ABSTRACT

This book expands the theoretical foundations of modern public relations, a growing young profession that lacked even a name until the twentieth century. As the discipline seeks guiding theories and paradigms, rhetorics both ancient and modern have proven to be fruitful fields of exploration. Charles Marsh presents Isocratean rhetoric as an instructive antecedent. Isocrates was praised by Cicero and Quintilian as "the master of all rhetoricians," favored over Plato and Aristotle.

By delineating the strategic value of Isocratean rhetoric to modern public relations, Marsh addresses the call for research into the philosophical, theoretical, and ethical origins of the field. He also addresses the call among scholars of classical rhetoric for modern relevance. Because Isocrates maintained that stable relationships must solicit and honor dissent, Marsh analyzes both historic and contemporary challenges to Isocratean rhetoric. He then moves forward to establish the modern applications of Isocrates in persuasion, education, strategic planning, new media, postmodern practices, and paradigms such as excellence theory, communitarianism, fully functioning society theory, and reflection.

chapter |17 pages

Isocrates and Modern Public Relations

An Overview

chapter |18 pages

Sophrosyne and Dikaiosyne

Isocrates' Concentric Ethics

chapter |13 pages

Peitho

An Isocratean Model of Persuasion

chapter |21 pages

Homonoia

Isocratean Rhetoric and Public Relations'Social Harmony Frameworks

chapter |13 pages

Koinos Bios

Isocratean Rhetoric and the Reflective Paradigm

chapter |18 pages

Logos and Dunamis

Isocratean Rhetoric and Postmodern Public Relations

chapter |17 pages

Syggrammata

Isocratean Planning and New Media

chapter |23 pages

Paideia

Isocrates' Rhetorical Education

chapter |10 pages

Antilogia

Speaking against Isocrates

chapter |6 pages

Mimesis

Rediscovering Isocrates