chapter. Earlier ver-
sions of these ideas were presented at a roundtable discussion, “Visual Rheto-
ric and Rhetorical History: Exploring the Connections,” at the National
Communication Association convention in Atlanta, Georgia in November
2001, and at the Rhetoric Society of America meeting in Las Vegas, Nevada in
May 2002. A more detailed analysis of FSA photography in LOOK magazine
may be found in Cara A. Finnegan, Picturing Poverty 168–219.
NOTES
Benjamin, Walter. “A Small History of Photography.” One Way Street and Other Writings.
London: Verso, 1985: 240–257.
—. “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction.” Illuminations: Essays and Re-
flections. Ed. Hannah Arendt. New York: Schocken Books, 1968: 217–251.
Benson, Thomas W. “History, Criticism, and Theory in the Study of American Rhetoric.”
American Rhetoric: Context and Criticism. Ed. Thomas W. Benson. Carbondale, IL: South-
ern Illinois UP, 1989: 1–18.
Betten, Neil. “American Attitudes Toward the Poor: A Historical Overview.” Current His-
tory 65 ( July 1973): 1–5.
Blakesley, David, and Collin Brooke. “Introduction: Notes on Visual Rhetoric.” Enculturation
3 (Fall 2001) <http://enculturation.gmu.edu/3_2/introduction.html> 12 May 2003.
Carlebach, Michael. American Photojournalism Comes of Age. Washington, DC: Smithsonian
Institution P, 1997.
“Children of the Forgotten Man! LOOK Visits the Sharecropper.” Look Mar. 1937: 18–19.
Cowles, Gardner, Jr. Letter to Roy Stryker. 23 Nov. 1936. Roy Emerson Stryker Papers, se-
ries 1, microfilm reel 1. Photographic Archive, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY.
Crary, Jonathan. Techniques of the Observer: On Vision and Modernity in the Nineteenth Century.
Cambridge: MIT P, 1990.
Derrida, Jacques. Of Grammatology. Trans. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak. Baltimore: Johns
Hopkins Press, 1974.
Edwards, Jackson. “One Every Minute: The Picture Magazine.” Scribner’s May 1938:
17–23; 102–103.
Farrell, Thomas B. Norms of Rhetorical Culture. New Haven: Yale UP, 1993.
Finnegan, Cara A. “Documentary as Art in U.S. Camera.” Rhetoric Society Quarterly 31
(Spring 2001): 37–67.
—Picturing Poverty: Print Culture and FSA Photographs. Washington, DC: Smithsonian
Books, 2003.
—. “Social Engineering, Visual Politics and the New Deal: FSA Photography in Survey
Graphic.” Rhetoric and Public Affairs 3 (Fall 2000): 333–362.
Foss, Sonja K. “A Rhetorical Schema for the Evaluation of Visual Imagery.” Communication
Studies 45 (1994): 213–224.
“FSA Picture Comments.” 18–29 Apr. 1938. Roy Emerson Stryker Papers, series 2, micro-
film reel 6. Photographic Archive, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY.
Jay, Martin. Downcast Eyes: The Denigration of Vision in Twentieth-Century French Thought.
Berkeley: U of California P, 1993.
Jenks, Chris. “The Centrality of the Eye in Western Culture: An Introduction.” Visual Cul-
ture. Ed. Chris Jenks. New York: Routledge, 1995. 1–25.
Lanham, Richard. A Handlist of Rhetorical Terms, 2nd ed. Berkeley: U of California P, 1991.
Levin, David M. (Ed.). Modernity and the Hegemony of Vision. Berkeley: U of California P,
1993.
Medhurst, Martin. “The Academic Study of Public Address: A Tradition in Transition.”
Landmark Essays on American Public Address. Ed. Martin Medhurst. Davis, CA:
Hermagoras Press, 1993. xi-xliii.
Mich, Daniel D., and Edwin Eberman. The Technique of the Picture Story: A Practical Guide to
the Production of Visual Articles. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1945.
Mitchell, W. J. T. Picture Theory: Essays on Verbal and Visual Representation. Chicago: U of
Chicago P, 1994.
214 FINNEGAN
Mott, Frank Luther. A History of American Magazines, Vol. IV: 1885–1905. Cambridge: Har-
vard UP, 1957.
“Myrna Loy: Dream Wife of a Million Men.” LOOK Mar. 1937: 20–21.
“Picture Papers.” The New Republic 24 Mar. 1937: 197.
The Resettlement Administration. Washington, DC: Resettlement Administration, 1935.
Roosevelt, Franklin D. “Second Inaugural Address.” The Essential Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Ed. John G. Hunt. New York: Gramercy Books, 1995: 127–132.
Ryan, William. Blaming the Victim. New York: Vintage Books, 1976.
Sloane, Thomas O. Encyclopedia of Rhetoric. New York: Oxford UP, 2001.
Snyder, Joel. “Picturing Vision.” Critical Inquiry 6 (Spring 1980): 499–526.
Spencer, Otha Cleo. “Twenty Years of ‘Life’: A Study of Time, Inc.’s Picture Magazine and
Its Contributions to Photojournalism.” Diss., U of Missouri, 1958.
Stryker, Roy. Letter to Gardner Cowles, Jr. 2 Dec. 1936. Roy Emerson Stryker Papers, series
1, microfilm reel 1. Photographic Archive, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY.
—. Letter to Gardner Cowles, Jr. 6 Feb. 1937. Roy Emerson Stryker Papers, series 1, micro-
film reel 1. Photographic Archive, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY.
Taft, Robert. Photography and the American Scene. New York: Dover, 1938.
Turner, Kathleen J. “Rhetorical History as Social Construction: The Challenge and the
Promise.” Doing Rhetorical History: Concepts and Cases. Ed. Kathleen J. Turner.
Tuscaloosa, AL: U of Alabama P, 1998: 1–15.
“The U.S. Minicam Boom.” Fortune Oct. 1936: 125–129+.
Wainwright, Loudon. The Great American Magazine: An Inside History of Life. New York: Al-
fred A. Knopf, 1986.
Zarefsky, David. “Four Senses of Rhetorical History.” Doing Rhetorical History: Concepts and
Cases. Ed. Kathleen J. Turner. Tuscaloosa, AL: U of Alabama P, 1998: 19–32.
CHAPTER TEN
The graphical display of economic and demographic data was a relatively new
phenomenon in the 19th century, having earlier been applied primarily in sci-
ence, mathematics, and engineering. Publications like the Philosophical Trans-
actions of the Royal Society included line graphs as early as the late 17th century
to display weather data, and later inventor James Watt used indicator dia-
grams to measure steam power (Funkhouser 289; Biderman 15). In the late
10. IDEOLOGY, MODERNIST AESTHETICS, CONVENTIONS 217
Because many of these readers were unfamiliar with the visual language of
data displays, the atlases had immense instructional value, educating citizens
not only in the progress of the nation but also in visual literacy.
The atlases completely transformed the design and reception of census
data, making them more compelling and comprehensible to the public. The
first three atlases (for the 1870, 1880, and 1890 censuses) were published as fo-
lios and included a wide array of maps, charts, and graphs, many of them in
full color (Walker; Hewes and Gannet; Gannett, Statistical, Eleventh). The sec-
ond set of three atlases (for the 1900, 1910, and 1920 censuses) were published
as smaller quarto-sized volumes, the last two rendered chiefly in black and
white (Gannett, Statistical, Twelfth; Sloane, Statistical, Thirteenth and Four-
teenth).1 The primary transformation in statistical display occurred in the three
folio atlases, heroic acts of visual rhetoric that were produced during the
founding era of statistical graphics (when “statistics” still largely meant data
about “states”). The first atlas (for the 1870 census), the folio with the fewest
pages, included over 50 plates, many of which contained numerous displays
that together comprised a total of 1,200 figures (Walker, Preface 1). The first
atlas contained a wide variety of “illustrations,” which were classified into two
types: “Geographical” and “Geometrical.” The former consisted of maps
with various systems for coding data, both physical and demographic, and the
latter were constructed of “lines and plane figures” (Walker, Preface 1–2). The
Geometrical illustrations included an array of configurations, including pop-
ulation distribution charts (males on one side, females on the other), area
charts, line graphs, pie charts, percent charts, and several novel displays. Maps
218 KOSTELNICK
accounted for about 2/3 of the plates, a proportion that shifted in subsequent
atlases as other forms were introduced, including rank charts and wind roses
(circular charts showing monthly distributions of deaths and diseases).
The graphical displays in the initial 1874 atlas visualized the distribution of
people across the country, their religious affiliations, occupations, literacy,
mortality rates, and health (including charts for blindness, deafness, idiocy,
and insanity). The 1883 atlas, published by Charles Scribner’s, included a more
comprehensive design of the census data, although it contained a smaller
range of display types, mainly maps, line graphs, and horizontal bar charts,
the latter of which often appeared in close proximity on the same plate. The
1883 atlas also visualized more economic data—about occupations, agricul-
tural production, manufacturing, finance, and other business activities
(Hewes and Gannett). The 1898 atlas contained probably the richest variety of
designs, introducing some new forms (e.g., wind roses) as well as displaying
variations of existing forms, with increased emphasis on visualizing data
about the burgeoning foreign population (Gannett, Statistical, Eleventh). The
quarto-sized 1903 atlas refined and consolidated existing forms, which were
then further winnowed down in the 1914 and 1925 black-and-white editions
(Gannett, Statistical, Twelfth; Sloane, Statistical, Thirteenth and Fourteenth).
Over the half century that the U.S. atlases appeared before the public, they
profoundly shaped visual discourse about statistical data. Before the 1874 atlas
appeared, graphical display in the United States lagged behind practices in Eu-
rope, which developed rapidly during the nineteenth century (see Funkhouser).
Some of the U.S. atlases’ designers—civil servants, academics, and members of
professional organizations, including the American Statistical Associa-
tion—were undoubtedly familiar with European developments in data display
(see Dahmann 2). International statistical congresses that were held in Europe
provided a forum for deliberating about graphical methods, but a consensus
about conventional practices was not reached (Funkhouser 311–322). Having
considerable leeway to visualize census data, the designers of the U.S. atlases
both modeled contemporary forms and invented their own, in the process sanc-
tioning a variety of genres, teaching American readers how to interpret them,
and building reader expectations.
Design is inherently rhetorical because its forms are largely negotiated and
shared by groups of users, or visual discourse communities (see Kostelnick
and Hassett 24–30). By socially constructing design forms, visual discourse
communities create, codify, and perpetuate conventional practices, which en-
gender expectations among its members. Those processes occur with all
forms of visual language—from architecture (houses, banks, campus build-
ings) to consumer products (furniture, cars, stereos) to information design, in-
10. IDEOLOGY, MODERNIST AESTHETICS, CONVENTIONS 219
FIG. 10.1. Sampling of Data Design Forms That Appeared in the U.S. Statistical
Atlases.
ing numerous such charts, with males outnumbering females in each of them,
particularly in western states like Nebraska and Nevada. Bi-polar charts ap-
peared again in 1898 and succeeding atlases to represent population data divis-
ible into two distinct but relatively equal groups. To many early readers of the
folio atlases, most of these forms were initially novel and supplied fresh, invit-
ing, and even challenging interpretive experiences: Those readers had little
10. IDEOLOGY, MODERNIST AESTHETICS, CONVENTIONS 221
FIG. 10.2. Bi-Polar Charts from the 1874 Statistical Atlas Showing the Distribution
by Sex of the Foreign-Born Population of States (Walker, Plate XXXIX).
sense of what was, or would become, conventional; to them, a pie chart may
have looked as exotic as the debt or bi-polar chart.
Many graphical displays in the atlases underwent novel adaptations be-
cause their conventional boundaries had not yet been established and data dis-
play genres themselves still lacked stability. For example, early bar and line
graphs with values that exceeded the plot frame were typically adapted to ac-
commodate the data. In the 1883 atlas, the designer of the bar graph in Fig.
10.3 represents two variables (Agricultural Laborers and Farmers and
Planters) that vastly exceed the horizontal baseline by snaking their bars back
and forth until they accumulate their total values. Dozens of bar graphs in the
1883 atlas use this novel and ingenious technique (see, for example, Hewes and
Gannett, Plates 34 and 35). A similar adaptation is used for line graphs with
anomalous values (Fig. 10.1k), which by extending or exceeding the plot
frame (Fig. 10.1k), climb up the plate like wild, unpruned branches (see Hewes
and Gannett, Plates 108 and 123). Although today’s readers might find these
practices curious or bizarre, they were not uncommon in the past (for exam-
ples, see Tufte, Envisioning 106–7). In the 19th century, conventions for display-
ing statistical data remained unsettled, and because the displays were executed
by hand, designers had both the opportunity and the exigency to improvise.
The large public audiences of the early atlases were no doubt receptive to
these practices because they were still largely unenculterated in emerging
genres like bi-polar, pie, and area charts.
222
FIG. 10.3. Bar Chart from the 1883 Statistical Atlas Showing Agricultural Occupations of Native and Foreign Population (Hewes and Gan-
net, Plate 64). Courtesy of the Rare Book and Special Collections Department of the Northern Illinois University Libraries, Northern Illinois
University, DeKalb, Illinois.
10. IDEOLOGY, MODERNIST AESTHETICS, CONVENTIONS 223
If we may compare the radii of the circle to the hands of a clock (supposing
these to be, instead of two, four, all of equal length), one hand, in these fig-
ures, always stands at six o’clock, and the others are moved around at vari-
ous angles to it and to each other, to represent the distribution indicated
above. (Walker, Preface 2)
The Preface and Introduction then tell readers how to interpret each of the
four segments of the pie chart, instruction that would likely strike contempo-
rary readers, fully enculturated in the genre of the pie chart, as both gratu-
itous and condescending.
Extensive explanations also accompanied area charts, novel forms that, un-
like bi-polar charts and pie charts, no longer claim conventional status. For ex-
ample, a plate in the 1874 atlas uses square area charts to represent “Church
Accommodation” by religious groups and states (see Fig. 10.4). Each square
contains five colored bars, four representing each state’s major denominations
(e.g., Methodists, Baptists, Presbyterians, Roman Catholics, etc.) and the fifth
showing all others combined. The note at the top of the plate explains this sys-
tem of representation:
224
10. IDEOLOGY, MODERNIST AESTHETICS, CONVENTIONS 225
So, for example, the square for Ohio (fifth row, second from the right) has no
“shaded interval” and therefore has room in its churches to accommodate vir-
tually everyone; on the other hand, Nebraska (directly above it) has a large
“shaded interval” and therefore has far fewer spaces in its churches than its
population. Fig. 10.1e shows another variation on the area chart that appears
on a field of like charts (Walker, Plate XX), each of which shows the relative
size and composition of a given state’s present population (the square on the
left) as well as of the native population that emigrated from the state (the rect-
angle on the right). Other than intuitively correlating area with population
size, readers must rely on explanations in the text (Walker, Preface 3) and at the
top of plate to interpret this complex system of representation.
Such explanations were far less frequent in the 1883 atlas, which used pri-
marily maps and horizontal bar graphs. The superiority of “simple linear” dia-
grams (vii), which included bar and line graphs, was noted by Hewes and
Gannet in their Preface: “Of the many kinds of diagrams hitherto used in the
illustration of statistical facts, this form is at once the simplest and the most ef-
fective” (vii). Empirical research has largely since corroborated Hewes and
Gannett’s choice of horizontal bar graphs by finding that readers can more ac-
curately compare data plotted along a scale extending from a baseline (Cleve-
land and McGill; see also Cochran, Albrecht, and Green). The 1898 atlas
includes a larger variety of displays, and hence more explanations, although
the explanations diminish markedly in subsequent atlases as the visual literary
of readers increased and as the atlas designers shunned novelty in favor of con-
ventional genres. In the later atlases (1914 and 1925) the variety of genres di-
minished, some genres (like the wind rose) disappeared, and other genres
underwent additional refinements—for example, maps signified density with
patterns and dots (Fig. 10.1p) rather than colors.
The atlases demonstrate a key principle of visual rhetoric—that informa-
tion design is socialized by discourse communities that construct, adapt, and
refine conventional practices and that enculturate users in those practices. As
decade-by-decade snapshots in the evolution of data displays, the atlases mod-
eled the process of convention building, as readers gradually became encul-
turated into genres that they came to understand and expect. Today, many of
these forms—bar graphs, pie charts, bi-polar diagrams—have become so fa-
miliar that we don’t question their conventional status as genres. This process
of enculturation creates rhetorical efficiency as well as poses an interpretive
problem because readers come to regard conventional forms as natural, direct
representations of fact unmediated by the artificial lens of design (see Barton
and Barton “Ideology”). For example, a designer might select a divided bar
graph (similar to Fig. 10.1o), a conventional form with high currency, to show
subdivisions among several quantities—for example, the relative health risks
to consumers of various types of prescription drugs. Although deploying a di-
vided bar graph may be more visually efficient than deploying pie charts or
226 KOSTELNICK
separate bars for each variable, the design may undermine the readers’ ability
to compare data because some bar segments won’t share the same baseline, an
interpretive problem that in this situation could have serious consequences for
readers. Nonetheless, readers will likely accept this representation because it
meets their expectations as a conventional genre.
As socially constructed forms of representation, data displays, like other
forms of visual language, attain conventional status within the discourse com-
munities in which they are deployed. Through the atlases, the U.S. government
sanctioned data display genres that were widely disseminated among the Amer-
ican public, fostering both their currency and credibility. That process was rhe-
torically significant because it cultivated readers’ expectations over half a
century, a long process compared to convention building in other domains (cor-
porations, universities), which through new management or visual identity pro-
grams can more rapidly transform their conventional languages.
Let these facts be expressed not alone in figures, but graphically, by means
of maps and diagrams, appealing to a quick sense of form and color … and
their study becomes a delight rather than a task. The density of settlement,
the illiteracy of the people, the wealth or poverty of different sections, and
many other features of great importance, hitherto but vaguely compre-
hended, are made to appear at a glance, and are so vividly impressed as not
to be easily forgotten. By such aids not only the statistician and political
10. IDEOLOGY, MODERNIST AESTHETICS, CONVENTIONS 227
economist, but the masses of the people, who make public sentiment and
shape public policy, may acquire that knowledge of the country and its re-
sources which is essential to intelligent and successful government. (vii)
To achieve that civic end, then, images “so vividly impressed as not to be easily
forgotten” (Hewes and Gannett vii) would serve as mnemonic devices that en-
abled readers to process and retain information. Nearly a century earlier, Wil-
liam Playfair made a similar claim in his Commercial and Political Atlas, arguing
that with the aid of his charts “as much information may be obtained in five min-
utes as would require whole days to imprint on the memory, in a lasting manner, by a
table of figures” (xii). Making information accessible and memorable to readers
was the paramount goal of visualizing it in maps and charts; as a reviewer of
the 1874 atlas put it, “the very reason of their being is because words and num-
bers cannot or will not tell the whole truth” (Brewer 85). Utilitarian, rather
than argumentative, benefits justified designing data, as they continue to to-
day.
However, designing information so that readers can comprehend and retain
it is scarcely an objective, neutral process. In the statistical atlases, data are de-
signed in thousands of artificial constructs that project a reading of the nation at
a specific historical moment, and in that sense those constructs are highly rhe-
torical, even argumentative. The visual arguments that the atlases posed to the
public address issues of nation building, dynamic migration, and the rapid as-
similation of foreigners. Nineteenth-century graphical displays were often used
to argue for public policy issues, with some of these displays envisioning epic
narratives of meteorology, natural history, economics, and health (and combi-
nations of these). They typically appeared in books and journals as foldout
plates, displaying several variables on the same plot frame, including annota-
tions about the data and historical events. These displays were exemplified by
Charles Joseph Minard’s chart of Napoleon’s Russian campaign, which repre-
sents the army’s march eastward over 400,000 strong and its retreat as it dwin-
dled to barely 10,000 (Tufte, Visual Display 40–41). Minard’s chart, lauded by
Tufte as perhaps “the best statistical graphic ever drawn” (Visual Display 40), bril-
liantly expresses the consequences of expansionism and implicitly argues to
keep French resources at home rather than squandering them on schemes
abroad. Another compelling visualization of a public policy issue was articu-
lated by Florence Nightingale’s charts, in which she used a circular time pattern
(akin to a wind rose) to display the death rates in hospitals during the Crimean
War (Funkhouser 343–345; see also Biderman 17–18).
How were public policy issues advanced by data displays in the statistical at-
lases? First, the displays visualize the concept of manifest destiny by charting the
deterministic narrative of westward expansion across the midwest, plains, and
west. In doing so, the atlases both narrate and advocate dynamic change by envi-
sioning a nation that is geographically mobile. All of the atlases included physi-
228 KOSTELNICK
cal maps of the entire country, coast to coast, and the vast regions awaiting
settlement. Although population maps in the 1874 atlas displayed primarily the
eastern half of the country (Fig. 10.1a), the 1883 atlas and its successors included
the whole country (Fig. 10.1b). To document manifest destiny, each atlas in-
cluded a map tracing the population center of the country as it progressed west,
beginning in 1790 near Baltimore and moving through West Virginia, Ohio, and
Indiana. In the 1883 and 1898 atlases these vast, dynamic shifts in population
were documented on maps showing the migration of population across states,
and they were further dramatized in rank charts (Fig. 10.1i), as some of the orig-
inal states lost their places to those more recently settled (see Hewes and
Gannett, Plate 18; Gannett, Statistical, Eleventh, Plate 2).
Visualizing westward migration argued that vast regions of the nation still
awaited settlement, which required additional sources of population. The at-
lases used several design strategies to track the movement of immigrants as
they were geographically assimilated. One strategy was to show, primarily
through maps, that foreigners were in fact migrating across the country and
were not merely concentrated on the coast. In the 1874 atlas, maps of the east-
ern half of the country show the distribution of foreigners, including specific
ethnic groups (e.g., Germans, Irish; Walker, Plate XXVII), and as we’ve seen in
Fig. 10.2, bi-polar population charts for each state show the distribution of for-
eigners by gender and age. In the 1883 atlas, bar charts were also used exten-
sively to locate immigrants, displaying the foreign population by state, its
percentage of the state’s population, and the percentages of each main ethnic
group (e.g, Irish, Scotch) by state as well as some large cities (e.g., New York,
Philadelphia). Virtually all of these charts displayed bars in ranked order so
readers could easily compare the size of each ethnic group. The migration
charts in the 1898 atlas emphatically visualize immigrants as the black seg-
ment on right of each bar (Fig. 10.1o; Gannett, Statistical, Eleventh 24). Collec-
tively, these displays argued that foreigners were being assimilated
geographically and playing a key role in westward expansion.
Visualizing the national assimilation of foreigners is epitomized in Fig.
10.5, a plate from the 1898 atlas showing a field of pie charts representing the
relative mix of foreign immigrants by state and territory. Fourteen ethnic
groups (in addition to a combined “Other Countries” group) are represented,
with most of the pie charts showing at least half of them. The field of pie
charts serves several rhetorical ends, principally by arguing that the foreign
population is both highly diversified and well distributed geographically. Be-
cause the equally sized charts show only the relative concentrations of foreign-
ers within a given state, they obscure the fact that some states had very high
concentrations of certain ethnic groups—e.g., Irish in New York, Germans in
Wisconsin, Scandinavians in Minnesota—and others far lower concentra-
tions. Southern states like South Carolina and Georgia, which experienced a
relatively small influx of foreigners, appear to have the same diversification as
FIG. 10.5. Field of Pie Charts from the 1898 Statistical Atlas Showing the National-
ities of the Foreign-Born Population by State (Gannett, Statistical, Eleventh, Plate 16).
229
230 KOSTELNICK
states like New York and Illinois. Because the field of pie charts prevents read-
ers from comparing absolute values from one state to another, it makes a com-
pelling argument for broad diversification and assimilation.
The atlases envisioned how foreigners were being assimilated not only geo-
graphically but also economically and vocationally. Although arguing visually
for geographical assimilation may have partly reduced the threat of foreigners
to native inhabitants, the social and economic effects of assimilation were
complicated by historical circumstances. In the 1890s the western frontier was
closing, and Americans were increasingly wary of foreigners, especially those
from southern and eastern Europe. Anti-immigrant sentiment ran particu-
larly high in the 1890s because jobs were scarcer during the financial down-
turn. “Nativist” groups opposed to immigration began to form, including the
Immigration Restriction League initiated by several Harvard graduates
(Daniels, Not Like Us 39–45; “Two Cheers” 14).
Amid these changing conditions, several visual strategies were deployed in
the atlases to represent the occupations of immigrants. The presence of for-
eigners in the occupational displays of the 1883 atlas was so subtle that readers
had to look closely to discern it. Occupations were displayed in bar graphs,
with natives signified by a wavy line inside the bars that distinguished them
from foreigners, a graphical technique illustrated in Fig. 10.3. In the 1898 atlas,
native and foreign workers were distinguished much more emphatically, both
in the form of separate bar charts displaying occupations of individual ethnic
groups (e.g., Italians, Russians) and of a percent bar chart categorizing the oc-
cupations of foreigners in relation to those of other groups (Gannett, Statisti-
cal, Eleventh 48–49, Plate 43). The shift to a more explicit form of display places
the immigrant issue squarely before the public and begs the question: By
showing economic assimilation during hard times, were the designers trying
to reduce the threat of foreigners, or were they fueling anti-immigrant senti-
ment? Depending on readers’ interpretive frameworks, they might be recep-
tive to either argument.
The 1903 atlas strikes a rhetorical compromise by combining natives and
foreigners in the same display, shown in Fig. 10.6. The chart represents over 40
occupations, which are itemized in the legend below, coded numerically
within the rectilinear areas on the chart, and grouped into five color-coded cat-
egories, from Agricultural Pursuits to Manufacturing and Mechanical Pur-
suits. The population is divided into four groups: native Whites of native
parents at the top of the chart, followed by native Whites of foreign-born par-
ents, foreign Whites, and Blacks at the bottom. This design enables even the
most casual reader to see that immigrants and their children are fully inte-
grated into a wide range of occupations that broadly mirror the patterns of
native Whites and Blacks, though foreigners are less active in Agricultural Pur-
suits and more active in Manufacturing and Mechanical Pursuits. By juxtapos-
ing the four population groups, the chart argues for broad assimilation but
10. IDEOLOGY, MODERNIST AESTHETICS, CONVENTIONS 231
FIG. 10.6. Area Chart from the 1903 Statistical Atlas Showing the Occupations of
Population Groups (Gannett, Statistical, Twelfth, Plate 87).
has rhetorical consequences, which Ben Barton and Marthalee Barton refer to
as the “rules of inclusion” and “rules of exclusion” (“Ideology” 53–62). In the
atlases, that control is clearly apparent in charts that downplayed, if not ex-
cluded, the foreign population. In a massive chart from the 1898 atlas showing
the growth in U.S. population from the first census in 1790 (Fig. 10.1n;
Gannett, Statistical, Eleventh, Plate 22), native Whites occupy the central core
of the display, swelling with each census from top to bottom. To the right, a
thin dark strip represents the Black population. On the left, however, foreign-
ers appear only incrementally, a design strategy that marginalizes them in rela-
tion to the total population, shown beneath in an area chart that subdivides
them by nationality. Graphical techniques also assuaged the impact of foreign-
ers on public health. In the 1874 atlas, a line graph shows the incidence of dis-
eases in both the native and foreign populations (adult and children) so that
readers can compare the data (Walker, Plate XLIV). However, the line graph
genre minimizes variations because the lines connecting data from one dis-
ease to another rise and fall at approximately the same angles. Subsequent at-
lases simply dodged the issue, as little information about diseases was
designed to compare foreign and native populations.
For some issues, like occupations, including or excluding information in
the atlases reflected the tenor of public discourse. The literacy of the foreign
population, for example, figured importantly beginning in the 1890s with at-
tempts to legislate literacy tests that would curb immigration, an effort that fi-
nally succeeded in 1917 (Daniels, Not Like Us 43–44; “Two Cheers” 14). The
atlases reflected the increasing public attention to literacy and the ability to
speak English. In the 1874 atlas, general illiteracy and adult White male illiter-
acy are plotted on maps (Walker, Plates XXIX and XXX), but in the 1883 atlas,
the ability to write is mapped for foreigners as well as visualized in a bar graph
(Hewes and Gannett, Plate 50). Subsequent atlases also charted illiteracy
rates, including a population distribution chart in the 1914 atlas comparing
data from the last and present censuses about foreigners’ ability to speak Eng-
lish (see Fig. 10.7). Overall, the language charts argue that foreigners as a
group are being assimilated linguistically into mainstream culture, though
these displays selectively reveal the data—including only the aggregate num-
bers and excluding the rates of individual ethnic groups. As a result, readers
are not invited to compare the relative literacy or English-speaking skills of
Italians, Germans, Russians, or other groups.
Although data about some public policy issues appear prominently in the
atlases, other data appear less frequently, if at all. In the climate of the post-
Civil War Reconstruction, displays of the Black population, for example, ap-
pear consistently but sparsely and seem to reveal the nation’s ambivalence
about their status. Data about Blacks appear in close proximity to data about
native Whites and foreigners, a gesture towards assimilation, but Blacks are
stereotypically represented graphically by darker shades (Figs. 10.1e and
FIG. 10.7. Bi-Polar Chart from the 1914 Statistical Atlas Showing Foreigners by Sex
Unable to Speak English (Sloane, Statistical, Thirteenth, Plate 226).
233
234 KOSTELNICK
Visual language embodies cultural knowledge about the world and about its
values, as we have already seen in the representation of public policy issues. Vi-
sual language also embodies another form of cultural knowledge—aesthetics
(Kostelnick “Cultural”). However, the role of aesthetics may seem invisible
because both readers and designers may be so entrenched in a given design
10. IDEOLOGY, MODERNIST AESTHETICS, CONVENTIONS 235
style that they become oblivious to its influence over them. However, aesthet-
ics permeates all areas of functional design, leaving a trail of cultural tracks.
For example, a technical illustration from the Renaissance will reveal the cul-
tural influence of the period (in the viewing angles, human figures, and other
contextual details), just as a high-contrast page of sans serif text with geomet-
rical forms will evoke early modernism. By projecting the aesthetic sensibility
of a given historical moment, visual language creates rhetorical energy by cul-
tivating and meeting readers’ expectations.
In the half century in which the atlases appeared, a sea change in aesthetics oc-
curred—from the decorative Victorian sensibility visible in the folio atlases to the
machine-age functionalism of the later ones. The folio atlases reflect a late 19th-
century aesthetic that fostered complexity, subtle variation, and natural forms. Al-
though readers may not have recognized the data display genres that first ap-
peared in the atlases, they most likely experienced an affinity with their aesthetic
composition and texture. The displays are colorful, detailed, and sometimes
multi-layered (e.g., the wavy line in the bar in Fig. 10.3). Shades of the same color
are typically employed in the maps to create subtle gradations of population den-
sity, which invite the reader’s careful study. The complex variety of the forms and
their richness of detail, linework, and color predate the functional economy of
modernism. Moreover, the displays rely on textual explanations for their interpre-
tation, creating an interdependence between word and image. Notes and labels
on the plates are primarily set in a serif typeface and often italicized; display text is
often rendered in handwritten capitals; and decorative arrows direct readers from
text to charts (see Fig. 10.3). Overall, the folio atlases reveal their historical and cul-
tural origins by embodying an aesthetic that the designers shared with their read-
ers and that gave the atlases a credible, authentic voice.
Although the folios embrace a delicate and highly ornamented aesthetic of
the late 19th century, the latter three atlases exemplify the transition to func-
tional modernism with its emphasis on economy and perceptual directness.
Modernism fostered cultural assimilation in two key ways: Its international
aesthetic visually dissolved cultural differences, and its emphasis on percep-
tual immediacy made data accessible to all readers, regardless of cultural back-
ground. Modernism sought to erase the stylistic conventions that separated
cultures by developing an “international” style that transcended national bor-
ders and unified cultures. Clean, geometric forms supplied a basic design vo-
cabulary for implementing the modernist program, engendering an aesthetic
of cultural homogeneity that dovetailed with the melting-pot ideology of
early 20th-century America.
Several design elements were deployed in the later atlases to visualize that
ideology. In the 1914 and 1925 atlases, color is largely superseded by black-
and-white patterns, or simply white space, virtually eliminating issues associ-
ated with interpreting color across cultures (see Horton 165–166). The seg-
ments of pie charts, for example, are no longer distinguished by color and
236 KOSTELNICK
legends but only by blank spaces, which are directly labeled with a sans serif
font, the modernist standard. This clean, objectified aesthetic is exemplified
by the visual language of population maps. Figure 10.8 shows a U.S. map from
the 1914 atlas showing the state-by-state percent of German immigrants. The
textured patterns reveal the distribution of German immigrants: heavy in the
upper Midwest and virtually nonexistent in the Southeast. No subtle or sug-
gestive cultural tracks infiltrate this map or others like it displaying immigrant
groups. Cleansed by the minimalist language of modernism, the data are visu-
alized as hard, objective facts devoid of any cultural associations.
The minimalist, international style of modernism well served the readers
of the later atlases, who were increasingly part of the melting pot, either as im-
migrants themselves or children of immigrants. The data not only visualized a
burgeoning multi-ethnic society; that society was also its audience—highly di-
versified, representing virtually every European language and nationality
(and others from around the world) as well as native Whites, some of whom
may have harbored ill feelings toward immigration. This culturally and lin-
guistically mixed audience was well matched with the international design
program of modernism, which aimed to democratize design by making it ac-
cessible to all. An advocate of this philosophy, Otto Neurath attempted to de-
mocratize statistics in the early 20th century through his Isotype system of
pictographic display. Neurath’s Isotype used pictures (e.g., of humans, cars) in
small, high-contrast, and equally sized increments, rather than as relative ar-
FIG. 10.8. Map from the 1914 Statistical Atlas Showing the Distribution of German
Immigrants by State (Sloane, Statistical, Thirteenth, Plate 217).
10. IDEOLOGY, MODERNIST AESTHETICS, CONVENTIONS 237
eas as had been done previously, so that readers could accurately compare
data. An extension of logical positivism, Isotype exploited visual perception so
that readers could directly apprehend facts about the economic and social con-
ditions of modern society (Lupton).5
The German immigration map (Fig. 10.8) illustrates several of these modern-
ist tenets. Like most displays in the 1914 and 1925 atlases, the map stands largely
on its own, perceptually linking reader and data with little textual mediation. Al-
though a single legend keys the data patterns for the six immigrant maps that ap-
pear on the same page, readers can perceive the main themes in the data without
even referencing the legend. Using black-and-white patterns to represent relative
population density exploits the gestalt principle of figure–ground contrast (darker
equals denser), and it flattens and economizes the maps compared to the
color-coding systems used in previous atlases. The flat black-and-white patterns,
however, have their drawbacks: They limit both the designer’s and the reader’s
ability to differentiate them, and the repetitive patterns (e.g., stripes) create what
Tufte calls “moiré effects” (Visual Display 107–11). But within the cultural frame-
work of functional modernism, these liabilities are offset by the aesthetic and
practical economies of black-and-white print.
Modernism, of course, did not have sole claim to perceptual accessibility. From
the start, the designers of the atlases intended their displays to be readily percepti-
ble to their readers—as Hewes and Gannett put it, to enable readers to see data “at
a glance” (Preface vii). In the Preface and Introduction to the 1874 atlas, Francis
Walker explains the perceptual qualities of its displays and their effects on the eye,
both in terms of a “general impression” of the data as well as closer readings of de-
tails (Walker, Preface 2). Tufte describes these two modes—on the one hand, the
big picture and on the other hand, the smaller local view—as the “macro” and
“micro” levels of interpretation (Envisioning 37–51; see also Barton and Barton,
“Modes” 150–155). All of the atlases give readers access to data on both levels,
though the emphasis gradually shifts away from the micro-level access in the fo-
lios to the more perceptually immediate macro-level, a shift that generally mirrors
the modernist emphasis on perceptual efficiency.
In the early atlases, especially the 1874 and 1898 atlases, graphical displays
were often spread across folio pages—as in Fig. 10.5, the field of pie charts—
which added another level of complexity by variegating their perceptual con-
text. Although the segments of the pie charts (e.g., British, Austrian, or Polish
immigrants) are consistently color-coded across the displays in the visual field,
the larger narrative is visually fragmented into the individual profiles of each
pie chart, one state at a time. The same applies to folio plates of population dis-
tribution charts: Readers can readily identify the anomalies (in asymmetrical
states like Nevada in Fig. 10.2), but the profiles of other states are rendered
more subtly in individual charts, as they are in the field of square area charts
for church accommodations (Fig. 10.4). In these instances, the micro-level re-
veals more compelling information than a glance at the whole plate.
238 KOSTELNICK
The rectilinear area chart of occupations from the 1903 atlas (Fig. 10.6)
strikes a balance between the macro- and micro-levels. The color and grouping
of elements enable readers to see the big picture and to compare variables—
e.g., to see that the foreign population has a larger share of workers in Manufac-
turing and Mechanical Pursuits than the other population categories, and fewer
in Agricultural Pursuits. On the micro-level, readers can explore the sub-plots
embedded in the larger narratives. For example, they can discover that the for-
eign population includes few lawyers and virtually no barbers, housekeepers, or
masons. Readers are empowered to access information on both levels and to
shuttle freely between the two.
In the later atlases, the emphasis shifts decidedly to the more perceptually
accessible macro-level. The design of the German immigration map (Fig.
10.8) emphasizes the macro-level through the visual immediacy of its high-
contrast design. The bi-polar chart in Fig. 10.7 (also from the 1914 atlas) simi-
larly foregrounds the macro-level with a linear, minimalist design. Readers
can readily see the dominant patterns—heavy concentrations of non-Eng-
lish speaking immigrants in the Middle Atlantic states and a few other local
areas—but no horizontal gridlines encourage the eye to explore micro-level
data for individual states. The dot density map (Fig. 10.1p), which appeared
initially in the 1883 atlas (Hewes and Gannett lix) but was refined and ex-
panded in the 1914 atlas, exemplified this shift to the macro-level by visualiz-
ing data as tiny uniform dots. Most readers wouldn’t try to count the
individual dots in a given region (unlike the folio maps where readers could
often, if they wished, scrutinize the data county by county). Densely con-
centrating in some regions and lightly dusting others, the dots on the maps
provide an unmediated macro-view, a gestalt that links data and eye through
direct perception. By emphasizing “seeing” over close “reading,” the
macro-view over the micro-view, modernist design presumed to tap directly
into the perceptual faculties of readers—any readers, anywhere, regardless of
their ethnicity—and therefore required minimal learning or enculturation
(see Bertin 179–181; Lupton).
The shift toward a modernist aesthetic for the data displays, then, rein-
forced the melting-pot ideology by representing changes in population in a
seemingly objective design accessible to a multi-ethnic audience. As Robin
Kinross points out, however, the rhetorical “neutrality” of modernism em-
bodied its own ideology. An aesthetic program that aimed to erase cultural
difference by creating an “international” style was hardly neutral. Historical
perspective further clarifies its ideological bent. Today the forms of early
modernism—the rectilinear grid of steel-and-glass buildings, the sleek lines
of furniture, the sans serif page of text, as well as the high-contrast displays
of the last two atlases—appear starkly, even gratuitously, functional. The
cultural framework of modernism has long since yielded to the nuanced,
10. IDEOLOGY, MODERNIST AESTHETICS, CONVENTIONS 239
CONCLUSION
During the half century in which they appeared, the statistical atlases played a
key role in defining the visual language of data displays in the United States.
By experimenting with a variety of forms, imitating them in successive atlases,
and educating readers in how to interpret them, the designers of the atlases
developed and modeled a conventional visual language for displaying data. By
envisioning the progress of the nation, the atlases also shaped civic discourse
about public policy issues, particularly regarding the influx of immigrants and
their assimilation geographically, vocationally, and linguistically. In doing so,
the atlases also projected the prevailing tides in taste, from an aesthetic that
valued ornament and close reading to one that valued economy and percep-
tual immediacy. In several ways, then, the atlases built a rhetorical bridge to
contemporary information design.
This bridge-building process reveals a good deal about the nature of visual
rhetoric in practical communication. Visual rhetoric is an intensely social pro-
cess that entails convention building within discourse communities and a pro-
cess of enculturation that fosters visual literacy among group members.
Information design also embodies the shared cultural knowledge—values,
ideologies, and aesthetic tastes—of its designers and readers at a given histori-
cal moment. Although these social elements provide a foundation for infor-
mation design, visual rhetoric is scarcely deterministic. Rather it turns on
readers’ interpretations in specific situational contexts, one reader at a time.
That some readers of the statistical atlases, however, may have initially found
the data displays novel, clever, or incomprehensible testifies to the powerful
social forces that drove the visual rhetoric of these images. By constructing a
coherent visual narrative from a wealth census data, over a half century the at-
lases progressively enabled a diverse, multi-ethnic audience to envision to-
gether the nation’s rapid growth.
240 KOSTELNICK
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
I wish to thank the editors of this collection, Charles Hill and Marguerite
Helmers, for their helpful suggestions on an earlier draft of this chapter.
NOTES
1. The statistical atlases were published from three to eight years after the actual cen-
sus year. Copies of the 1874, 1883, and 1898 atlases appear on the Library of Con-
gress Web Site (http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/gmdhtml/census.html),
which also contains additional background information (see Dahmann).
2. According to the 1874 statistical atlas, “The Geographical illustrations, in
general, require no verbal description and explanation, beyond what is
given on their face” (Walker, Preface 3); a line graph is described as a “more
familiar mode of illustration” (Walker, Preface 2).
3. Tufte’s predecessors include Willard Brinton, whose Graphic Methods for Pres-
enting Facts (1914) analyses distortions caused by areas and volumes (20–40).
Several decades of empirical research have clarified and authenticated these
concerns (see Cleveland and McGill; Macdonald-Ross; Cochran, Albrecht,
and Green).
4. In the political arena, for example, Ross Perot was lampooned for using
charts and graphs in his 1992 presidential campaign.
5. Although Neurath’s Isotype system was infused with the democratic ideals
of early modernism, Clive Chizlett argues that Neurath may have used his
design skills in the Soviet Union in the 1930s to misrepresent mass deaths
resulting from famine.
WORKS CITED
Barton, Ben F., and Marthalee S. Barton. “Ideology and the Map: Toward a Postmodern Vi-
sual Design Practice.” Professional Communication: The Social Perspective. Ed. Nancy
Roundy Blyler and Charlotte Thralls. Newbury Park, CA: Sage, 1993: 49–78.
—-. “Modes of Power in Technical and Professional Visuals.” Journal of Business and Techni-
cal Communication 7 (1993): 138–162.
Bertin, Jacques. Graphics and Graphic-Information-Processing. Trans. William J. Berg and
Paul Scott. New York: Walter de Gruyter, 1981.
Biderman, Albert D. “The Playfair Enigma: The Development of the Schematic Represen-
tation of Statistics.” Information Design Journal 6.1 (1990): 3–25.
Boorstin, Daniel J. The Americans: The Democratic Experience. New York: Random House,
1973.
Brewer, W. H. “Walker’s Statistical Atlas of the United States.” The American Journal of Sci-
ence and Arts (Third Series) 10 (1875): 83–88.
Brinton, Willard C. Graphic Methods for Presenting Facts. New York: Engineering Magazine
Company, 1914.
10. IDEOLOGY, MODERNIST AESTHETICS, CONVENTIONS 241
Chizlett, Clive. “Damned Lies. And Statistics. Otto Neurath and Soviet Propaganda in the
1930s.” Special Issue on Diagrams as Tools for Worldmaking. Ed. Sharon Helmer
Poggenpohl and Dietmar R. Winkler. Visible Language 26.3/4 (1992): 298–321.
Cleveland, William S. and Robert McGill. “Graphical Perception: Theory, Experimenta-
tion, and Application to the Development of Graphical Methods.” Journal of the Ameri-
can Statistical Association 79.387 (1984): 531–554.
Cochran, Jeffrey K., Sheri A. Albrecht, and Yvonne A. Green. “Guidelines for Evaluating
Graphical Designs: A Framework Based on Human Perception Skills.” Technical Com-
munication 36 (1989): 25–32.
Dahmann, Donald C. “Presenting the Nation’s Cultural Geography: 1790–1920.” Lib. of Con-
gress, Washington. June 2003. <http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/gmdhtml/
census2.html>.
Daniels, Roger. Not Like Us: Immigrants and Minorities in America, 1890–1924. Chicago: Ivan
R. Dee, 1997.
—. “Two Cheers for Immigration.” Debating American Immigration, 1882–Present. Ed. Roger
Daniels and Otis L. Graham. Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield, 2001: 5–69.
Funkhouser, H. G. “Historical Development of the Graphical Representation of Statistical
Data.” Osiris 3 (1937): 269–404.
Gannett, Henry. Statistical Atlas of the United States, Based upon Results of the Eleventh Census.
U.S. Census Office. Washington: GPO, 1898.
—, comp. Statistical Atlas: Twelfth Census of the United States, Taken in the Year 1900. U.S. Cen-
sus Office. Washington: U.S. Census Office, 1903.
Hewes, Fletcher W., and Henry Gannett. Scribner’s Statistical Atlas of the United States,
Showing by Graphic Methods Their Present Condition and Their Political, Social and Indus-
trial Development. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1883.
Horton, William. “Overcoming Chromophobia: A Guide to the Confident and Appropri-
ate Use of Color.” IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication 34.3 (1991): 160–173.
Kinross, Robin. “The Rhetoric of Neutrality.” Design Issues 2.2 (1985): 18–30. Rpt. in Design
Discourse: History, Theory, Criticism. Ed. Victor Margolin. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1989:
131–143.
Kostelnick, Charles. “Conflicting Standards for Designing Data Displays: Following,
Flouting, and Reconciling Them.” Special Issue on Visualizing Information. Ed. Wil-
liam M. Gribbons and Arthur G. Elser. Technical Communication 45 (1998): 473–482.
—. “Cultural Adaptation and Information Design: Two Contrasting Views.” IEEE Transac-
tions on Professional Communication 38 (1995): 182–196.
Kostelnick, Charles, and Michael Hassett. Shaping Information: The Rhetoric of Visual Con-
ventions. Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois UP, 2003.
Kostelnick, Charles, and David D. Roberts. Designing Visual Language: Strategies for Profes-
sional Communicators. Needham Hts., MA: Allyn and Bacon, 1998.
Lupton, Ellen. “Reading Isotype.” Design Issues 3.2 (1986): 47–58. Rpt. in Design Discourse:
History, Theory, Criticism. Ed. Victor Margolin. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1989: 145–156.
Macdonald-Ross, Michael. “How Numbers Are Shown: A Review of Research on the Pre-
sentation of Quantitative Data in Texts.” Audio-Visual Communication Review 25 (1977):
359–409.
Monmonier, Mark. “The Rise of the National Atlas.” Cartographica 31.1 (1994): 1–15.
Neurath, Otto. International Picture Language: The First Rules of Isotype. London: Kegan
Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., Ltd., 1936.
242 KOSTELNICK
Nightingale, Florence. Notes on Matters Affecting the Health, Efficiency and Hospital Adminis-
tration of the British Army. London: Harrison, 1858.
Playfair, William. The Commercial and Political Atlas, Representing, by Means of Stained Cop-
per-Plate Charts, the Progress of the Commerce, Revenues, Expenditure, and Debts of England,
during the Whole of the Eighteenth Century. 3rd ed. London, 1801.
Sloane, Charles S., comp. Statistical Atlas of the United States. Thirteenth (1910) Census. U.S.
Bureau of the Census. Washington: GPO, 1914.
Sloane, Charles S., comp. Statistical Atlas of the United States: Fourteenth (1920) Census.
U.S. Bureau of the Census. Washington: GPO, 1925.
Tufte, Edward R. Envisioning Information. Cheshire, CT: Graphics P, 1990.
—. The Visual Display of Quantitative Information. Cheshire, CT: Graphics P, 1983.
Walker, Francis A., comp. Statistical Atlas of the United States Based on the Results of the Ninth
Census 1870. U.S. Census Office. New York: Julius Bien, 1874.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
243
244 STROUPE
eracy for employment, and that teaching the practices of a constitutive liter-
acy encourages a desirable critical consciousness that helps enable students to
understand, and even act to expose and change, the usually unspoken ideolo-
gies that inform their cultures.
In teaching New Media Writing at the university, however, the necessity of
using, and therefore teaching and learning, various information technologies
foregrounds the instrumental mechanics of producing satisfactory texts.
Lacking a well-established method of visual/verbal composition, a tradition
of online belle-lettres, or a prevailing theory of digital cultural studies, the po-
tential for constitutive literacy in the use and end-products of Dreamweaver
or Photoshop can seem a mere abstraction, something that rhetorically enno-
bles our educational enterprise in scholarly analysis, but that is difficult to
show students and to help them emulate in practice. Yoking together “media”
and “literacy” or “visual” and “rhetoric,” therefore, presents imaginary, lin-
guistic resolutions in scholarly writing which elide the broad differences be-
tween the purposes of corporate training and liberal-arts curricula.
Saying that these tropic resolutions are metaphorical or imaginary doesn’t
mean they are not both conventional and useful in scholarly discourse. These
critical metaphors or oxymoronic neologisms produce what Wolfgang Iser
calls “gaps,” interpretive dilemmas that both negate the norms represented by
the opposed elements—in the case of “visual rhetoric,” the conventional as-
sumptions we make about how images work as opposed to how words do—as
well as suggest positive alternatives at some “virtual point of convergence”
(34, 49). In a phrase, such dilemmas represent a creative irritant, the grain of
sand that ideally instigates a pearl.
The challenge of teaching visual rhetoric lies in transplanting our “virtual”
critical resolutions between visual and literate cultures (our scholarly pearls)
into the practical work of digital production. We need to show students specific
examples and techniques of genuinely converged literate and iconographic
authorships in New Media environments, to provide them with a critical lan-
guage for understanding and imitating these models in a variety of situations,
and thus to establish a new pedagogical method and institutional practice ap-
propriate both to the humanities and to the needs of students. In essence, we
must decide whether Dreamweaver and Photoshop can be used for “literate”
purposes and, if so, whether such purposes can and should be taught.
Before answering yes to all of these questions, we must recognize that the
competition between visual design and verbal rhetoric long predates the ad-
vent of digital culture. W. J. T. Mitchell has characterized and critiqued the cus-
tomary attitudes of bibliocentric disciplines like English and composition as
combining an iconoclastic “contempt” for graphic images as uncritical “idola-
try, fetishism, and iconophilia,” a “fear” toward visual discourse as a “racial, so-
cial and sexual other,” and a tendency to see any genre that combines the two
discourses, such as the theater, as a “battleground between the values associ-
11. RHETORIC OF IRRITATION 245
ated with verbal and visual codes” (151, 157–158). Those who feel the need to
defend print culture against a supposed obsolescence draw a similar line in the
sand between traditionally linear, sustained print discourse and digital hyper-
texts that “chunk” content and bedevil the act of reading with interminable
clicks and choices. As George Landow among others has observed, hypertext
realizes the long-theorized “death” of the author—the idea of a unified and
discreet authorship being fundamental to most literature and composition
curricula—and a shift of authority to readers, viewers or, most recently, “us-
ers,” who cannot as readily be canonized or studied textually.
Just as the idea of “visual rhetoric” is made intellectually imaginable in the
very act of combining these categorically opposed terms in a single trope, I
will argue that the practice of visual rhetoric is made methodologically imag-
inable in the principle of juxtaposing “inappropriately” opposed categories
into a constitutive whole. In what follows, I only half facetiously call this
method of inappropriate juxtapositions a “rhetoric of irritation,” and I will
examine two specific visual texts, a Web page and a photocomposite, to
show how these “irritating” juxtapositions represent a ideologically expres-
sive dialogue—what Mikhail Bahktin calls “dialogism.” In Greg Ulmer’s
Web essay, “Metaphoric Rocks” and George E. Mahlberg’s Photoshopped
image, “Oswald in a Jam,” I will show that this dialogism, this dialogue
among normally unrelated voices and contexts, produces both an irritation
in the text as a kind of discursive friction between these perspectives—
whether expressed visually, verbally or in some hybrid form like a Web
page—as well as a social irritation in the audience who registers this friction
as a kind of disruption of “normal” discourse. Like Iser’s “gaps,” this sense
of disruption calls attention to interpretive dilemmas and cultural instabili-
ties that exist socially beneath the veneer of appropriate assumptions (that
is, ideology) at any moment in history, and which these dialogues echo and
enact explicitly in the visual/verbal texts.
The rhetoric of irritation can be a visual rhetoric, as we’ll see in Mahlberg’s
photocomposite, because it is not exclusive to the verbal medium. In the case
of “Metaphoric Rocks” as I shall discuss in more detail below, Ulmer combines
images and words by enacting a dialogue between academic and promotional
intentions, a dialogue made possible by his blithely ignoring the appropriate
distinctions between their purposes and contexts. Ulmer’s words and images
are thus able to speak to one another because neither illustrates the other. In-
stead, both verbal and visual elements illustrate and enact the dialogical
tug-and-pull between these cultural tensions and identities, words and images
essentially riffing off the same theme. The lack of an instrumental, illustrative
word/image relation thus suggests a constitutive relation in the spirit of the
dialogism that Mikhail Bakhtin describes among languages in the novel, and
which I am arguing represents the basis for a “literate” practice in digital or vi-
sual discourse. Bakhtin writes:
246 STROUPE
All words [or images] have the “taste” of a profession, a genre, a tendency, a
party, a particular work, a particular person, a general, an age group, the
day and hour. Each word tastes of the context and contexts in which it has
lived its socially charged life; all words and forms are populated by inten-
tions. (293)
Bahktin’s choice of the word “taste” here is worth noting because it under-
scores what he does and doesn’t mean by languages and their “mutual illumi-
nation.” That is, the “literate” effect of a dialogical text (what he calls
“novelistic discourse”) depends not on the cultivated taste developed in the
classroom or the art gallery, but the taste acquired by the word from its use in
the street, the field, or the office—from the life that the word (bad, eclectic,
gnarly, convergence) has lived, and is living, socially. The “artistic organiza-
tion” of the text doesn’t itself illuminate notational systems, but reflects the
light and energy of living words rubbing up against other words, languages,
lives, contexts, tastes and intentions.
Greg Ulmer’s “Metaphoric Rocks: A Psychogeography of Tourism and
Monumentality,” demonstrates how such dialogical, cultural energies can in-
tegrate words and images by combining tastes and contexts into meaningful,
if not entirely stable, hybrid compositions. In essence, rather than a page made
monological (as opposed to dialogical) by the dominance of either alphabetic
or iconographic language, both verbal and visual elements are located within
a dialogically animated field of contrasting (in this case, comically resonating)
intentions.3 Conventional, formal word/image relations are disrupted by the
unconventional, cultural play of voices and purposes.
The verbal text of Ulmer’s essay is ostensibly addressed to the Florida Tour-
ism Commission, on behalf of the “Florida Research Ensemble [or FRE] … a
faculty group at the University of Florida that practices an experimental ap-
proach to arts and letters.” Ulmer’s narrator takes exception to the fact that the
Commission has paid $250,000 to the New York consulting firm, Penn and
Schoem, to advise the state on its role in promoting tourism:
11. RHETORIC OF IRRITATION 247
sheet. But does the suggested comparison work completely? Does the pamphlet
also represent—perhaps in its proclamation of “FREE ADMISSION AND
PARKING!”—a visualization of the principles of a just society? The pairing and
captioning of the images, as well as the academic argument of the verbal text,
insists on this possibility. However, the “everyday,” contextual distinction be-
tween the intentions of Platonic philosophy toward Atlantis in the Timaeus (“to
understand … the just state”) and the intentions of the promotional ad
(“Florida’s Best Visitor Value …”) exemplify and “italicize” strains among these
differing languages that the verbal argument at this point would suppress.
Ulmer’s “Metaphoric Rocks,” then, represents a larger, dynamic structure
in which both the verbal text and the string of images are dialogical. The role
played by the images, however, is not simply illustrative because the zigzag-
ging lines of dialogical development—the explicit shifts and juxtapositions be-
250 STROUPE
Mahlberg’s words (conviction, drive, passion, blues, beltin’, serious) verbally ex-
press the surprising relationship, made visually apparent in the picture itself,
between political violence and music, or terrorism and performance. These
words specify the photocomposite’s provocative juxtapositions between the
institutional tumult of the 1960s—represented by the Vietnam War, antiwar
protests in the streets, and the assassinations of John and Robert Kennedy and
Martin Luther King—and the decade’s promise of freedom and cultural revo-
lution as embodied in the idealism of the rock-and-roll generation. The appro-
priate inappropriateness of the juxtaposition offers a glimpse beyond roman-
ticizations of transcendent ’60’s rebellion and even of tragic ’60s violence.
More fundamentally, the interpretive tensions called out by the image bring
into consciousness the normalizing ideological categories that we customarily
use to separate ideas of social chaos and cultural progress, and that suppress
the realization that political violence and terrorism are varieties of theatrical
spectacle.
On his previous website, where “Oswald In a Jam” appeared for years under
the title “In-A-Gadda-Da-Oswald,” Mahlberg’s commentary suggested the
dialogical nature of the images conception and execution. In addition to being
an obvious reference to Iron Butterfly’s 1968 song, “In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida,” the
original title also recalls, wrote Mahlberg,
In the context of Mahlberg’s work across media, the original title of the
photo thus provides a key to how the image was conceived creatively, and
how it must be interpreted aesthetically and culturally. Indeed, the photo is
a visual corollary to the aural performance Mahlberg describes here, a
densely layered radio experience that combines ‘60s-era rock, live journal-
istic texts, ruminative oral poetry, and contemporary electronica in an in-
tentionally disorienting, suggestive and provocative way. The deliberate
anachronism of combining the political events of 1962 and 1963 with a hit
song of 1968 in a single, dramatic sequence serves to bracket the years be-
tween, to explicitly set off “the ‘60s” as a subject of the piece. The invoca-
tion of Brian Eno recalls that artist/producer’s trademark, avant-garde
techniques of layering and repeating variable tape loops, which he devel-
oped in the 1970s.4
Although Mahlberg refers to neither the radio feature nor to Brian Eno in the
image itself, the image “Oswald in a Jam” is a “cover”—in both music industry
senses of the word as an imitation of or homage to the original radio work, as
well as a visual correlative of its aural performance. Both these sources serve as
discursive models (of radical juxtaposition and deferred meaning) for
Mahlberg’s production and our interpretation of the image, placing the viewer
among apparently conflicting or competing layers of context, where the image’s
unresolved dialogical tensions resist easy settlement.
Tellingly, the suggestiveness of this image is not an automatic result of
combining surprising visual elements in the same scene, as evidenced by
comparing Mahlberg’s image to the relatively mild and conventional effects
achieved by the run-of-the-mill “Photoshopped” images (essentially photo-
graphic single-frame cartoons) that circulate on the Internet by e-mail, or
featured on such sites as <http://www.worth1000.com>. Like distinctions
between academic and commercial cultures that Ulmer invokes (by blithely
transgressing) in “Metaphoric Rocks,” the dialogical tensions in “Oswald in
a Jam” draw their energy and meaning from corresponding cultural and
ideological tensions called out from among the viewers’ own cultural norms
and assumptions. Because the viewer is implicated in the instabilities and in-
terpretive dilemmas presented by the image’s juxtapositions, meaning is not
immediate but deferred, everywhere and yet nowhere, contained not in one
element or in the meeting of the elements, but in the irritating, Iserian gaps
between the familiar, historical scene of terrorism (a society in crisis) and
Mahlberg’s insinuation of rock-and-roll transcendence.
254 STROUPE
corporate and civic in use and must speak to the lowest common denominator
to successfully provide as many users as possible with the content. They might
point out that Mahlberg’s image is more notable as a novelty than a true exam-
ple of visual culture as seen across media. “Oswald in a Jam” is thus a rarified
highjacking of the iconic language that, like images of the burning Twin
Towers, more often serves in popular discourses to represent already under-
stood ideas. Since meaning in Ulmer and Mahlberg is deferred, reflective and
implicit—rather than direct, immediate and explicit—the chronically impa-
tient user posited by usability studies might take anything from these texts, or
nothing. Who’s to say?
Yes, who’s to say? That is the question. These differences raised here be-
tween users versus audiences, these assertions of what the Web or visual cul-
ture is or isn’t, remind us that describing, theorizing, and instructing are
ways of talking—abstract and figurative, whether arrived at empirically or
intuitively—and never the thing itself. A Web page or an image might really
be simple until someone, literally or figuratively, pastes a sticker on its sur-
face asking an irritating question that reminds us that culture happens—al-
ways. A class in New Media Writing or other digital production is a class
largely concerned with how to talk about reading and creating digital texts.
In English or composition, such a class uses words that emerge from their
critical traditions, words that have, in Bakhtin terms, lived their “socially
charged lives” in the disciplines and are “populated by [their] intentions”
(293). This chapter has been an exercise in one such way of talking, of apply-
ing the adjective, “literate,” and the noun, “rhetoric,” to the business of read-
ing and composing digital or visual texts.
In concluding, then, I must reconsider this chapter’s opening dichotomy
between teaching the instrumental and constitutive senses of “literacy,” be-
tween the mechanical, bread-and-butter skills of digital production and
the critical awareness of the cultural work of words and images. Insisting
on such an opposition is useful for those in the humanities tradition teach-
ing Dreamweaver and Photoshop because these faculty feel a necessity to
resist the class’s natural undertow toward a focus on software instruction,
computer science, graphic design, or usability, which follow the tug of stu-
dents’ expectations and novices’ needs. In practice, what distinguishes the
two kinds of literacy is not the action of the classroom or the means of pro-
duction, but the words we use, just as a visitor might not distinguish a typ-
ing classroom from computer-assisted writing classroom until hearing
what is said, the kinds of words being used. In this way, use of the oxymo-
ron, “visual rhetoric,” is not just a critical trope, but also a key to a practice,
because practice follows seeing, and seeing follows talking. Who’s to say?
The visual is always rhetorical when rhetoricians are doing the looking,
and especially when they are talking about the visual with the taste of rhet-
oric in their mouths.
11. RHETORIC OF IRRITATION 257
NOTES
WORKS CITED
Bakhtin, Mikhail. The Dialogic Imagination. Trans. Caryl Emerson and Michael Holquist.
Austin: U of Texas P, 1981.
Biagra, Jello. “Holiday in Cambodia.” Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables. Dead Kennedys. Al-
ternative Tentacle,1980.
Eno, Brian. Ambient 1: Music for Airports. Eeg, 1978.
Iser, Wolfgang. Implied Reader: Patterns of Communication in Prose Fiction from Bunyon to
Beckett. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1978.
Krug, Steve. Don’t Make Me Think: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability. Indianapolis:
New Riders, 2000.
Landow, George P. Hypertext: The Convergence of Contemporary Critical Theory and Technol-
ogy. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1992.
258 STROUPE
What is more banal, more everyday, and more routinized, than shopping for
groceries? Yet, the little choices and daily decisions made about where to shop
for food and what to buy are constitutive elements of living in the contempo-
rary world. Grocery stores, supermarkets, super-shopping centers, health-
food stores, whole-food markets, and co-ops provide more than food, they ma-
terialize consumer culture in tidy, colorful packages. Further, they are mate-
rial and visual sites in which individuals directly negotiate their relations with
globalized consumer culture. Here, in the grocery store, the forces of global
capitalism, the contemporary transformation of transportation, production
and packaging technologies and the discourses of postmodern consumer
marketing intersect with the lived bodies of individuals. Located at the inter-
sections of these elements of the contemporary condition, the grocery
store—as banal as it may be—is a crucial place for understanding everyday, vi-
sual rhetoric in a postmodern world.
It is only within particular stores, within specific material locations, that
these global transformations intersect with the particularities of bodies and
subjects. We turn our attention, then, to the Wild Oats Market in Fort Collins,
Colorado. Although this Wild Oats—one store in an international chain of up-
scale, organic food stores—is not exactly analogous to the big-box supermar-
ket in which a huge portion of all groceries are sold, it provides a particularly
felicitous place for thinking about the relations between global and local that
are fundamental to postmodernity.1 Wild Oats is a powerful rhetorical site be-
cause for many of its visitors, it serves as one hub in their daily lives, sliding, as
many daily habits do, under the critical consciousness, and working within the
comforts of habit and routine. We will argue that Wild Oats responds to the
abstractions and discomforts of globalized postmodern consumer culture
259
260 DICKINSON AND MAUGH
with a rhetoric of connection that draws on images of locality and nature, and
asserts a particular form of community.
But, we turn our attention to Wild Oats not simply because of the ways it
condenses particular problems of postmodernity, but also because of the
ways it helps us think about the functions of visual rhetoric. As the chapters in
this book demonstrate, studies in visual rhetoric often focus on what might
best be called visual images. In this volume alone, we see investigations of
film, advertising, photography, editorial cartoons, travel guides and statistical
tables. These are obvious texts for both theoretical and critical reflection on vi-
sual rhetoric because these texts clearly do their work through visual means.
As Martin Jay argues, scholars thinking about visuality across the disciplines,
and over the scope of Western philosophy have consistently focused on pre-
cisely these kinds of images.
In this chapter we want to extend the analysis of visual rhetoric from the vi-
sual arts of photography, television, film and print to place.2 Clearly the visual
arts fill our vision on a daily basis. At the same time, the daily visuality of our
lives consists of that which fills our everyday spaces. The places in which we
live and work, the rooms in which we teach, drink coffee, and sleep, are always
apprehended, understood, and constructed visually. In the everyday, then, vi-
sual rhetoric includes the visual suasion of images, but must also include the
visuality of the spaces in which we live. Yet these places are not simply or pri-
marily visual, they are always material and concrete and they are the sites of
our embodied realizations of our selves. A well-rounded understanding of vi-
sual rhetoric needs to address the embodiment of visual rhetoric.
But how a definition or a theory of visual rhetoric should address materi-
ality is a complex problem, a problem for which we have, at best, partially
constructed solutions. As will be clear from our analysis of Wild Oats, build-
ings, and the institutions they house do not simply respond to the contempo-
rary through visuality, instead they draw in the fully embodied subject.
Indeed, although Wild Oats provides visual comforts, it also embeds the
consumer in its rhetoric through taste, touch, smell and hearing. Wild Oats’s
appeal to the fully embodied subject became apparent in our investigation
of the visual persuasion of Wild Oats. As we wrote, we kept finding our-
selves sidetracked into writing about tasting and touching and smelling and
hearing. This suggested to us that visual rhetoric in the built environment
seldom if ever functions alone.
In the first section of the chapter, we will proffer one definition of the
functions of visual rhetoric in postmodern spaces. This definition will lead
us to a consideration of the ways everyday spaces serve as sites for negotiat-
ing the contours of postmodernity. In the second part of the chapter, we will
turn to Wild Oats to ground this understanding of visual rhetoric in a partic-
ular site. In the final section, we reflect on what the analysis might tell us
about the rhetorical power of at least some postmodern spaces and, more
12. PLACING VISUAL RHETORIC 261
1–3; Braidotti 41–56; Squier 113–132; Zita 76–79). In short, the identity crisis
of postmodernity is one that challenges subjectivity, and does so in part by
challenging the notions of the body itself.
Within this context of dislocation, postmodern visual rhetoric can be par-
ticularly useful as individuals seek to create coherent and comfortable iden-
tities. Many postmodern texts negotiate the problems of postmodernity in
one of two ways. On one hand, many rely on a relentless quoting and refer-
encing of a large range of other cultural texts. Jim Collins, writing about
film, works through the ways many contemporary films combine visual
conventions from two or more genres. Movies like Shanghai Noon or Scream
refuse insertion in any one genre (western or horror, in these cases) but are
constructed almost exclusively through quotations of and comment on the
generic constraints that once made films predictable. These films revel in
and rely on semiotic excess for their visual and narrative resources and in so
doing, help audiences negotiate an image-saturated landscape (Collins 127).
Some texts, however, utilize a very different strategy. These popular texts
nostalgically recall simpler times or offer stories and images that seem more
coherent. Collins calls films using this reactive rhetorical strategy new sincer-
ity films. New sincerity films offer audiences simple and seemingly authentic
identities and powerfully real connections with others. Dances With Wolves is
a kind of touchstone in this postmodern genre. In this film, the generic con-
straints of the classic western are rewritten. Native American values and
ways of life are portrayed as modes of salvation against the greed and avarice
of White, Christian capitalism. What is crucial here is Collins’s argument
that the shifts of postmodernity have not left audiences completely adrift. It
is not as though, Collins argues, culture is in a post-enlightenment moment
while subjectivity remains foundered in enlightenment possibilities. In-
stead, these new texts and their audiences, working together, are creating
new strategies through which individuals are able to more or less success-
fully negotiate the postmodern terrain.
Although films and other popular culture texts provide important resources
as subjects traverse the dislocations of postmodernity, surely the everyday
spaces in which these subjects enact themselves are at least as important. If post-
modernity is characterized by dislocations within both time and space, and if
these dislocations have their bodily effects, then the everyday spaces in which we
enact our embodied selves become crucial to thinking through rhetorical re-
sponses to postmodernity. Architecture negotiates the postmodern visual land-
scape with strategies similar to those used in films and popular music (Jencks,
“Hetero-Architecture” 60–63). On one hand, postmodern architecture (espe-
cially in the relatively narrow definition offered by Charles Jencks, Language 6)
poaches from a range of historical styles to construct buildings that are not
wholly new, but which create meaning through intertextual weavings of im-
ages. These buildings acknowledge the loss of concrete historical and geograph-
12. PLACING VISUAL RHETORIC 263
the virtual eclipse of the public realm, the growing encroachment of the
marketplace and the state in the private realm, the shift to flexible accumu-
lation, the growing gap between rich and poor, increased access to informa-
tion technologies and influence of intelligent machines, the consequent
obscuring of power, and the resultant challenge to dominance of the mod-
ern world view all contribute to a peculiar postmodern insecurity. (26)
If Fort Collins, a town of just over 125,000 people, has an urban core, it is in what
many refer to as “old town.” Straddling College Avenue, old town has the oldest
commercial buildings, a growing collection of civic buildings and, not surpris-
ingly, houses the most visible difficulties of contemporary life including the
homeless mission and the groups of homeless and aimless wandering the
streets.4 The city has grown south, leaving behind these conditions as it builds
large houses in new developments and constructs shopping complexes filled
with middle-class stores and restaurants. Across from the city’s increasingly up-
scale mall, behind the Cadillac dealer, north of the BMW lot, south of the
Porsche and Audi sellers, and within blocks of Fort Collins’s more expensive es-
tablished neighborhoods, Wild Oats is part of the new and prosperous Fort Col-
lins. Shoppers arrive at Wild Oats only after passing through these staunchly
bourgeois neighborhoods and retail districts. Already clued into the aesthetic
and class concerns of the area, Wild Oats patrons parking in the store’s lot are
well prepared for the shopping experience Wild Oats proffers.
Our analysis begins here, in this parking lot. Like the range of stores sur-
rounding Wild Oats and typical of suburbs and newer urban developments,
Wild Oats in Fort Collins is a box building fronted by a parking lot. In this
form—box floating in a sea of pavement and parked cars—Wild Oats in no
way resists late modern and postmodern strip shopping complexes. At the
same time, a number of exterior design features immediately distinguish the
Wild Oats box from other boxes in parking lots. The building is not nearly as
large as local supermarkets, and it is much smaller than a Super Wal-Mart.
This smaller size gives the building a more human scale. It feels more personal
and more local simply because it is smaller than its competitors. This personal-
ized feel is reinforced by the planters with trees that line a table filled patio on
the east, while liberal use of tile in the siding begins to pull the building outside
of the prefabricated abstractions and the bigger-is-better ways of contempo-
rary consumer culture. This relatively small store utilizing living trees as de-
sign elements resists the fast food, “biggie-meal” model of food consumption.
The name of the store—Wild Oats Market—announces the store’s particu-
lar response to contemporary culture in two ways. First, the name emphasizes
the store’s connection to nature and food. Wild Oats could refer to a life in the
wilds of nature (with convenient parking out front). Further, it suggests resis-
tance to the rules as the shopper can sow wild oats in the store. And of course it
connects to a grain—oats—that is particularly nutritious.5 So the first two
words work to connect us to natural, liberating food products.6 Just as interest-
ing, however, is the name, “Market.”7 Sharon Zukin, thinking both about the
built environment and the troubles of market and place writes, “[i]n theory, a
postmodern culture suggests the possibility of reconciling landscape and ver-
nacular, and market and place; but the more visible it becomes, the more it
12. PLACING VISUAL RHETORIC 265
doors, the visitor is greeted by the sight of Wild Oats’s particular vision of
marketplace in postmodernity.
Producing Locality
It is no mistake that on entering the store, the first vision shoppers see is that
of organically grown fruits or vegetables piled high in wooden crates. Color-
ful and fresh, the produce proclaims Wild Oats’s commitment to carefully
grown food. But the food is not just displayed for vision; as the shopper
moves to the display, other senses are engaged as well. Perhaps they pick up a
peach feeling it for freshness; the shoppers smell it, hoping to catch the scent
of a peach orchard. On many days, the display includes samples of produce
encouraging the shopper to taste and literally consume and incorporate the
produce. At this site then, the entire body is woven into the Wild Oats’s rhet-
oric of nature. The fruit of the earth is seen and felt, its taste and scent avail-
able to the consumer.
This moment may present the store’s most powerful rhetoric. Engaging a
full range of embodied senses immediately draws the visitor into Wild Oats’s
attempt to overcome the complex abstractions of postmodernity. Tasting,
smelling, touching, and looking lead to choices that involve the whole person
in the complex systems by which produce moves from farm to table. In short,
the forces of globalism bring produce from around the world to this store, to
this consumer, to this body, finding in the body its final and its absolutely local-
ized resting place.
This initial display is part of a larger display of fresh produce that takes up
the entire right front of the store. Like the first display, the rest of the pro-
duce is artfully presented. You will not find the grapes pre-packaged or the
cherries pre-selected, instead the produce is available to be touched and han-
dled. Signs naming the produce also name the country or state that grew the
produce and whether the produce is organic. The signs indicate that some of
the produce is grown locally; however, most of it comes from places like
Chile, Mexico and California. At first, this appears problematic for a store re-
sisting globalization, but rhetorically it is presented to be just the opposite.
Knowing the origin of the produce allows the store to tell the customer that
they support organic produce regardless of where it was grown. Just as im-
portantly, although the produce comes to Wild Oats from across the global,
in naming its country of origin, Wild Oats works to demystify the systems
that bring food to our tables. Fresh tomatoes do not appear magically in Jan-
uary, but are, as the signs proclaim, shipped from organic farms in Mexico.
The produce section at Wild Oats is caught between resisting globalization
and providing the full range of goods made possible by globalization. If our
Wild Oats on the front range of the Rocky Mountains limited itself to pro-
duce grown locally, its selection would be slim even in summer. This prob-
12. PLACING VISUAL RHETORIC 267
lem is not as great in, say, Southern California, but even there, it is impossible
to get all the produce desired all year long.
In the produce section, then, Wild Oats is not outside of globalization but
negotiates our relationship to globalized structures through a rhetoric of lo-
cality rather than through a rhetoric of the local. This rhetoric of locality seeks
not to reinforce the local versus the global, but rather to negotiate the range of
possibilities offered by globally dispersed localities. Embedding the individual
in one particular and well-known local site is less crucial then giving the sub-
ject the means by which they can locate themselves in the web of global sys-
tems, places and processes. Unlike the colonizing force of corporations like
McDonalds, Wild Oats asserts a more progressive vision of globalization. In
Wild Oats, global capitalism can work to encourage organic farming and a
range of agricultural practices that sustain traditional, healthier modes of liv-
ing not only for shoppers at Wild Oats, but for workers around the globe. In
this way, Wild Oats fits into practices like Body Shop’s use of “exotic” products
from underdeveloped nations and produced by natives and Starbucks claims
of support for fair trade practices (Kaplan 61; Mathieu 123). In both cases, the
institutions claim that rather than colonizing native others, their practices en-
hance the lives and communities of workers. In Wild Oats’s produce depart-
ment, then, consumers are invited into an economic and cultural globalism in
which buying tomatoes in January is a way of making better a world that is
otherwise overly challenging.9
Nature in Bulk
Of course, the produce section, in keeping with our argument so far, is also
deeply connected to nature. This connection to nature reinforces the rhetoric
of locality because particular forms of earth and climate result in particular
produce. But in connecting locality to nature, Wild Oats tries to reconnect in-
dividuals with the earth and its bounty. The wide variety of produce available
is, of course, part of this rhetoric of nature. But so too is the wide range of
goods available in the bulk section. The sheer number of bins, displaying a
wide range of colors and shapes, works to insert the visitor into the abundance
of natural goods the earth produces. Standing outside of the abstract systems
that support agri-businesses and supermarkets, the bins pronounce nature’s
gifts that, for many shoppers, are unavailable in other supermarkets. The
shopper, looking from one bin the next, reading the cards that explain the
product or its use, choosing to fill a bag with flax seed flour or Brazil nuts, be-
comes intimately intertwined with the materials themselves. In these prac-
tices as in the practices enacted in the produce section, the shopper becomes
part of the nature offered and seen. In a sense, the consumer becomes embed-
ded in the labor that moves food from field to table. The consumer selects the
product, packages and labels it. The shopper is not separated from the food by
268 DICKINSON AND MAUGH
sealed packages that hide rather than reveal the status of the material bought.
Instead the bulk section reconnects shoppers to nature, overcoming the sepa-
ration from our “natural condition by instruments of [our] own making”
(Burke 13).
This connection to nature fostered in the produce and bulk sections of the
market, is reinforced throughout the store through broader design elements.
A primary element at work in this feel is the use of wood around the store. The
ends of the shelves are trimmed in wood. Wood display cases stand at each of
the checkout stands, while fresh baked artisanal breads and pastries are held in
blond wood cases. Add fresh-cut flowers throughout the store (even in the
bathrooms) and a fireplace in the café and you have a store that consistently
draws on visions of nature.
The packages in these wood cases also proclaim their naturalness. On the
shelves in the middle of the store we find the packaged foods, from bags of
chips to cans of tomatoes. Yet, nearly every package, in some way or another,
proclaims the naturalness of the product inside. Of course, the labels nature
and natural are in constant use, but also crucial are a whole host of other
descriptors including organic, pure and no preservatives. Harvey Levenstein ar-
gues that consumers consistently believe that these key words denote foods
that are “healthier, safer and better for them” (199). It is crucial, of course, for
the packaging to declare the naturalness of the contents. Without this maneu-
ver, the bag of chips at Wild Oats would seem to be more or less the same as a
bag of Doritos. This would begin to undercut Wild Oats’s rhetorical claim to
connectedness within globalization. What the chip aisle and all the other aisles
of processed, packaged foods in Wild Oats provide are the comforts of mass
produced, processed foods, but with a “natural” difference.
Like the rhetoric of locality just discussed, the rhetoric of the natural is not
so much opposed to global consumer culture, but rather is a particular posi-
tion within that culture. Rather than a rejection of postmodern systems, “all
natural” cups of soup exploit the very means of processing the language
seems to resist. As postmodern consumer culture raises the desire for a more
natural, less plastic life—in short, a simpler yet abundant life—natural foods
companies and stores provide carefully processed and packaged food that con-
sistently claims its own naturalness. By displaying these packaged products in
wooden cases, bringing the consumer to packaged products after leading
them through the produce and bulk sections that highlight the natural, the
consumer is ready to believe the claims on the package label.
A Slice of Community
Wild Oats strives to create connection not just through a rhetoric of locality or
nature, but also through the establishment of ethical, socially conscious com-
munity. Wild Oats produces community connections through a range of full
12. PLACING VISUAL RHETORIC 269
tin board on which community groups can post announcements and adver-
tisements. The magazine racks hold alternative magazines; Organic Gardner
replaces Better Homes and Gardens, Yoga Journal replaces Sports Illustrated. Taken
together, these differences between Wild Oats and the “mainstream” super-
market connect the store with a particular kind of consumer who is fully in-
volved in consumer culture, but a consumer culture predicated on its status as
alternative. Wild Oats provides a site where individuals resisting the
one-size-fits-all, better living through chemistry model of consumption can
find a home, a place of comfort and connection.
Finally, a sense of belonging to a community outside the store’s walls is re-
inforced at the “donation station.” Wild Oats offers a bulletin board near the
front of the store where customers may pick up information about donating
money to various causes. A similar bulletin board is located in the back of the
store where customers can drop off their donations as they shop. In Wild Oats’
south parking lot, there is a permanently stationed Good Will donation trailer
where, each day during business hours, patrons can contribute household
items and clothing. Wild Oats strives to convince customers that it cares about
the community and they reinforce this value in their customers, as they invite
them to donate. The combination of the customer donations and the store’s
donations allow the consumer to give back to the community in which they
live. Even if the customer does not directly give to a charity, Wild Oats does.
By simply shopping at Wild Oats, anyone can be a donor.
The mini-markets, inclusiveness and donation programs, combine with
rhetorics of locality and nature in inviting shoppers to feel part of a larger, or-
ganic community. This community, as proffered by Wild Oats, supports sus-
tainable farming and progressive economic development, it offers holistic
modes of eating and healing. In short, the community connections available
in Wild Oats seem to directly address the alienation and anomie that is charac-
teristic of postmodern consumer culture. And yet the store does not directly
resist consumerism, it does not argue for a radical remaking of the economies
of globalization, it does not suggest a decentering of dominant social or cul-
tural formations. Instead, drawing on a full range of consumer goods and
globalized markets, Wild Oats offers an image of home and community that is
comforting but not transformative, familiar but not radically new.
We have been arguing that Wild Oats provides a particular way of negotiat-
ing the discomforts alienating tendencies of postmodern, globalized con-
sumer culture. At first glance, Wild Oats appears to be offering a space of
action outside of the postmodernity to which it responds. In fact, this is not
the case. Instead, through its rhetoric of locality, nature, and community,
12. PLACING VISUAL RHETORIC 271
Wild Oats, although not appealing directly to images of the native, the tribal,
or the underdeveloped engages in a related rhetoric of connection creating
transnational, postmodern bonds that leave open personal freedom to con-
sume while providing enough details of time and place about the products
consumed to provide comfort. But even in this specificity, even in these
rhetorics of locality, nature, and community, the deep social injustices on
which transnational consumers depend are constantly and always hidden and
mystified (Kaplan 61).
This mystification in Wild Oats is particularly powerful because of the
ways it works on the whole person. Wild Oats’s rhetoric is of course visual.
The sight of the produce, the bins of natural grains and beans, the vision of
the butcher cutting our steak and the baker slicing our daily bread visually
draw us into this rhetoric of connection. However, we do not just see the
produce or the bread, the meat or the cheese—we taste and touch and
smell. We do not just consume with our eyes but with our whole selves.
The connections proffered by Wild Oats are materialized in an instant, in
272 DICKINSON AND MAUGH
the sound and the smell, the taste and the touch, and the sight. As the indi-
vidual searches for a locality in which to feel secure, as the body seeks a way
toward its lost naturalness, as the subject desires the interconnections of
community, visual rhetoric provides some of the hoped-for resources. But
as this analysis of Wild Oats suggests, these connections can be even more
powerfully made when we understand that the eye is embodied and rheto-
ric is material.
How then does this analysis enrich our initial definition of visual rheto-
ric in everyday built spaces? Earlier we suggested that postmodern visual
rhetoric in everyday built environments serves as one way for customers to
negotiate the dislocations characteristic of postmodernity. We went on to
argue that postmodernity undermines our ability to locate ourselves in
time or space or, for that matter, in our own bodies. Our discussion of Wild
Oats intersects directly with both this definition and this naming of the dif-
ficulties of postmodernity. As our subjectivities and our bodies are frag-
mented and dispersed, we desire more than just a vision or a sight of
comfort, we desire a site in which our whole bodies might find comfort. Vi-
sual rhetoric in space becomes most compelling not simply when the vi-
sion is compelling, but when the rhetoric appeals to the intersections
among the five senses. The sight of the peach is made more powerful by
the smell and touch and taste.
Visual rhetoric in space is part of the way a site like Wild Oats helps cus-
tomers negotiate the postmodern terrain. But we negotiate that terrain
with all of our selves, with all of our bodies. The rhetoric of locality helps
us locate our bodies in relation with other bodies in the world. The rhetoric
of nature helps assure us that some part of our bodies—as extended as they
may be by postmodern technologies and cultures—are or can be also natu-
ral. And the rhetoric of community connects our individual values with
those of others close to us in both time and space. As Elizabeth Grosz ar-
gues, locatedness in place is fundamental to both subjectivity and coherent
understandings of bodies (93). Vision, along with hearing, touch and
smell, become fundamental to the body in locating itself in the world and,
thus, fundamental to the functioning of both the body and the subject. The
body and the subject turn not so much to extraordinary spaces—muse-
ums, cathedrals, civic buildings, monuments—for comfort and coherence,
but to places of everyday life. In grocery stores and offices, homes and cof-
fee shops, the body and the subject search for places that, in very literal
ways, help shape the contours of the everyday. Particularly powerful, we
suggest, are those places like grocery stores, restaurants, kitchens, and cof-
fee shops that can most thoroughly and explicitly address the seeing, tast-
ing, hearing, touching, and smelling person into the rhetorics of space.
The visual rhetorics of place, then, function most profoundly within these
interconnections among bodies, subjects and vision.
12. PLACING VISUAL RHETORIC 273
NOTES
1. Wild Oats stores began in 1987 in Boulder, Colorado. Wild Oats Markets,
Inc., with over 107 stores across the United States and Canada, not only spe-
cializes in natural, organic, and gourmet food, but also contain large sec-
tions devoted to natural health and beauty products including
supplements, homeopathic remedies, essential oils and the like. In its mar-
keting on the Web and, to some extent, in its in-store marketing, Wild Oats
supports a liberal form of consumer capitalism that we will take up later in
the chapter (WildOats.com).
2. A number of rhetorical critics have taken up space and architecture as im-
portant sites for analysis. See, Armada; Blair, “Contemporary”; Blair,
Jeppeson, Pucci; Blair and Michel; Dickinson, “Joe’s”; Dickinson, “Mem-
ories”; Gallagher, “Memory”; Gallagher, “Remembering”; Katriel.
3. We use the term, everyday built environment for at least two reasons. First, our
interest lies more in the kinds of banal spaces most of us use most of the
time rather than in high or “important” architecture. Second, we are signal-
ing our intention to focus not just on the building or even the interior de-
sign, but on the wide range of visual and material elements that are part of
the banal spaces, including the products for sale, the people in the building
and the like (de Certeau xx-xxvi; Lefebvre, Critique 92).
4. Like many gentrifying old towns, Fort Collins’s old town has both the appeal
of centrality and the demerits of relative poverty and density. As a center, it
contains fancy stores devoted to chocolate, kitchen goods, housewares and
fine (for Fort Collins) restaurants. But as the dense center of the city with a
range of civic and non-profit services for the poor and the homeless, it also
is the most visible site/sight of the contradictions of postmodern con-
sumer culture. As middle-class patrons sip $3 lattés, the poor and the home-
less congregate at the bus stop. For a fuller discussion of these
contradictions see, Zukin.
5. It is more than a bit ironic that wild oats are weeds of which the farmer tries
to rid the field. Perhaps it is within a world in which most consumers are
fully separated from the farming that produces the food that Wild Oats is a
reasonable name for a grocery store.
6. It should be noted that Wild Oats’s major competitor, Whole Foods, uses a
similar strategy in naming. Although there is not quite the connection to re-
sistance in the play on the old saying “sowing wild oats,” or “feeling her/his
oats,” there is the distinction from the over-packaged, over-processed food
sold at traditional supermarkets. The similarities do not end there. In-
deed, although customers may be fiercely loyal to either Wild Oats or
Whole Foods, our sense is that much of the visual and material rhetoric of
the two stores is more similar than different. We base this claim on our vis-
its and regular use of Wild Oats and Whole Foods stores in Fort Collins and
274 DICKINSON AND MAUGH
WORKS CITED
Armada, Bernard J. “Memorial Agon: An Interpretive Tour of the National Civil Rights
Museum.” Southern Communication Journal (1998): 235–243.
Blair, Carole. “Contemporary U.S. Memorial Sites as Exemplars of Rhetoric’s Materiality.”
Rhetorical Bodies. Ed. Jack Selzer and Sharon Crowley. Madison: U of Wisconsin P, 1999:
16–57.
—, Marsha Jeppeson, and Enrico Pucci. “Public Memorializing in Postmodernity: The
Vietnam Veterans Memorial as Prototype.” Quarterly Journal of Speech 77 (1991):
263–288.
—, and Neil Michel. “Reproducing Civil Rights Tactics: The Rhetorical Performances of
the Civil Rights Memorial.” Rhetoric Society Quarterly 30 (2000): 31–55.
Braidotti, Rosi. Nomadic Subjects: Embodiment and Sexual Difference in Contemporary Feminist
Theory. New York: Columbia UP, 1994.
Burke, Kenneth. Language as Symbolic Action: Essays on Life, Literature, and Method. Berkeley:
U of California P, 1966.
Butler, Judith. Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity. New York: Routledge,
1990.
Callinicos, Alex. Against the Third Way: An Anti-Capitalist Critique. Cambridge, UK: Polity, 2001.
Collins, Jim. Architectures of Excess: Cultural Life in the Information Age. New York:
Routledge, 1995.
Cyphert, Dale. “Ideology, Knowledge and Text: Pulling at the Knot in Ariadne’s Thread.”
Quarterly Journal of Speech 87 (2001): 378–395.
Dallmayr, Fred. Achieving Our World: Toward a Global and Plural Democracy. Lanham, MD:
Rowman and Littelfield, 2001.
De Certeau, Michel. The Practice of Everyday Life. Berkeley, CA: U of California P, 1984.
Dickinson, Greg. “Joe’s Rhetoric: Starbucks and the Spatial Rhetoric of Authenticity.”
Rhetoric Society Quarterly 32 (2002):5–27.
12. PLACING VISUAL RHETORIC 275
—. “Memories for Sale: Nostalgia and the Construction of Identity in Old Pasadena.”
Quarterly Journal of Speech 83 (1997): 1–27.
—. “Movies, Memories and Merriment: Making Postmodern Spaces in Los Angeles.”
Philologia Hispalensis 13 (1999): 99–103.
Ellin, Nan. “Shelter from the Storm or Form Follows Fear and Vice Versa.” Architecture of
Fear. Ed., Nan Ellin. New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 1997: 13–45.
Gallagher, Victoria J. “Memory and Reconciliation in the Birmingham Civil Rights Insti-
tute.” Rhetoric and Public Affairs 2 (1999): 303–320.
—. “Remembering Together: Rhetorical Integration and the Case of the Martin Luther
King, Jr. Memorial.” Southern Communication Journal 60 (1995): 109–119.
Grossberg, Lawrence. We Gotta Get Out of This Place: Popular Conservatism and Postmodern
Culture. New York: Routledge, 1992.
Grosz, Elizabeth. Volatile Bodies: Toward a Corporeal Feminism. Bloomington: U of Indiana P,
1994.
Gunn, Giles. Beyond Solidarity: Pragmatism and Difference in a Globalized World. Chicago: U
of Chicago P, 2001.
Haraway, Donna J. Modest_Witness@Second_Millennium. FemaleMan©_Meets_OncoMouse™:
Feminism and Technoscience. New York: Routledge, 1997.
Hardt, Michael, and Antonio Negri. Empire. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 2000.
Harvey, David. The Condition of Postmodernity. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell, 1989.
Hutton, Patrick H. History as an Art of Memory. Hanover: U of Vermont P, 1993.
Iyer, Pico. The Global Soul: Jet Lag, Shopping Malls, and the Search for Home. New York: Alfred
A. Knopf, 2000.
Jay, Martin. Downcast Eyes: The Denigration of Vision in Twentieth-Century French Thought.
Berkeley: U of California P, 1993.
Jencks, Charles. “Hetero-Architecture and the L.A. School.” The City: Los Angeles and Ur-
ban Theory at the End of the Twentieth Century. Eds. Allen J. Scott and Edward W. Soja.
Berkeley: University of California P, 1996.
—. The Language of Postmodern Architecture. 5th ed. New York: Rizzoli, 1987.
Kaplan, Karen. “A World Without Boundaries: The Body Shop’s Trans/National Geogra-
phies.” Social Text (1995): 45–66.
Katriel, Tamar. “Sites of Memory: Discourses of the Past in Israeli Pioneering Settlement
Museums.” Quarterly Journal of Speech 80 (1994): 1–20.
Lefebvre, Henri. Critique of Everyday Life. N. Vol. 1. Trans. John Moore. London: Verso,
1991.
—. The Production of Space. Trans. Donald Nicholson-Smith. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers,
1991.
Levenstein, Harvey. The Paradox of Plenty: A Social History of Eating in Modern America. New
York: Oxford U P, 1993.
Mathieu, Paula. “Economic Citizenship and the Rhetoric of Gourmet Coffee.” Rhetoric Re-
view 18 (1999): 112–127.
Mayo, James M. The American Grocery Store: The Business Evolution of an Architectural Space.
Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1993.
Nora, Pierre. “Between Memory and History: Les Lieux de Memorie.” Representations 26
(1989): 7–25.
Soja, Edward W. Postmodern Geographies: The Reassertion of Space in Critical Social Theory.
New York: Verso, 1989.
276 DICKINSON AND MAUGH
For the middle class in Victorian England, the concept of home was of para-
mount importance. A particular home confirmed a specific family’s place in
the social order, and, in ideological terms, reiterated middle-class standards
through a concrete visual example that conformed to certain norms. Because
middle-class identity was defined in large part through the imaginative value
of domesticity, the physical images presented by actual homes were comple-
mented with print images in texts that participated in creating domestic ideol-
ogy. The cultural meaning of home thus depended heavily on the visual as
both a tangible image and a metaphor. As I will argue, Victorian domesticity
was importantly disseminated as a visual rhetoric that combined ideological
significance—the intangible, ideal image of the respectable family—with
physical images of homemaking in textual illustrations that reproduced this
ideology in a consumable format.
Texts that illustrate how to achieve a proper home—and thereby establish
and continually confirm one’s middle-class identity—proliferated in Victorian
culture. At mid-century, the available images of home ranged from paintings
and literature that depicted domestic scenes to architectural treatises and
housekeeping guides that offered multiple visions of how to build a house and
live in it.1 This wide range of genres, circulating around a common set of is-
sues, defined the vital link between domesticity and identity: displays of good
taste in decorating, brilliance at entertaining, and thorough competence at the
daily management of a household full of children and servants were the surest
markers of middle-class respectability. In her study on Victorian domesticity,
Elizabeth Langland notes that, “appearances are productive of substantial ef-
fects, and those who know how to manage the social signifiers are individuals
277
278 KASTON TANGE
cluded scriptural extracts in the exhibition catalogue entry, I would argue that
the narrative implied by this image is that the highly detailed domestic interior
has played a significant role in awakening the woman’s conscience.7 For a
knowledgeable Victorian reader, this domestic space would serve as an indict-
ment of the woman because the piano, the fashionable decorations, and the
neglected embroidery wools on the floor are all guilty reminders of what her
position at the center of this drawing-room ought to be. The seemingly end-
less proliferation of domestic detail in this painting was praised by John
Ruskin, a well-known commentator on art and architecture, and a man whose
public lectures, books, and articles often discussed aesthetic issues in terms of
their relationship to identity. In his letter to The Times of May 25, 1854, he
wrote, defending Hunt’s painting:
Nothing is more notable than the way in which even the most trivial ob-
jects force themselves upon the attention of a mind which has been fe-
vered by violent and distressful excitement …. Even to the mere spectator
a strange interest exalts the accessories of a scene in which he bears wit-
ness to human sorrow. There is not a single object in all that room, com-
mon, modern, vulgar … but it becomes tragical, if rightly read. That
furniture, so carefully painted, even to the last vein of the rosewood—is
there nothing to be learnt from that terrible lustre of it, from its fatal new-
ness; nothing there that has the old thoughts of home upon it, or that is
ever to become a part of home? (7)
Ruskin argues that Hunt’s careful painting of domestic detail, “even to the last
vein of rosewood,” is a purposeful means of conjuring tragedy and pity in the
viewer who “rightly” reads the scene. Attributing the power of the painting to
the way it ties the girl’s moral failings to the failure of this fashionable decor
“to become a part of home,” Ruskin notes the reciprocity between the domes-
tic space and the woman it contains. Her disgrace has prevented her from cre-
ating a home out of these domestic objects, just as the objects themselves have
failed to impress her into moral action. Moreover, he collapses the woman
herself with the viewer of the painting in his observation that “nothing is
more notable than the way in which even the most trivial objects force them-
selves upon the attention of a mind which has been fevered by violent and dis-
tressful excitement”—it is both her mind and the spectator’s that is forced to
see the “distressful” significance of these “trivial objects.”
It is additionally important that Ruskin reads this interior as “modern, vul-
gar” and terribly, fatally new, for these loaded terms would have immediately
signaled to his readers that this domestic space has been created by people
whose money is new and whose middle-class sensibilities might therefore be
suspect. He implies that this image reveals one of the primary dangers that
household advice texts tacitly address: the nouveau riche will have the money to
282 KASTON TANGE
buy middle-class goods but will not have the moral fiber or sense of taste to en-
able them to “do” domesticity properly. Hence, I would argue that one reason
this painting caused such public discomfort is that it provides an inversion of
the cultural value of middle-class domesticity by focusing too-detailed atten-
tion on how domestic identity might go wrong. Hunt’s painting draws on the
accepted notion that a respectable home with a good woman at its center
might coincide to produce a moral culture, but it offers a picture of the ob-
verse: a middle-class home occupied by those who are disreputable will ulti-
mately be a failure as a space, unable to exercise the proper moral influence on
its inhabitants. His picture was a scandalous image, then, not because it
showed a fallen woman but because it revealed that domesticity might fail to
produce respectable citizens.
Hunt’s image is an important one to consider because it both reveals and
challenges the cultural ideals of domesticity and the power of images to en-
force those ideals. However, in terms of sheer quantity, Hunt’s image was
more than counterbalanced by the multitudes that elided this negative poten-
tial of domesticity by focusing on the positive power of home to influence be-
havior and consolidate class position. Works on architecture and
housekeeping from the 1830s and 1840s owed a clear debt to the conduct man-
uals that had been important to defining identity since the 18th century. Fol-
lowing the conduct manuals’ focus on character as paramount, these early
homemaking texts relied on conceptual models of home based on intangible
qualities such as personal taste, moral character, feminine influence, and the
notion of domesticity as a haven from the public world of commerce and
competition.8 Minimally illustrated, these texts tended to show either generic
domestic scenes, like a mother reading to a child, or historical models of aes-
thetic architectural principles. In the 1850s, however, texts on homemaking
began to move toward the more practical concerns of contemporary house-
holds. These later works give directions on how to design, build, and decorate
a healthy and convenient house; hire, manage, and fire servants; cook food,
tend the sick, and clean every household item that might get dirty. Not surpris-
ingly, these texts are more visually oriented, and the illustrations they provide
contain informative images rather than classical models. Significantly, the
movement from questions of the character of home and its occupants to prac-
tical directions for managing a household did not imply that character ceased
to be a central component of domesticity. Rather, it rhetorically connects the
value of character with the tangible facts of home creation to indicate that
middle-class identity requires not just the sterling character described in con-
duct manuals but also the visible marker of having achieved that identity, the
ideal home space in which to display that character.
Significantly, these advice texts occupy a paradoxical position, defining
middle-class homes while simultaneously endorsing the assumption that such
homes are the exclusive province of those who have “naturally” reached this
13. ENVISIONING DOMESTICITY 283
FIG. 13.2. “Thoroughfare Plan,” from Robert Kerr’s The Gentleman’s House. London:
John Murray, 1871, Plate 52, facing page 470.
household to avoid unsanctioned meetings on the way to and from the highly
segregated places within the home.11
Corridors for “men” or “women” and discrete staircases throughout the
house were designed to ensure the respectable behavior of servants by pre-
venting male and female members of the staff from the temptations of en-
countering one another regularly, while the “Principal Staircase” and separate
corridor for the “Private” use of the family and its guests helped keep the pres-
ence of servants as hidden as possible from the middle-class view. If one con-
13. ENVISIONING DOMESTICITY 285
siders that before indoor plumbing became common throughout the house,
bathing water, cleaning supplies, and the contents of chamber pots would
have to be carried in buckets to or from every room, it is hardly surprising that
families would not want to encounter their servants on the stairs in the course
of the day. Yet such segregation also facilitated the spectacle of class position
by locating servants and domestic labor in the least visible spaces of the house.
Illustrating how architecture can build these ideological elements into the
walls of a home, many Victorian texts offered readers sample floor plans that
demonstrated how to properly lay out a home to achieve both private conve-
nience and the appropriate public spectacle of middle-class domesticity. Be-
cause homes in London and other cities were built up rather than sprawling
across expensive real estate, even the small rooms of a modest house would
occupy a minimum of three stories in addition to the basement kitchens, ren-
dering it absolutely necessary to plan well in order to avoid endless trips up and
down the stairs.
Figure 13.3 contains the plans for the family stories of a representative mid-
dle-class home in town, taken from J. H. Walsh’s A Manual of Domestic Economy
(1857). A typical ground floor (what Americans call the first floor) contained
the dining room, a library and/or study, and an entrance hall that, as in this
plan, was often separate from the main staircase hall. The back staircase on
floor A of this plan created fairly uncomplicated access from the basement
kitchen to the dining room. Associated with the man of the house, dining
rooms, libraries, and studies were often described as “masculine” in their de-
cor, and the easy access from these spaces to the outside world confirmed his
manly need for public pursuits. By contrast, the first floor (American second
floor) was the woman’s floor, typically housing the drawing room, or suite of
rooms, and perhaps her private boudoir. A woman’s place was thus situated
physically at the heart of the household, metonymically establishing her au-
thority as the central manager of the domestic establishment and implying
that one important job of a good home was to extend feminine succor to
guests via the public drawing room space. In this plan for a relatively modest
house, the primary bedroom, identified as “Bedroom No. 1,” with its adjoin-
ing dressing room (“D.R.”) and toilet (“W.C.”), also occupies this floor. Subse-
quent floors generally contained more private places and include guest rooms
and bedrooms for younger members of the family. At the top of the house, the
bedrooms would be smallest; these might be for female servants, or, in a house
with many children, they would serve as a nursery suite with accommoda-
tions for nursery staff as well as infant or school-age children. On the plans
here, the small dressing room that opens directly off the servants’ staircase on
floor C would likely be a bedroom for the principle housemaid. Nursery
space, if needed in this house, would be located on floor D, in order to afford a
full story of space to serve as a sound barrier between the children’s realm and
the drawing room in which parents would entertain guests.
286 KASTON TANGE
FIG. 13.3. “Plans of Different Floors of Town House,” from J. H. Walsh’s A Manual
of Domestic Economy, Second Edition. London: G. Routledge & Co., 1857, Figure 47,
facing page 96.
One significant fact of household arrangements that this image would im-
ply to a proficient Victorian reader is the importance of invisibility on the part
of servants. Although the secondary staircase confirms their existence, the
fact that there are no plans here for the basement or attic floors—which would
contain kitchens, workrooms, and servants’ quarters—highlights through ab-
sence how the servants ought to be relegated to the margins of the house.
13. ENVISIONING DOMESTICITY 287
Comparing Fig. 13.2 with Fig. 13.3, especially in the light of information pro-
vided in the text of Robert Kerr’s book, identifies this as an important princi-
ple of home design. In the Preface to The Gentleman’s House (1864), Kerr
explains that “the fundamental idea of [my] treatise is that large houses and
small houses, from the largest indeed to the smallest, if well devised as English
Residences, have all alike the selfsame principles of plan, differing of necessity
in scale, because they differ in size, but not differing in purpose” (viii–ix). That
homes “well devised as English Residences, have all alike the selfsame princi-
ples of plan” implies the degree to which a domestic floor plan might embody
social ideals. Thus, although a house with four major corridors and six stair-
cases is a very large home indeed, Kerr’s “Thoroughfare Plan” is significantly
not intended to imply that one must have a tremendous income in order to de-
sign a respectable house. Instead, he assumes that the reader literate in mid-
dle-class ideology will see that this plan articulates the principle of segregating
household occupants from one another as much as is practicable and that it
should be “scaled” appropriately to suit individual requirements and budgets.
By extension, this good reader would rightly understand that, although the
floor plan in Fig. 13.3 shows a much smaller house, it is similarly well-designed
in providing the necessary minimum of two staircases to segregate the work-
ing servants from the genteel family.
In addition to defining where each person in the house belonged, these
physical boundaries within a home also provided a system by which people
knew how to behave at all times. Thus, for example, a gentleman always knew
what was expected from him in a lady’s drawing room, even if he had never
met his hostess before. These behavioral implications of floor plan images,
however, are even less explicit on paper than the principles of hierarchical seg-
regation that the plans suggest. As we saw, reading Kerr’s “Thoroughfare
Plan” too literally, as an inexperienced reader might, would seem to suggest
that “respectability” requires an almost impossibly large house. Similarly,
reading even the more modest plans in Fig. 13.3 simply as layouts for the dis-
persal of walls and windows, doors and fireplaces would not necessarily lead a
reader to understand how the needs and pastimes of a home’s occupants are
answered by a floor plan or how their behavior should be shaped by specific
places within the home. In order to understand these points, a reader would
require some experience that enabled intertextual comparison—either with
actual homes, in which other members of the middle class modeled and re-
sponded to appropriate behaviors, or with a wide range of other books whose
directions and images collaborated with these floor plans to provide a more
complete picture of the intricacies of middle-class home spaces.
Far from providing all the information that is necessary to create an ideal
home, architectural books in fact require complementary information on the
decoration of home spaces to suit one’s class position. Indeed, Charles
Eastlake’s popular and influential Hints on Household Taste (originally appear-
288 KASTON TANGE
ing in 1868) proclaims that “half the effect of every room which is planned
must ultimately depend on the manner in which it is fitted up; and if our na-
tional taste is ever to assume a definite character, let us hope that the interior
of our dwellings will reflect it no less than the walls by which they are en-
closed” (xxvii). Linking the principles built into the walls of a home with the
“effect” produced by room decoration, Eastlake plays on the multiple mean-
ings of the word “domestic” to assert that the character of the middle-class
home is a matter of national interest. His emphasis on taste clearly indicates
that a home was a marker of class position only if its decoration corresponded
to the principles built into its layout. Indeed, there was substantial cultural at-
tention to how to furnish and decorate a middle-class home properly. Archi-
tectural treatises that focus primarily on floor plans—such as Gervase
Wheeler’s The Choice of a Dwelling—also give some attention to topics like the
appropriate color schemes for dining rooms and drawing rooms. Housekeep-
ing sources, like Cassell’s Household Guide, illustrate models of desirable fur-
nishings. And texts devoted solely to interior design provide detailed images
of good middle-class taste.12
Rather than offering here an overview of Victorian material culture, an is-
sue addressed in voluminous detail by historians of the decorative arts, my in-
terest is in how ideas of decoration were conveyed in images to the consuming
public. A survey of texts that illustrate decorative processes and furniture re-
veals that there were two primary approaches to providing images of middle-
class decor. Because color illustrations were extremely rare and costly, and
fashionable colors and trimmings would likely change faster than books could
be published, many authors preferred to draw on the distinction between taste
and fashion, providing representative examples of “useful and tasteful” arti-
cles rather than aiming to offer readers a fashionable guide to the latest interior
trends. Images in these texts tend to be generic, only occasionally with a de-
signer’s or manufacturer’s name attached to suggest that this precise design
was purchasable. Other texts offer readers detailed woodcut or line-drawn il-
lustrations of a fully decorated room. These pictures, rather than giving read-
ers samples of a variety of furniture options, locate the furniture in the room
in which it would be used, thereby suggesting how to create an entire environ-
ment, from wallpaper to furniture to mantle ornaments. In both cases, there
are intriguing patterns to what kind of information is and is not provided.
Thomas Webster’s Encyclopaedia of Domestic Economy, a 10-volume set, is a
good example of the multiple-samples approach to explaining home interiors.
Devoting an entire book, about 150 pages, to “Household Furniture,” Web-
ster covers the make and materials of carpets, processes of decoration like
gilding and japanning, and household items such as lamps, kitchen imple-
ments and china, as well devoting chapters to the furnishing of “the Principal
Apartments.” In the spirit of cataloguing all of the necessary items in a mid-
dle-class home, this book offers detailed information about every type of fur-
13. ENVISIONING DOMESTICITY 289
Such detailed definitions are followed by illustrations of more than one version of
the item, with short captions explaining the primary differences in shape and func-
tion between them. Items like chairs and tea tables, which would be more self-ex-
planatory, are not defined as if they were unfamiliar, as a chiffonnière most
certainly would be to a newly wealthy family. Rather, Webster explains what con-
stitutes good materials and workmanship in these furnishings, noting, for exam-
ple, that “In the cheapest kinds of chairs the legs are held together by cross bars and
rails; but in the best chairs these are omitted, the stoutness of the materials and the
goodness of the workmanship permitting the legs to be sufficiently strong with-
out” (245, italics in original). Thus providing information that would enable one
to judge the quality of items for purchase and the range of furnishings necessary
in a respectable home, Webster’s book appears to tell readers everything they
need to know about fitting out a middle-class home.
However, the illustrations are so plentiful as often to create a crowded ap-
pearance on the page, and the text at once explains the furniture in detail and
leaves key points to the imagination of the reader. Fig. 13.4, for example,
shows a sample page from Webster’s book, on which a variety of “ladies’ work
tables” are illustrated.
The page immediately preceding this one offers a clear definition, as if to
ensure that the item itself is no mystery to the reader. “Ladies’ work tables are
small tables for holding the lighter articles of their work, and are generally fit-
ted up with convenient places for cottons, needles, pins, scissors, &c. They are
sometimes plain, of mahogany, with small drawers, as fig. 209., or with a silk
bag fluted with a fringe, as fig. 210., fixed to a frame that draws out for holding
various articles of needlework that are in progress” (234, italics in original). In
two facing pages, only one of which is reproduced in Fig. 13.4, ten varieties of
work tables are illustrated, interspersed with short descriptions identifying the
primary differences between them in terms of shape. Notably, however, these
descriptions do not evaluate the tables in terms that would enable a reader
truly unfamiliar with their use to decide which of the ten would be most ap-
propriate for her needs in her drawing room. Identifying many of them as
290 KASTON TANGE
FIG. 13.4. Illustrations of ladies’ work tables, from John Webster’s Encyclopaedia of
Domestic Economy. London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, 1844, page 235.
“convenient” without defining what makes them so, the text and illustrations
here provide an almost overwhelming array of choices without offering the
necessary tools to distinguish between them.
Webster’s pages of dining tables, drawing-room chairs, and indeed every
other major article of furniture similarly present a wide array of options.
Some of them are identified as suiting various purposes, such as tables that
will telescope to accommodate dinner parties of many different sizes, if one
entertains often; however, many pages offer images that seem to differ in style
more than anything else. The pages of chairs show ones with padded backs
and others with wooden ones, some with silk and tassel upholstery and others
13. ENVISIONING DOMESTICITY 291
with woven seats, and some heavily ornamented with carving while others
have clean, sweeping lines. (See Fig. 13.5 for one such page; there are several
other pages like this in Webster’s book.)
There is no information explicit on these pages about how to choose be-
tween “good” chairs. The text notes, for example, that the front legs of chairs are
typically straight and elaborately carved by being turned on a lathe, while the
rear legs are curved, rendering lathe carving impossible and undesirable: less vis-
ible back legs need no ornamentation, “good taste requiring that labour shall
not be thrown away” (245). Yet even while invoking “good taste” to explain chair
design, Webster does not mention what kinds of upholstery are tasteful or how
to tell the “antique style” from the modern, or what constitutes too much orna-
FIG. 13.5. Illustrations of chairs, from John Webster’s Encyclopaedia of Domestic Econ-
omy. London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, 1844, page 247.
292 KASTON TANGE
ment (although the warns against this vulgarity). Thus, although the plethora
of images and the tiny-print text amongst which they are interwoven would
seem to suggest that there could be no other possible detail necessary to know,
in fact, reading these images requires careful interpretation by the reader. The
multiple-samples format of book doesn’t explain the mysterious concept of
taste even when picturing it, making it difficult for a newly middle-class reader to
tell why the objects are pictured at all. Although the information on the page pro-
vides facts, definitions and models, a reader still must figure out based on these
pictures what the rules of proper taste are so that he or she is able to go to a shop
and buy a good chair. Thus such books preserve the exclusivity of middle-class
taste even as they present copious images that would seem to suggest that such
taste can be learned in the pages of these volumes.
In contrast to the multiple-samples mode, the images in books like Rhoda
and Agnes Garrett’s Suggestions for House Decoration in Painting, Woodwork and
Furniture provide visions of complete rooms decorated with good taste (see
Fig. 13.6 and Fig. 13.7.)
In the “View of a Drawing-Room,” the Garrett sisters bring together many
of the elements that are catalogued in books such as Webster’s. Thus, here,
one can see how to array the furniture in the room, how to decorate the walls
using wallpaper, dado, paint and pictures, what style of curtains might suit a
modest room, and how many decorative objects provide a pleasing diversion
to the eye without being overwhelming. In addition, the picture of the “Draw-
ing-Room Chimney-Piece” illustrates not just principles for use but also the
feeling such a room should be designed to convey.
Suggesting cozy comfort and conversation through the facing chairs pulled
up to the fire, and signaling a lack of pretension in the fact that the easy chairs
are not distinctly of the same style or too carefully matched, this chimney
piece in effect takes the elements Webster enumerates and creates a narrative
out of them. In order to gain the most from either book, however, it would be
in a reader’s best interest to consult them both. Webster offers variety; the
Garretts put a much smaller selection of objects into use; and taken together,
these books provide a more complete lesson in creating the image of home
than either offers on its own. The visual rhetoric is thus not fully articulated by
any single text: it requires multiplicity and repetition with variation to com-
plete the picture in the readers’ minds. Thus, proper consumption of these
goods requires, in part, continued consumption of the books that explain
these goods, since a middle-class reader has to buy book after book in order to
get the complete image of domesticity.
In addition to decorative samples and architectural efforts to normalize the
“principles of plan” and “purpose” of middle-class homes, many books pro-
vided directions aimed at the women who would manage such houses.
Isabella Beeton’s The Book of Household Management (1861) is perhaps the best-
known example of such housekeeping guides, although many other similar
13. ENVISIONING DOMESTICITY 293
FIG. 13.6. “View of Drawing-Room,” from Suggestions for House Decoration by Rhoda
and Agnes Garrett. Philadelphia: Porter & Coates, n.d., Frontispiece.
nishing and supplies that would be wanted on each of four budgets ranging
from £.100 to £.1000 per year.14 This table operates much like the pictorial cata-
logue of furniture we saw in Webster’s book, offering readers a laundry list of
every conceivable item that might be wanted and leaving it up to individual
judgment to scale the list to an appropriate size.
Figure 13.8 shows one example of the type of visual image housekeeping
guides might provide. It is taken from Isabella Beeton’s The Book of Household
Management, which opens by asserting her intention to “point out the plan
which may be the most profitably pursued for the daily regulation of affairs” (2).
Her efforts to provide women a “plan” that will enable them to regulate their
days are complemented by visual images that offer a quick reference for skills
and information a woman would require to run a proper middle-class house-
13. ENVISIONING DOMESTICITY 295
hold. Her book includes, for example, tables of servants’ wages, pictorial com-
parisons between ancient and modern kitchen equipment, and menus for
dinner parties arranged graphically to show women how to lay the dining table.
Figure 13.8 does not simply tell a reader what ought to be served at a large
dinner party. It tailors that information to the month of the year, to take into
account what foods are in season in November, and it demonstrates how the
food ought to be presented on the table for the most efficient and pleasing dis-
play. For the reader who might need some help in understanding the move-
ment of courses through the meal, these table layouts also indicate what
dishes should replace others—as in the Third Course diagram, where we learn
that the place occupied by partridges will be later filled by plum pudding.
Beeton provides similar graphics for each month of the year, and modified
lists follow each graphic to explain how to trim the menu for dinners for
twelve, eight, or six people respectively.
FIG. 13.8. November menu for a “Dinner for 18 Persons,” from Mrs. Isabella
Beeton’s The Book of Household Management. London: S.O. Beeton, 1869, page 946.
296 KASTON TANGE
NOTES
1. For example, there was a series of articles entitled “How to Build a House
and Live in It” in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine from 1846–1847.
2. Although many recent scholars of 19th-century culture have thoroughly
explored the degree to which this binary broke down in practice, cultural
investment in upholding this ideal played a tremendous role in Victorian
conceptions of home. Significant work investigating this issue has been
done by the following cultural historians, literary scholars, and geography
theorists: Monica Cohen, Catherine Gallagher, Elizabeth Langland, Mary
Poovey, Gillian Rose, and John Tosh.
13. ENVISIONING DOMESTICITY 299
3. The first volume of this poem, “The Betrothal,” was issued in 1854; three
subsequent volumes continued the story, ending with “The Victories of
Love,” published in 1861.
4. Chapter Three of Lenore Davidoff and Catherine Hall’s Family Fortunes
traces the development of domestic ideology in terms of its reliance on cul-
tural constructions of womanhood and offers a useful overview of how
these terms are interrelated.
5. See also John Tosh for a historical overview of how the conception of home
changed with increasing industrialization. He concurs that middle-class do-
mestic ideology, based on the value of separate spheres, had become well-
established by the early 1840s.
6. F.R.C.S. stands for Fellow, Royal College of Surgeons and indicates a man has
a university medical education; R.I.B.A. stands for Royal Institute of British
Architects—the professional association of architects created in 1837. Many
female authors of similar manuals purposefully used “Mrs.” on the cover of
their books to authenticate their advice; their credentials were often also de-
tailed by male co-authors in Prefaces to their books as further legitimation.
7. See George P. Landow’s Replete with Meaning: William Holman Hunt and Ty-
pological Symbolism (originally published by Yale University Press in 1979,
and now available as a Victorian Web Book) for a sustained reading of the
religious implications of this painting.
8. The most widely cited conduct manuals today are the series by Mrs. Sarah
Stickney Ellis, including such titles as Wives of England, Women of England,
Mothers of England, Daughters of England. Her books, published in the late
1830s and early 1840s, focused on domestic life in terms of individual con-
duct, thereby offering a bridge between the etiquette-based conduct manu-
als of the previous century and the more practical housekeeping manuals
that appeared in the 1850s and beyond.
9. This formulation clearly supports Pierre Bourdieu’s argument that taste serves as
the primary marker of class position. It is particularly useful also to consider this
in light of Michel de Certeau’s arguments about the role of everyday objects in
cultural practice. In Victorian texts, the notion that taste is part of one’s inheri-
tance rather than learnable is implied by countless architectural and housekeep-
ing texts that offer cautions against “over-ornament” and “vulgar” decoration.
(See, for example, Kerr; Orrinsmith; and Wheeler, passim.) While these texts ad-
vocate moderation as a factor of taste, they do not define these terms.
10. See Robin Evans’s “Figures, Doors and Passages” for a comprehensive his-
tory of changes in home design and fuller discussion of the move to a corri-
dor-based model.
11. In addition to extremely detailed descriptions of all aspects of home layout
and design, Kerr’s The Gentleman’s House contains dozens of oversized
plates, such as this one, with detailed plans of grand country houses.
300 KASTON TANGE
WORKS CITED
Beeton, Mrs. Isabella. The Book of Household Management. London: S.O. Beeton, 1861.
Bourdieu, Pierre. Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgment of Taste. Trans. Richard Nice.
Cambridge: Harvard U P, 1984.
Cassell’s Household Guide: Being a Complete Encyclopaedia of Domestic and Social Economy.
London: Cassell, Petter, and Galpin, 1869–1871.
Cohen, Monica F. Professional Domesticity in the Victorian Novel: Women, Work, and Home.
New York: Cambridge U P, 1998.
Davidoff, Lenore, and Catherine Hall. Family Fortunes: Men and Women in the English Middle
Class, 1780–1850. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1987.
de Certeau, Michel. The Practice of Everyday Life. Berkeley: U of California P, 1984.
Eastlake, Charles. Hints on Household Taste. 2nd ed. Boston: James R. Osgood and Com-
pany, 1878.
Editors of the “Family Friend.” [Robert Kemp Philip.] The Practical Housewife, Forming a
Complete Encyclopaedia of Domestic Economy. London: Ward and Lock, 1855.
Ellis, Mrs. Sarah Stickney. The Wives of England. New York: D. Appleton, 1843.
Evans, Robin. “Figures, Doors and Passages,” Architectural Design (April 1978): 267–278.
Gallagher, Catherine. The Industrial Reformation of English Fiction: Social Discourse and Nar-
rative Form, 1832–1867. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1985.
13. ENVISIONING DOMESTICITY 301
Garrett, Rhoda, and Agnes Garrett. Suggestions for House Decoration in Painting, Woodwork,
and Furniture. Philadelphia: Porter & Coates, n.d.
The Household Encyclopaedia; or Family Dictionary of Everything Connected with Housekeeping
and Domestic Medicine. London: W. Kent & Co., 1858–1860. Vol. I, A–F, 1858, Vol. II,
G-Z, 1860.
“How to Build A House and Live in It,” Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine: 59.368 (June 1846):
758–65; No. II, 60.371 (Sept. 1846): 349–57; No. III, 61.380 (June 1847), 727–34.
Kerr, Robert. The Gentleman’s House; Or, How to Plan English Residences from the Parsonage to
the Palace. 3rd ed., rev. London: John Murray, 1871.
Landow, George P. Replete With Meaning: William Holman Hunt and Typological Symbolism.
London and New Haven: Yale UP, 1979. A Victorian Web Book. 20 November 2002
<http://65.107.211.206/victorian/painting/whh/replete/contents.html>.
Langland, Elizabeth. Nobody’s Angels: Middle-Class Women and Domestic Ideology in Victorian
Culture. Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1995.
Loftie, Mrs. The Dining-Room. London: Macmillan and Co., 1878.
Mitchell, Sally. Daily Life in Victorian England. Westport, CT: The Greenwood P, 1996.
Orrinsmith, Mrs. The Drawing-Room: Its Decoration and Furniture. London; Macmillan and
Co., 1878.
Patmore, Coventry. The Angel in the House. London: John W. Parker & Son, 1854–1861.
Poovey, Mary. Making a Social Body: British Cultural Formation, 1830–1864. Chicago: U of
Chicago P, 1995.
—. Uneven Developments: The Ideological Work of Gender in Mid-Victorian England. Chicago: U
of Chicago P, 1988.
Rose, Gillian. “As If the Mirrors Had Bled: Masculine Dwelling, Masculinist Theory and
Feminist Masquerade.” Body Space. Ed. Nancy Duncan. New York: Routledge, 1996:
56–74.
—. Feminism and Geography: The Limits of Geographical Knowledge. Minneapolis: U of Min-
nesota P, 1993.
Ruskin, John. “The Pre–Raphaelites: Letter To the Editor.” The Times, 21.733 (May 25,
1854): 7.
Spain, Daphne. Gendered Spaces. Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina P, 1992.
Tosh, John. A Man’s Place: Masculinity and the Middle-Class Home in Victorian England. New
Haven: Yale U P, 1999.
Walsh, J. H., F.R.C.S. A Manual of Domestic Economy: Suited to Families Spending from £.100 to
£.1000 a Year. 2nd ed. London: G. Routledge & Co., 1857.
Webster, Thomas, F. G. S. &c, assisted by the late Mrs. Parkes. Encyclopaedia of Domestic
Economy: Comprising Such Subjects as are Most Immediately Connected with Housekeeping.
London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, initiated 1844.
Wheeler, Gervase. The Choice of a Dwelling: A Practical Handbook of Useful Information on All
Points Connected with Hiring, Buying, or Building a House. London: John Murray, 1871.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
As the chapters in Defining Visual Rhetorics suggest, recent work in rhetoric has
taken a pictorial turn. Three exigencies are prompting this move from exclu-
sive attention to discourse to the study of visual images and material objects as
rhetoric. One is the pervasiveness of the visual symbol and its impact on con-
temporary culture. Visual artifacts constitute a major part of the rhetorical en-
vironment, and to ignore them to focus only on verbal discourse means we
understand only a miniscule portion of the symbols that affect us daily.
The study of visual symbols from a rhetorical perspective also has grown
with the emerging recognition that such symbols provide access to a range of
human experience not always available through the study of discourse. As Jean
Y. Audigier explains, human experiences that are spatially oriented, non-linear,
multidimensional, and dynamic often can be communicated only through vi-
sual imagery or other nondiscursive symbols. To understand and articulate such
experiences requires attention to these kinds of symbols, as Marguerite
Helmers and Charles Hill eloquently suggest in their analysis of the Thomas
Franklin photograph that has come to be known as Ground Zero Spirit.
For me, the most important reason for studying visual rhetoric is to develop
rhetorical theory that is more comprehensive and inclusive. Throughout rhet-
oric’s long tradition, discursive constructs and theories have enjoyed ideologi-
cal hegemony, delimiting the territory of study to linguistic artifacts,
suggesting that visual symbols are insignificant or inferior, and largely ignor-
ing the impacts of the visual in our world. Because rhetorical theory has been
created almost exclusively from the study of discourse, rhetoricians largely
lack sophisticated understanding of the conventions through which meaning
is created in visual artifacts and the processes by which they influence viewers.
303
304 FOSS
Visual rhetoric refers not only to the visual object as a communicative artifact
but also to a perspective scholars take on visual imagery or visual data. In this
meaning of the term, visual rhetoric constitutes a theoretical perspective that
306 FOSS
analyses of visual data and the nature of the perspective they take on those
data are developed as they focus on particular aspects of visual artifacts—areas
of focus that then function to transform rhetorical theory.
AREAS OF FOCUS
The chapters in this book suggest that rhetorical scholars tend to study visual
objects with a focus on one of three areas—nature, function, or evaluation. In
this pillar of the framework for studies of visual rhetoric, nature deals with the
components, qualities, and characteristics of visual artifacts; function concerns
the communicative effects of visual rhetoric on audiences; and evaluation is
the process of assessing visual artifacts.
A second focus for scholars who adopt a rhetorical perspective on visual sym-
bols is the function or functions the visual rhetoric serves for an audience. The
function of a visual artifact is the action it communicates (Foss). Functions of
visual artifacts, for example, might range from memorializing individuals to
creating feelings of warmth and coziness to encouraging viewers to explore
self-imposed limitations. Function is not synonymous with purpose, which in-
volves an effect that is intended or desired by the creator of the image or ob-
ject. Scholars who adopt a rhetorical perspective on visual artifacts do not see
the creator’s intentions as determining the correct interpretation of a work.
Not only may the scholar not have access to evidence about the intentions of
the creators of artifacts, but a privileging of creators’ interpretations over the
interpretations of viewers closes off possibilities for new ways of experiencing
the artifact. Once an artifact is created, these scholars believe, it stands inde-
pendent of its creator’s intention.
Edwards’s chapter on the construction of cultural memory through im-
ages illustrates a focus on function in the study of visual rhetoric. She notes
that one use of iconic images is their appropriation to new contexts, where
they function to create analogies that recall past moments and suggest future
possibilities. Focusing her analysis on the photograph of John F. Kennedy, Jr.
saluting his father’s funeral cortege, Edwards explores how it was used at the
time of the deaths of Jackie Kennedy and the son, John Kennedy. She con-
cludes that the photograph connected the past and the present through its
symbolic twin expressions of outrage and regret.
Two chapters analyze visual rhetoric for ideological functions that con-
struct viewers’ identities in particular ways. In Dickinson and Malone
Maugh’s analysis of the Wild Oats Marketplace, they seek to discover how
Wild Oats responds to the abstractions and discomforts of globalized
postmodern consumer culture. They suggest that the store repackages the
possibilities of globalization to convert individuals who normally would be re-
sistant to such culture into consumers comfortable with the wide range of
goods available to them as a result of it. The analysis by Kaston Tange of the
images in Victorian books devoted to teaching home arts highlights a similar
function. Books that contained floor plans, pictures of furniture, drawings of
14. FRAMING THE STUDY 309
window treatments, and diagrams of how to set a table, for example, not only
gave directions on how to achieve the home the readers desired but also
helped create the desire for a home and, consequently, a middle class.
Studies such as these that have function as their focus have the capacity to
transform rhetorical theory in that they encourage a conceptualization of a
broader array of functions for symbols. Although discursive rhetoric can serve
an infinite number of functions, the functions explored in rhetorical theory
tend to be persuasive functions, with symbols designed to change audience
members in particular ways. Such a singular function is much more difficult to
attribute to many visual symbols given their greater ambiguity over verbal dis-
course. Exactly what the message is of an artifact is often open to myriad inter-
pretations, limiting its persuasive potential but expanding its potential to
communicate functions that may be less dominating and more invitational
(Foss and Griffin), more eclectic, and more fragmented. Study of the visual,
then, may help move rhetorical theory away from a focus on changing others
to attention to a much broader array of functions for symbols and thus to a
greater understanding of the infinitely varied actions that symbols can and do
perform for audiences.
A third area in which scholars focus as they analyze visual rhetoric is evalua-
tion or assessment. Some scholars choose to evaluate an artifact using the cri-
terion of whether it accomplishes its apparent function. If an artifact
functions to memorialize someone, for example, such an evaluation would in-
volve discovery of whether its media, colors, forms, and content actually ac-
complish that function. Other scholars choose to evaluate visual symbols by
scrutinizing the functions themselves that are performed by the symbols, re-
flecting on their legitimacy or soundness determined largely by the implica-
tions and consequences of those functions—perhaps, for example, whether
an artifact is congruent with a particular ethical system or whether it offers
emancipatory potential.
Strachan and Kendall’s analysis of political candidates’ convention films is
an example of a focus on evaluation in rhetorical studies of visual artifacts.
They are interested in understanding the nature of the biographical candidate
films aired at political parties’ conventions and analyze and evaluate the films
of George W. Bush and Al Gore in the 1998 presidential campaign for this pur-
pose. The Gore film, they assert, failed to live up to the full potential of its
genre because it did not address the audience’s patriotic values and thus did
not evoke strong emotional reactions to the candidate. They evaluate the
Bush film more positively as an artifact of the genre of the convention film be-
cause it celebrated values through emotional appeals and presented Bush as a
rugged individualist standing for America. Like other scholars who focus on
310 FOSS
function, Strachan and Kendall are interested in understanding how the qual-
ity of the rhetorical environment is affected by various kinds of images and
other visual artifacts.
A focus on evaluation, like those on nature and function, also has the poten-
tial to transform rhetorical theory. In particular, such a focus encourages a
questioning of the traditional notion of effectiveness. Discourse at the inter-
personal or small-group level typically is evaluated on the basis of whether an
audience has changed in the direction desired by the rhetor after exposure to
the rhetor’s message. How such a criterion would be applied to visual rhetoric
that is non-representational and perhaps baffling for audience members is un-
clear. Certainly, standard rhetorical criteria for assessing the potential of mes-
sages to create change such as clarity of thesis, relevance of supporting
materials, vividness of metaphors, appropriateness of organizational pattern,
dynamism of style, and credibility of the rhetor are largely irrelevant.
In the context of public discourse, an additional criterion for effectiveness
often is added to the criterion of audience change—contribution to rational-
ity. From this perspective, rhetoric is supposed to contribute to rational debate
about issues in the public sphere, and visual rhetoric often is judged to be lack-
ing according to this criterion. Neil Postman, for example, argues that the vi-
sual epistemology of television “pollutes public communication” (28) and
contributes to a decline in “the seriousness, clarity and, above all, value of pub-
lic discourse” (29). Similarly, David Zarefsky suggests that rhetorical forms
such as visual images “stand in for a more complex reality” (412), contributing
to the deterioration of “a rich and vibrant concept of argument, of public delib-
eration” (414).
Visual rhetoric may not be used to persuade audiences in directions in-
tended by a rhetor and may not be contributing to standard definitions of ra-
tional public communication, but its effects are significant and certainly not
always negative. The world produced by visual rhetoric is not always—or even
often—clear, well organized, or rational, but is, instead, a world made up of
human experiences that are messy, emotional, fragmented, silly, serious, and
disorganized. Such experiences are not often captured in rhetorical theory
that posits criteria for assessment that require that visual rhetoric be judged
negatively or ignored entirely. Studies of visual rhetoric that focus on evalua-
tion, then, expand rhetorical theory to include broader criteria for the evalua-
tion of rhetoric that more accurately capture and acknowledge the role of the
visual in our world.
APPROACHES
The chapters in this volume add a third pillar of the frame of the current study
of visual rhetoric to definition and areas of focus in that they suggest how
studies of visual images and objects approach their areas of focus to transform
14. FRAMING THE STUDY 311
generating rhetorical theories that are articulate about visual symbols. An as-
sumption of scholars who proceed inductively from visual objects is that these
visual objects are different in significant ways from discursive symbols. They
focus on the particular qualities of visual rhetoric to develop explanations of
how visual symbols operate in an effort to develop rhetorical theory from vi-
sual symbols to insure that it takes into account the dimensions of visual
forms of rhetoric.
Two chapters exemplify the inductive approach to the study of visual rhet-
oric. Blair asks whether there can be visual arguments when arguments as we
usually know them are verbal. He articulates the two primary reasons offered
against the possibility of arguments as visual—that the visual is inescapably
ambiguous and that arguments must have propositional content—and an-
swers both objections. He concludes by offering a definition of visual argu-
ments that expands traditional definitions of argument and goes on to assert
that the particular qualities of the visual image make visual arguments differ-
ent from verbal ones in that the visual has an immediacy, a verisimilitude, and
a concreteness that help influence acceptance in ways not available to the ver-
bal. He thus expands an understanding of argumentation rooted in the partic-
ularities of the visual.
David Blakesley’s analysis of Hitchcock’s film, Vertigo, is another example
of an approach that begins with a focus on characteristics of the visual. He
proposes four approaches to film rhetoric derived from the characteristics of
films—language, ideology, interpretation, and identification. Film identifi-
cation is the focus in his analysis, and he suggests that Hitchcock employs a
variety of visual techniques to focus attention on the psychological conse-
quences of the desire for identification or identity. Because of its visual quali-
ties, he notes, film makes identification even more inviting than it might be
in a verbal text.
The inductive, artifact-based approach exemplified by Blair and Blakesley,
because it begins with the characteristics of artifacts and builds rhetorical the-
ory on the basis of those characteristics, offers the most opportunities for rhe-
torical expansion. It has the greatest potential to expand rhetorical theory
beyond the boundaries of discourse as it offers rhetorical qualities, character-
istics, and components for which current rhetorical theory cannot account.
CONCLUSION
The chapters in this volume represent the variety that exists in the analysis of
visual rhetoric and provide models for the study of the rhetorical workings of
visual artifacts. More important, however, these chapters lay out the primary
components of the current framework for such study—definition of visual
rhetoric as artifact or perspective; areas of focus as nature, function, or evalua-
tion; and methodological approaches as deductive or inductive in their move-
14. FRAMING THE STUDY 313
ment between visual artifact and theory. This framework is not simply a
framework for an understanding of visual rhetoric, however, but also for
transforming discourse-based rhetorical theory. As rhetorical theory opens up
to visual rhetoric, it opens up to possibilities for more relevant, inclusive, and
holistic views of contemporary symbol use.
WORKS CITED
Bush, George, 149–152, 153 De Certeau, Michel, 273, 274, 299, 300
Butler, Judith, 157, 173, 175, 261, 274 De Lauretis, Teresa, 5, 15, 22
Byrne, R. M. J., 28, 39 DeLuca, Kevin Michael, 167, 173, 174, 175,
193, 194
C Derrida, Jacques, 14, 16, 22, 197, 213
De Saussure, Ferdinand, 16–17, 22
Calder, Lendol, 173, 175 De Sousa, Ronald, 34, 38, 39
Calinescu, Matei, 14, 22, 77–78, 85 Dickinson, Greg, 263, 273, 274
Callinicos, Alex, 274, 274 Dijkstra, Bram, 162, 175
“Camelot Buried at Sea,” 182, 194 Dillard, James Price, 32, 33, 39
Campbell, David, 13, 22 Dorment, Richard, 72, 85, 85
Campos, Alfredo, 30, 31, 39 Douglas, Susan J., 173, 175
Carlebach, Michael, 201, 213 Dreesmann, Cécile, 92, 109
Carley, Kathleen M., 88–89, 107, 109 Durning, Alan Thein, 171, 175
Carroll, Noel, 116, 132, 132
Carson, Rachel, 173, 175 E
Cassell’s Household Guide, 288, 293, 296, 300
Cederblom, J., 28, 39 Eagly, Alice H., 32, 39
Chatman, Seymour, 116, 132 Eastlake, Charles, 287–288, 300, 300
Chaudhuri, Arjun, 30, 32, 39 Eaton, Jan, 91, 109
“Chevy Suburban” Advertisement, 172, 175 Eberman, Edwin, 212, 213
“Children of the Forgotten Man! LOOK Editors of the “Family Friend,” 293, 300
Visits the Sharecropper,” 196, 197, Edwards, Jackson, 202, 213
201, 205, 206, 207, 213 Edwards, Janis L., 187, 188, 194
Chisholm, Ann, 131, 132 Edwards, Joan, 93, 102, 109
Chizlett, Clive, 240, 241 Ehrman, Edwina, 108, 109
Christie, Archibald, 107, 108 Elkins, James, 21, 22, 65, 85, 118, 122, 130, 132
Ciotti, Giovanni Battista, 108, 108 Ellin, Nan, 263, 275
Clabburn, Pamela, 107, 108 Ellis, Mrs. Sarah Stickney, 299, 300
Clanchy, Michael, 107, 109 Engel, S. Morris, 60, 60
Clegg, Jeannine, 7, 22 Eno, Brian, 253, 257, 257
Cleveland, William S., 225, 240, 241 Epstein, Kathleen A., 95, 96, 97, 108, 109
Clifford, Geraldine, 104, 109 Evans, Jonathan St. B. T., 28, 39
Cochran, Jeffrey K., 225, 240, 241 Evans, Robin, 299, 300
Cohen, Monica F., 298, 300 Ewen, Stuart, 168, 173, 175
Collins, Billy, 5, 22
Collins, Jim, 261, 262, 274 F
Collins, Randall, 107, 109
Collinson, Patrick, 97, 103, 109 Faigley, Lester, 3, 22
Corcoran, Paul E., 135, 141, 153 Farrell, Thomas B., 196, 212, 213
Cowles, Gardner, Jr., 203, 213 Fincher-Kiefer, R., 28, 40
Crary, Jonathan, 212, 213 Finnegan, Cara A., 197, 211, 213
Fischer, Eileen, 173, 175
D Fiske, S. T., 28, 39
Fleming, David, 60, 60
Dahmann, Donald C., 218, 240, 241 Floren, Terese M., 12, 22
Dallmayr, Fred, 274, 274 Foss, Karen A., 42, 60
Daniels, Roger, 230, 232, 241 Foss, Sonja K., 42, 60, 212, 213, 308, 309, 313
Davidoff, Lenore, 279, 299, 300 Fox, Roy F., 19, 22, 37, 39
DeBord, Guy, 183, 194 Franklin, Thomas E., 5, 6, 7, 11, 22
AUTHOR INDEX 321
H K
Hagstrum, Jean H., 64, 85 Kanengieter, Marla R., 307, 313
Halbwachs, Maurice, 77, 85 Kaplan, Karen, 267, 271, 275
Hall, Catherine, 279, 299, 300 Katriel, Tamar, 273, 275
Haraway, Donna J., 261, 275 Kaufer, David S., 88–89, 107, 109
Hardt, Michael, 274, 275 Keillor, Garrison, 182, 194
Hariman, Robert, 9, 17, 22, 87, 110 Keller, Punam Anand, 32, 38
Harris, Roy, 103, 107, 109 Kendall, Kathleen E., 135, 153
Harvey, David, 261, 275 Kern, Montague, 139, 153
Hassett, Michael, 218, 219, 241 Kerr, Robert, 283, 284, 287, 297, 299, 301
322 AUTHOR INDEX
Nimmo, Dan, 137, 154 Rear Window, 111, 122, 128, 133
Nisbett, Richard E., 31, 39 Rebotier, Thomas Paul, 31, 39
Nora, Pierre, 261, 275 Reboul, Olivier, 42, 60, 61
Northcraft, Gregory B., 32, 40 Reeves, Richard, 182, 193, 194
The Resettlement Administration, 210, 214
O Roberts, David D., 215, 241
Roosevelt, Franklin D., 195–196, 209, 214
O’Brien, Geoffrey, 80, 86 Rorty, Richard, 112, 133
O’Keefe, Daniel J., 32, 39 Rose, Gillian, 298, 301
Olbrechts-Tyteca, Lucie, 27, 28, 29, 30, 39 Rosenblatt, Louise, 65, 86
Orrinsmith, Mrs., 299, 300, 301 Ross, Lee, 31, 39
Osborn, Michael M., 180, 194 Roston, Murray, 73–74, 86
Roszak, Theodore, 173, 177
P Royal Academy Critiques &c., 72, 73, 86
Ruskin, John, 281, 301
Paine, Sheila, 92, 107, 110 Ryan, William, 208, 214
Palsgrave, John, 92, 110
Papson, Stephen, 163, 165–166, 171, 172, 176
Parker, Rozsika, 101, 110 S
“Parliament Cigarettes” Advertisement, 159,
176 Sampson, Geoffrey, 90, 110
Parmal, Pamela A., 96, 101, 110 Schaffer, Simon, 74, 86
Parry-Giles, Shawn J., 140, 153 Schroeder, Jonathan E., 171, 173, 177
Parry-Giles, Trevor, 140, 153 Scott, Linda M., 37, 39
“Pathfinder” Advertisement, 161, 176 Seelye, Katharine Q., 142, 154
Patmore, Coventry, 278, 301 Shaffer, David R., 32, 39
Pearce, Lynne, 66, 67, 69, 84, 86 Shea, Daniel M., 148, 154
Pears, Iaian, 71, 72, 86 Showalter, Elaine, 129, 133
Peck, Eugenia, 32, 33, 39 Shutkin, William A., 172, 173, 177
Peeples, Jennifer, 174, 175 Silfies, L. N., 28, 40
Peirce, Charles Sanders, 15, 16, 23, 29, 39 Silverman, Kaja, 116, 132, 133
Perelman, Chaim, 27, 28, 29, 30, 39 Sinatra, Richard, 31, 39
Perlmutter, David D., 56, 61, 185, 186, 187, Sivan, Emmanuel, 13, 23
194 Sivulka, Julianna, 161, 177
Perry, Gill, 63, 68, 86 Sloane, Charles S., 217, 218, 233, 236, 242
“Picture Papers,” 202, 214 Sloane, Thomas O., 212, 214
Pitkin, Hannah, 141, 154 Smith, Larry David, 137, 138, 154
Playfair, William, 223, 227, 242 Smith, R. A., 28, 39
Pointon, Marcia, 83, 86 Smith, Stephen M., 32, 39
Pollock, Griselda, 66, 84, 86 Snyder, Joel, 212, 214
Poole, Robert, 80, 82, 86 Sobchack, Vivian, 114, 131, 133
Poovey, Mary, 298, 301 Soja, Edward W., 261, 275, 276
Postman, Neil, 310, 313 Spain, Daphne, 300, 301
Priestly, Joseph, 76, 77, 96 Spencer, Otha Cleo, 212, 214
Prince, Stephen, 114, 131, 133 Spufford, Margaret, 97, 110
Psycho, 111, 121, 128, 133 Squier, Susan M., 262, 276
Pucci, Enrico, 273, 274 Stafford, Barbara Maria, 3, 19, 21, 23, 124, 133
“Puerto Rico” Advertisement, 159, 176 Stam, Robert, 116, 131, 133
Stokes, Philip, 164, 177
R Street, Brian V., 89, 110
Stroupe, Craig, 257N, 258
Rathje, William, 173, 176 Stryker, Roy, 203, 205, 210, 214
324 AUTHOR INDEX
Fear, 34 Freedom, 35
Federal Emergency Management Agency, 11 Frequency, as characteristic of outrage-pro-
Feminine sphere, 278 voking photograph, 186
Femininity Full-service areas, of grocery store, 269
in advertising, 173 Function of artifact, 308–309
consumption and, 170–171 Furniture, Victorian, 288–294
essentialist fantasy of, 156 guide to selecting, 291–292
“Feminist Criticism in the Wilderness”
(Showalter), 129
Feminist studies, film identification and,
G
116–117
Feminized environment, 156–158, 159–160, Gaps, 244
162–164, 172 Gated communities, 263
Fertility, female images of, 157, 160 Gaze, x, 157
Fidji perfume ad, 159, 163 Gender
Figure-ground contrast, 237 advertising appeals to, 155
Film domestic ideology and, 278
audience reaction to, 54 Ground Zero Spirit photo and, 12
new sincerity, 262 industrialization/urbanization and,
postmodern, 262 169–170
as visual argument, 56 Gendered environment, 156, 307
See also Convention films; Film rhetoric advertising history and, 168–173
Film rhetoric, 305, 312 appropriated iconography and, 162–165,
contested nature of representational 174
realism, 111–112 cultural ubiquity and, 165–168, 174
defining, 113–118 defining characteristics of, 156–162
film identification, 116–118, 119, 129–131 exceptions to, 172
film ideology, 115–116, 119 mythology of, 168
film interpretation, 116 The General Magazine of the Arts and Sciences,
film language, 114–115, 119 Philosophical, Philological, Mathe-
interplay of verbal and visual, 112–113 matical, and Mechanical (Martin),
Vertigo, 118–129 75
Film studies, 116 Genres of visual argument, 55–59
Film styles, in convention films, 138–139 The Gentleman’s House (Kerr), 287, 297, 299
Fine arts, defined, 63. See also Painting German immigration map, 236, 237, 238
Flag, American, 4, 7–8, 9, 10, 35 German samplers, 95–96, 97
Flat stitches, 91 Gift shop, art museum, 79
Florida Tourism Commission, 246–247 Global, relation to local, 259
Focus, 201 Globalization
Fonts anti-globalization, 175
on samplers, 104 creating sense of locality and, 266–267
in statistical atlases, 235, 236 progressive view of, 267, 274
Footprint, 29 Wild Oats Market response to, 266–267,
Forgotten man 271–272
LOOK feature on, 196, 202, 204–208 Glottographic writing system, 90–91, 94, 95,
as symbol of American capitalism, 209 104, 105–105
Fort Collins (Colorado), 264, 273 “God Bless the U.S.A.,” 139
Fortune, 200 Good Will, 270
Frame, narrative, 69 Gore (Albert) convention film, 142–146
F.R.C.S. (Fellow, Royal College of Surgeons), “Grand Canyon of the Colorado” (Moran),
279, 299 164
SUBJECT INDEX 331
Labels M
direct, 254
in grocery store, 268 Macro level of interpretation, 237–238
Ladies’ work tables, 289–290 Maeseyck, 92
Language(s) Magazines
dialogical tension between, 246–247, contemporary home, 297–298
248 picture, 200–201, 203
film, 114–115, 119 Victorian home articles in, 279
unconscious and, 114 Male, political image as ideal, 140, 143
visual, 37, 195–196, 215–216, 234–235, The Man from Hope, 140–141, 149
243 Manifest destiny, displays of in statistical at-
as worldview, 246 lases, 227–228
See also Words Manifest rationality, 52
Language as Symbolic Action (Burke), 64 A Manual of Domestic Economy (Walsh), 285,
Last Great Places, 164 293
Last Supper (DaVinci), 10 Maps, 217–218, 225
Layout, of LOOK sharecropper article, data density, 219
204–205, 210 dot density, 238
334 SUBJECT INDEX
visual. See Visual symbols Time magazine, salute photograph in, 181,
words as, 30 185, 188
See also Signs Tobacco, advertising for, 159, 160–161, 166
Systematic cognitive processing, 32–33 Touristic language, vs. scholarly, 247,
248–251
T Trace, 14, 16
Transposability, as characteristic of outrage-
Tape loops, 253, 257 provoking photograph, 186
Taste, middle-class Victorian, 282, 283, 288, Transtextuality, 14
291–292, 296, 299 Trucks, advertising for, 160, 161
Tea tables, 289 Truth, photographs and, 14
Telepolitical age, 137 Truth values
Television propositions and, 44
effect on political image making, 137 visual arguments and, 47–49
epistemology of, 310 Typography, 219
home decorating shows, 300
vicarious experience and, 147
U
Television commercials, 56–59, 305 Unconscious, language and, 114
audience reaction to, 54–55 Understanding, difference and, 17
number of visual images in, 51 U.S. population, evolution of, 219
Television news U.S. Post Office, 10, 11
coverage of crises in American culture, Urbanization
3–4 advertising and, 169–170
sense of realism and, 51 experience of nature and, 171–172
visual arguments in, 58 Usability, 255–256
Terministic screen, 113–114, 131 Users
The Terministic Screen (Blakesley), 113 vs. audience, 255–256
Terminology authority of, 245
community conventions and, 45 The Usual Suspects, 112
disciplines and, 19–20 Utilitarian samplers, 103–105
Terrior, concern with, 274
Terrorism, performance and, 252, 253, 254.
See also Ground Zero Spirit; Sep- V
tember 11, 2001
Text Vagueness, visual argument and, 46–47, 60
descriptive, 30–32 Validation, 66
relation to visual images, 248 Values
verbal, 33 middle-class Victorian, 279–282
as visual design, 99–100 presence and, 38
visuality of, 3 transfer of, 36–37
as visual rhetoric, 88–90 Vectoriality, 308
See also Words Verbal representation, vs. pictorial, 2–3
Textile, reading, 91. See also Sample Verbal rhetoric, vs. visual design, 244–245
making/samplers Verbal text, cognitive processing of, 33
Textual picture, 196, 212 Vertigo, 111, 113, 312
Texture, 308 concluding scene, 130–131
Third way, 274 desire for identification and, 117
“The Thirteenth Labor of Hercules,” 157, dream sequence, 128–129
158 identification in, 120–121, 123–124,
“Thoroughfare Plan” (Kerr), 283–285, 287 128–129
Time, viewing and, 12–13 ideology in, 116
SUBJECT INDEX 341