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{{otheruses4|the concept of rhetoric in general|the work by Aristotle|Rhetoric (Aristotle)}}
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'''Rhetoric''' has had many definitions; no simple definition can do it justice.<ref>The definition of rhetoric is a controversial subject within the field and has given rise to philological battles over its meaning in Ancient Greece. See, for instance, Johnstone, Henry W. Jr. (1995). "On Schiappa versus Poulakos." ''Rhetoric Review.'' 14:2. (Spring), 438-440.</ref> In fact, the very act of defining has itself been a central part of rhetoric: It appears among Aristotle's topoi, heuristics for rhetorical [[inventio|invention]].<ref> The rhetorical topic of "genus" motivates definitional arguments: "Another line of proof is secured by defining your terms."(Aristotle Rhetoric, II:23,7)</ref> For Aristotle, rhetoric is the art of practical wisdom and decision making, a counterpart to [[logic]] and a branch of politics. <ref>"...rhetoric is a combination of the science of logic and of the ethical branch of politics..." [http://www.public.iastate.edu/~honeyl/Rhetoric/rhet1-4.html | Aristotle. ''Rhetoric.'' (trans. W. Rhys Roberts). I:4:1359.]</ref> The word is derived from the ancient Greek ''eiro'', which means "I say." In its broadest sense, rhetoric concerns human discourse.<ref>Young, R. E., Becker, A. L., & Pike, K. L. (1970). Rhetoric : discovery and change. New York,: Harcourt Brace & World. p. 1</ref>
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==Rhetoric as a Civic Art==
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<small> (124&nbsp;articles)</small>


In eras of [[History of Europe|European history]], rhetoric concerned itself with persuasion in public and political settings such as assemblies and courts. Because of its associations with democratic institutions, rhetoric is commonly said to flourish in open and [[democratic]] societies with rights of [[free speech]], free assembly, and political enfranchisement for some portion of the population. <ref>Garsten, B. (2005). Saving Persuasion: A Defense of Rhetoric and Judgment. Harvard UP. pp. 1-2.; Katula, R.A. (1995). Greek Democracy and the Study of Rhetoric. In Murphy, J.J. and Katula, R.A. (eds.) A Synoptic History of Classical Rhetoric. Hermagoras Press. 3-16. pp. 3-4. </ref>
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==Rhetoric as a Course of Study==
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<small> (27&nbsp;articles)</small>


As a course of study, rhetoric trains students to speak and/or write effectively. The rhetorical curriculum is nearly as old as the rhetorical tradition itself. Over its many centuries, the curriculum has been transformed in a number of ways, but, in general, it has emphasized the study of principles and rules of composition as a means for moving audiences.
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In Greece, rhetoric originated in a school of [[pre-Socratic]] philosophers known as [[Sophists]] circa 600 BC. It was later taught in the [[Roman Empire]] and during the [[Middle Ages]] as one of the three original [[liberal arts]] or ''[[trivium (education)|trivium]]'' (along with [[logic]] and [[grammar]]). <ref>cf. Conley, T.M. (1990) Rhetoric in the European Tradition. University of Chicago Press.; Kennedy, G.A. (1994). A New History of Classical Rhetoric. Princeton University Press.</ref>
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<small> (11&nbsp;articles)</small>


==Rhetoric as Epistemology==
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The relationship between rhetoric and knowledge is one of its oldest and most interesting problems. The contemporary stereotype of rhetoric as "empty speech" or "empty words" reflects a radicial division of rhetoric from knowledge, a division that has had influential adherents within the rhetorical tradition, most notably [[Plato]] in ancient Athens, and [[Petrus Ramus | Peter Ramus]] in 16C Renaissance Europe.<ref>cf. Kennedy, G.A. (1994). A New History of Classical Rhetoric. Princeton University Press., pp. 30-43.; Ong, W.J. (2004). Ramus, Method, and the Decay of Dialogue: From the Art of Discourse to the Art of Reason. University of Chicago Press.</ref> It is a division that has been strongly associated with Enlightenment thinking about language.
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Most rhetoricians, however, see a closer relationship between rhetoric and knowledge. Researchers in the rhetoric of science, for instance, have shown how the two are difficult to separate, and how discourse helps to create knowledge.<ref> cf. Gross, A.G. (1994). The Rhetoric of Science. Harvard University Press.; McCloskey, D. (1998). The Rhetoric of Economics. University of Wisconsin Press.; Latour, B. & Woolgar, S. (1986). Laboratory Life: The Construction of Scientific Facts. Princeton University Press.; Fahnestock, J. (1999). Rhetorical Figures in Science. Oxford University Press.</ref> This perspective is often called "[[rhetoric of science|epistemic rhetoric]]," where communication among interlocutors is fundamental to the creation of knowledge in communities.
=====By nation, people, region or country=====
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Emphasizing this close relationship between discourse and knowledge, contemporary rhetoricians have been associated with a number of philosophical and social scientific theories that see language and discourse as central to, rather than in conflict with knowledge-making (See [[Critical Theory]]'', ''[[Post-structuralism]], [[Hermeneutics]]'', ''[[Reflexivity (social theory)|Reflexivity]])''.
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<small> (7&nbsp;articles)</small>


==The Scope of Rhetoric==
=====Genres, styles and music eras=====
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<small> (11&nbsp;articles)</small>


Contemporary studies of rhetoric address a more diverse range of domains than was the case in ancient times. While classical rhetoric trained speakers to be effective persuaders in public forums and institutions like courtrooms and assemblies, contemporary rhetoric investigates human discourse writ large. Rhetoricians have studied the discourses of a wide variety of domains, including the natural and social sciences, fine art, religion, journalism, fiction, history, cartography, and architecture, along with the more traditional domains of politics and the law. <ref> John S. Nelson, Allan Megill, and Donald N. McCloskey ''[http://hhs.sagepub.com/cgi/content/citation/3/2/305?ck=nck The Rhetoric of Human Sciences: Language and Argument in Scholarship and Public Affairs]'', London: University of Wisconsin Press, 1987. ;
=====Musical theory, instruments and techniques=====
"In the last ten years, many scholars have investigated exactly how rhetoric works within a particular field." Theodora Polito, ''[http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/bpl/epat/2005/00000037/00000004/art00003 Educational Theory as Theory of Culture: A Vichian perspective on the educational theories of John Dewey and Kieran Egan]'' Educational Philosophy and Theory, Vol. 37, No. 4, 2005;
[[Agung]]&nbsp;–
[[Deirdre N. McCloskey]] (1985) ''[http://books.google.com/books?id=WtcKAAAACAAJ The Rhetoric of Economics]'' [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0022-0515(198306)21:2%3C481:TROE%3E2.0.CO;2-R] (Madison, University of Wisconsin Press).;
[[Gandingan]]&nbsp;–
Nelson, J. S. (1998) Tropes of Politics (Madison, University of Wisconsin Press).; Brown, R. H. (1987) Society as Text (Chicago, University of Chicago Press).</ref>
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<small> (9&nbsp;articles)</small>


Public relations, lobbying, law, marketing, professional and technical writing, and advertising are modern professions that employ rhetorical practitioners.
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<small> (6&nbsp;articles)</small>


==The History of Rhetoric in Western Civilization==
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===Ancient Greece===
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The earliest mention of oratorical skill occurs in [[Homer]]'s ''[[Iliad]]'', where heroes like Achilles, Hektor, and Odysseus were honored for their ability to advise and exhort their peers and followers (the ''Laos'' or army) in wise and appropriate action. With the rise of the democratic ''polis'', speaking skill was adapted to the needs of the public and political life of cities in [[Ancient Greece]], much of which revolved around the use of [[oratory (speech)|oratory]] as the medium through which political and judicial decisions were made, and through which philosophical ideas were developed and disseminated. For modern students today, it can be difficult to remember that the wide use and availability of written texts is a phenomenon that was just coming into vogue in [[Classical Greece]]. In Classical times, many of the great thinkers and political leaders performed their works before an audience, usually in the context of a competition or contest for fame, political influence, and cultural capital; in fact, many of them are known only through the texts that their students, followers, or detractors wrote down. As has already been noted, ''rhetor'' was the Greek term for ''orator:'' A ''rhetor'' was a citizen who regularly addressed juries and political assemblies and who was thus understood to have gained some knowledge about public speaking in the process, though in general facility with language was often referred to as ''logôn techne'', "skill with arguments" or "verbal artistry."
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<ref>cf. [[Mogens Herman Hansen]] The Athenian Democracy in the Age of Demosthenes (Blackwell, 1991); Josiah Ober ''Mass and Elite in Democratic Athens'' (Princeton UP, 1989); Jeffrey Walker, ''Rhetoric and Poetics in Antiquity (Oxford UP, 2000).</ref>
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[[Bert Jansch|Jansch, Bert]]&nbsp;–
[[Andrew Johnston (singer)|Johnston, Andrew]]&nbsp;–
[[Juanes]]&nbsp;–
[[Paul Kelly (musician)|Kelly, Paul]]&nbsp;–
[[The Killers (band)]]&nbsp;–
[[Killswitch Engage]]&nbsp;–
[[King Crimson]]&nbsp;–
[[Kiss (band)]]&nbsp;–
[[Beyoncé Knowles|Knowles, Beyoncé]]&nbsp;–
[[Ladysmith Black Mambazo]]&nbsp;–
[[Lamb of God (band)]]&nbsp;–
[[Ray LaMontagne|LaMontagne, Ray]]&nbsp;–
[[Cynthia Lennon|Lennon, Cynthia]]&nbsp;–
[[Alfred Lennon|Lennon, Freddie]]&nbsp;–
[[John Lennon|Lennon, John]]&nbsp;–
[[Julia Lennon|Lennon, Julia]]&nbsp;–
[[Lightning Bolt (band)]]&nbsp;–
[[Linkin Park]]&nbsp;–
[[Dave Lombardo|Lombardo, Dave]]&nbsp;–
[[Loose Fur]]&nbsp;–
[[LeToya Luckett|Luckett, LeToya]]&nbsp;–
[[Machine Head (band)]]&nbsp;–
[[Madness (band)]]&nbsp;–
[[Madonna (entertainer)]]&nbsp;–
[[Wade Mainer|Mainer, Wade]]&nbsp;–
[[Natalie Maines|Maines, Natalie]]&nbsp;–
[[The Make-Up]]&nbsp;–
[[Shelly Manne|Manne, Shelly]]&nbsp;–
[[Bob Marley|Marley, Bob]]&nbsp;–
[[Maroon 5]]&nbsp;–
[[George Martin|Martin, George]]&nbsp;–
[[Jim and Mary McCartney|McCartney, Jim and Mary]]&nbsp;–
[[Linda McCartney|McCartney, Linda]]&nbsp;–
[[Paul McCartney|McCartney, Paul]]&nbsp;–
[[Meg & Dia]]&nbsp;–
[[Katie Melua|Melua, Katie]]&nbsp;–
[[Freddie Mercury|Mercury, Freddie (Bulsara, Farrokh)]]&nbsp;–
[[Meshuggah]]&nbsp;–
[[Darren Middleton|Middleton, Darren]]&nbsp;–
[[Dannii Minogue|Minogue, Dannii]]&nbsp;–
[[Larry Mullen, Jr.|Mullen, Larry Jr.]]&nbsp;–
[[Nation of Ulysses]]&nbsp;–
[[Nickel Creek]]&nbsp;–
[[No Age]]&nbsp;–
[[No Doubt]]&nbsp;–
[[Martin O'Donnell|O'Donnell, Martin]]&nbsp;–
[[Oasis (band)|Oasis]]&nbsp;–
[[The Paperboys]]&nbsp;–
[[Paul Oscar]]<!-- See article and GA pass on talk page for notes as to why the first name comes first here. -->&nbsp;–
[[Neil Peart|Peart, Neil]]&nbsp;–
[[Martin Peerson|Peerson, Martin]]&nbsp;–
[[A Perfect Circle]]&nbsp;–
[[Phish]]&nbsp;–
[[Trevor Pinnock|Pinnock, Trevor]]&nbsp;–
[[Positive Black Soul]]&nbsp;–
[[The Quarrymen]]&nbsp;–
[[Rage Against the Machine]]&nbsp;–
[[The Reputation]]&nbsp;–
[[Trent Reznor|Reznor, Trent]]&nbsp;–
[[Daniel Rodriguez|Rodriguez, Daniel]]&nbsp;–
[[Henry Rollins|Rollins, Henry]]&nbsp;–
[[Axl Rose|Rose, Axl]]&nbsp;–
[[Bianca Ryan|Ryan, Bianca]]&nbsp;–
[[S Club]]&nbsp;–
[[Zubir Said|Said, Zubir]]&nbsp;–
[[Daniel Santos (singer)|Santos, Daniel (singer)]]&nbsp;–
[[Malcolm Sargent|Sargent, Malcolm]]&nbsp;–
[[Neila Sathyalingam|Sathyalingam, Neila]]&nbsp;–
[[Say Anything (band)]]&nbsp;–
[[Bon Scott|Scott, Bon]]&nbsp;–
[[Shadows Fall]]&nbsp;–
[[Silent Civilian]]&nbsp;–
[[Nina Simone|Simone, Nina]]&nbsp;–
[[Ashlee Simpson|Simpson, Ashlee]]&nbsp;–
[[Slipknot (band)|Slipknot]]&nbsp;–
[[Small Mercies]]&nbsp;–
[[Buster Smith|Smith, Buster]]&nbsp;–
[[George Toogood Smith|Smith, George (John Lennon)]]&nbsp;–
[[Mimi Smith|Smith, Mimi]]&nbsp;–
[[Patti Smith|Smith, Patti]]&nbsp;–
[[Soda Stereo]]&nbsp;–
[[Sonic Youth]]&nbsp;–
[[Sparks (band)]]&nbsp;–
[[Britney Spears|Spears, Britney]]&nbsp;–
[[Bruce Springsteen|Springsteen, Bruce]]&nbsp;–
[[Stavesacre]]&nbsp;–
[[Cat Stevens|Stevens, Cat]]&nbsp;–
[[Karlheinz Stockhausen|Stockhausen, Karlheinz]]&nbsp;–
[[Rory Storm|Storm Rory]]&nbsp;–
[[Streetlight Manifesto]]&nbsp;–
[[Sugababes]]&nbsp;–
[[Arthur Sullivan|Sullivan, Arthur]]&nbsp;–
[[Sum 41]]&nbsp;–
[[Stuart Sutcliffe|Sutcliffe, Stuart]]&nbsp;–
[[Ian Svenonius|Svenonius, Ian]]&nbsp;–
[[Switchfoot]]&nbsp;–
[[Connie Talbot|Talbot, Connie]]&nbsp;–
[[Tapeworm (band)]]&nbsp;–
[[Taxiride]]&nbsp;–
[[The Teen Idles]]&nbsp;–
[[Temple of the Dog]]&nbsp;–
[[Tenacious D]]&nbsp;–
[[Thirsty Merc]]&nbsp;–
[[Thrice]]&nbsp;–
[[Danny Tidwell|Tidwell, Danny]]&nbsp;–
[[Tiësto]]&nbsp;–
[[Timbaland]]&nbsp;–
[[Justin Timberlake|Timberlake, Justin]]&nbsp;–
[[TISM]]&nbsp;–
[[Tina Turner|Turner, Tina]]&nbsp;–
[[Jeff Tweedy|Tweedy, Jeff]]&nbsp;–
[[Nobuo Uematsu|Uematsu, Nobuo]]&nbsp;–
[[Underoath]]&nbsp;–
[[Derek Webb|Webb, Derek]]&nbsp;–
[[Kanye West|West, Kanye]]&nbsp;–
[[Matthew West|West, Matthew]]&nbsp;–
[[Hayley Westenra|Westenra, Hayley]]&nbsp;–
[[The White Stripes]]&nbsp;–
[[Wicked Lester]]&nbsp;–
[[X Japan]]&nbsp;–
[[Ace Young|Young, Ace]]&nbsp;–
[[Jane Zhang|Zhang, Jane]]&nbsp;–
<small> (237&nbsp;articles)</small>


Rhetoric thus evolved as an important art, one that provided the orator with the forms, means, and strategies for persuading an audience of the correctness of the orator's arguments. Today the term ''rhetoric'' can be used at times to refer only to the form of argumentation, often with the pejorative connotation that rhetoric is a means of obscuring the truth. Classical [[philosophers]] believed quite the contrary: the skilled use of rhetoric was essential to the discovery of truths, because it provided the means of ordering and clarifying arguments.
=====Recordings, compositions and performances=====
"[[1 Thing]]"&nbsp;–
"[[2 Become 1]]"&nbsp;–
"[[2 Hearts]]"&nbsp;–
''[[9.0: Live]]''&nbsp;–
[[2001 (album)|''2001'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
[[A.M. (album)|''A.M.'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
"[[Aesthetics of Hate]]"&nbsp;–
[[Agrippina (opera)|''Agrippina'' (opera)]]&nbsp;–
''[[All Hope Is Gone]]''&nbsp;–
[[All the Way (Eddie Vedder song)|"All the Way" (Eddie Vedder song)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Alright, Still]]''&nbsp;–
[[American Gangster (album)|''American Gangster'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
"[[Angels Brought Me Here]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Anniemal]]''&nbsp;–
[[Arise (album)|''Arise'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
[[Autobiography (Ashlee Simpson album)|''Autobiography'' (Ashlee Simpson album)]]&nbsp;–
''[[B'Day]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Bat out of Hell]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Bat out of Hell II: Back into Hell]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Bat out of Hell III: The Monster Is Loose]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Beacon Street Collection]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Beautiful Liar]]"&nbsp;–
"[[The Beautiful People]]"&nbsp;–
[[Being There (album)|''Being There'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Bizarre Ride II the Pharcyde]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Black Holes & Revelations]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Black Parade]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Black Tears]]"&nbsp;–
''[[The Blackening]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Burn the Bastards]]"&nbsp;–
[[Burn (Usher song)|"Burn" (Usher song)]]&nbsp;–
"[[Can I Have It Like That]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Candy Shop]]"&nbsp;–
[[Caught Up (Usher song)|"Caught Up" (Usher song)]]&nbsp;–
''[[cê]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Chronic]]''&nbsp;–
[[Clocks (song)|"Clocks" (song)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Coltrane for Lovers]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Confessions Part II]]"&nbsp;–
[[Confessions (Usher album)|''Confessions'' (Usher album)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Costello Music]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Cowboys Are Frequently, Secretly Fond of Each Other]]"&nbsp;–
[[Crash (Gwen Stefani song)|"Crash" (Gwen Stefani song)]]&nbsp;–
[[Crazy in Love (Beyoncé Knowles song)|"Crazy in Love" (Beyoncé Knowles song)]]&nbsp;–
[[Crazy (Gnarls Barkley song)|"Crazy" (Gnarls Barkley song)]]&nbsp;–
[[Crocodiles (album)|''Crocodiles'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
[[Curtis (50 Cent album)|''Curtis'' (50 Cent album)]]&nbsp;–
[[Cyberpunk (album)|''Cyberpunk'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
"[[D.S. (song)|D.S.]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Dangerously in Love]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Dani California]]"&nbsp;–
"[[A Day in the Life]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Demolition Plot J-7]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Desolate North]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Destiny Fulfilled]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Diabolus in Musica]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Dido and Æneas]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Dirrty]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Disasterpieces]]''&nbsp;–
[[Discipline (Janet Jackson album)|''Discipline'' (Janet Jackson album)]]&nbsp;–
[[Doctor Who Prom]]&nbsp;–
"[[Doctorin' the Tardis]]"&nbsp;–
''[[The Documentary]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Doggystyle]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Double Allergic]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Double Nickels on the Dime]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Down Town]]"&nbsp;–
[[Enjoy Yourself (Kylie Minogue album)|''Enjoy Yourself'' (Kylie Minogue album)]]&nbsp;–
"[[Enter Sandman]]"&nbsp;–
[[Era Vulgaris (album)|''Era Vulgaris'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Extraordinary Machine]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Fairy-Queen]]''&nbsp;–
[[Feedback (song)|"Feedback" (song)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Fingerprints: The Best of Powderfinger, 1994–2000]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Fly Me Away]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Flying the Flag (for You)]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Free as a Bird]]"&nbsp;–
''[[FutureSex/LoveSounds]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Get Me Bodied]]"&nbsp;–
''[[A Ghost Is Born]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Ghosts I–IV]]''&nbsp;–
"[[The Gift That Keeps Giving]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Gimme More]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Giovinezza]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Give Up]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Giving You Up]]"&nbsp;–
"[[God Put a Smile upon Your Face]]"&nbsp;–
''[[God's Son]]''&nbsp;–
[[Green Light (song)|"Green Light" (song)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Guitar Method]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Halo 2 Original Soundtrack]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Halo Original Soundtrack]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Hard to Swallow]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Haunting the Chapel]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Heaven Up Here]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Hell Awaits]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Hella Good]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Hey Venus!]]''&nbsp;–
[[Hilary Duff (album)|''Hilary Duff'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
[[Homework (album)|''Homework'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
''[[How to Grow a Woman from the Ground]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Hybrid Theory]]''&nbsp;–
[[I Believe in You (Kylie Minogue song)|"I Believe in You" (Kylie Minogue song)]]&nbsp;–
"[[I Bruise Easily]]"&nbsp;–
"[[I Should Be So Lucky]]"&nbsp;–
"[[I Wanna Have Your Babies]]"&nbsp;–
"[[I Want You (album)|''I Want You'' (album)]]"&nbsp;–
"[[I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That)]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Illmatic]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Impossible Princess]]''&nbsp;–
"[[In Bloom]]"&nbsp;–
"[[In da Club]]"&nbsp;–
"[[In My Place]]"&nbsp;–
[[Indestructible (Disturbed album)|''Indestructible'' (Disturbed album)]]&nbsp;–
[[Iowa (album)|''Iowa'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
"[[It Was a Good Day]]"&nbsp;–
"[[It's All Coming Back to Me Now]]"&nbsp;–
"[[It's Grim Up North]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Janet Jackson's Rhythm Nation 1814]]''&nbsp;–
''[[janet.]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Justified and Ancient]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Kicking Television: Live in Chicago]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Kimi ga Yo]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Kind of Blue]]''&nbsp;–
''[[King of Pop (album)|King of Pop]]''&nbsp;–
[[Kylie (album)|''Kylie'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
"[[Last Train to Trancentral]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Lazer Beam]]"&nbsp;–
[[Let It Be (song)|"Let It Be" (song)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Let's Get It On]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Like a Rolling Stone]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Live Forever]]"&nbsp;–
''[[London Calling]]''&nbsp;–
[[Loose (album)|''Loose'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
"[[Lose My Breath]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Losing My Religion]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Lost and Running]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Love like This]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Luxurious]]"&nbsp;–
"[[The Magnificent]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Majulah Singapura]]''&nbsp;–
[[Maneater (Nelly Furtado song)|"Maneater" (Nelly Furtado song)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Mate. Feed. Kill. Repeat.]]''&nbsp;–
[[Me, Myself and I (Beyoncé Knowles song)|"Me, Myself and I" (Beyoncé song)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Mezzamorphis]]''&nbsp;–
[[Miscellaneous solo piano compositions (Rachmaninoff)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music]]''&nbsp;–
[[Discography of Final Fantasy I and II|Music of ''Final Fantasy I and II'']]&nbsp;–
[[Discography of Final Fantasy III|Music of ''Final Fantasy III'']]&nbsp;–
[[Discography of Final Fantasy IV|Music of ''Final Fantasy IV'']]&nbsp;–
[[Discography of Final Fantasy V|Music of ''Final Fantasy V'']]&nbsp;–
[[Discography of Final Fantasy VI|Music of ''Final Fantasy VI'']]&nbsp;–
[[Discography of Final Fantasy VII|Music of ''Final Fantasy VII'']]&nbsp;–
[[Discography of Final Fantasy VIII|Music of ''Final Fantasy VIII'']]&nbsp;–
[[Discography of Final Fantasy IX|Music of ''Final Fantasy IX'']]&nbsp;–
[[Discography of Final Fantasy X|Music of ''Final Fantasy X'']]&nbsp;–
[[Discography of Final Fantasy X-2|Music of ''Final Fantasy X-2'']]&nbsp;–
[[Discography of Final Fantasy XI|Music of ''Final Fantasy XI'']]&nbsp;–
[[Discography of Final Fantasy XII|Music of ''Final Fantasy XII'']]&nbsp;–
[[Music of Kingdom Hearts|Music of ''Kingdom Hearts'']]&nbsp;–
[[Discography of the Final Fantasy Tactics series|Music of the ''Final Fantasy Tactics'' series]]&nbsp;–
[[My Boo (Usher and Alicia Keys song)|"My Boo" (Usher and Alicia Keys song)]]&nbsp;–
"[[My Kind of Town]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Mythodea]]''&nbsp;–
[[Naughty Girl (Beyoncé Knowles song)|"Naughty Girl" (Beyoncé song)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Neon Bible]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Nine Million Bicycles]]"&nbsp;–
[[No Depression (album)|''No Depression'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
[[No Doubt (No Doubt album)|''No Doubt'' (No Doubt album)]]&nbsp;–
''[[No Jacket Required]]''&nbsp;–
"[[No One Knows]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Nobody Sees]]"&nbsp;–
[[Number 1 (song)|"Number 1" (song)]]&nbsp;–
[[Number 1's (Mariah Carey album)|''Number 1's'' (Mariah Carey album)]]&nbsp;–
"[[O Canada]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Objects in the Rear View Mirror May Appear Closer than They Are]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Ocean Rain]]''&nbsp;–
[[Off the Wall (album)|''Off the Wall'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
''[[OK Computer]]''&nbsp;–
[[Ooh La La (Goldfrapp song)|"Ooh La La" (Goldfrapp song)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Orfeo ed Euridice]]''&nbsp;–
[[Over the Rainbow (Connie Talbot album)|''Over the Rainbow'' (Connie Talbot album)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Parables for Wooden Ears]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Parachutes]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Paranoid Android]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Parsifal]]''&nbsp;–
[[Passenger (Powderfinger song)|"Passenger" (Powderfinger song)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Pastime with Good Company]]''&nbsp;–
[[Perfection (song)|"Perfection" (song)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Pick Up the Pace]]''&nbsp;–
[[Porcupine (album)|''Porcupine'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
[[Promiscuous (song)|"Promiscuous" (song)]]&nbsp;–
"[[Put the Needle on It]]"&nbsp;–
[[Radio (LL Cool J album)|''Radio'' (LL Cool J album)]]&nbsp;–
[[Rain (The Beatles song)|"Rain" (The Beatles song)]]&nbsp;–
"[[Ramblin' Wreck from Georgia Tech]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Ray of Light]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Ready to Die]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Reasonable Doubt]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Return of Saturn]]''&nbsp;–
[[Rhinemaidens (Wagner)]]<!-- Doesn't really fit here, feel free to move to wherever...-->&nbsp;–
"[[Ride a White Horse]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Ring the Alarm]]"&nbsp;–
[[Ruby Blue (album)|''Ruby Blue'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
[[Run Baby Run (Garbage song)|"Run Baby Run" (Garbage song)]]&nbsp;–
[[Run to You (song)|"Run to You" (Bryan Adams song)]]&nbsp;–
"[[Run-Away]]"&nbsp;–
[[Running (No Doubt song)|"Running" (No Doubt song)]]&nbsp;–
''[[A Rush of Blood to the Head]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Say It Right]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Say You'll Be There]]"&nbsp;–
[[The Scientist (song)|"The Scientist" (song)]]&nbsp;–
[[Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (song)|"Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" (song)]]&nbsp;–
[[Shadow (Ashlee Simpson song)|"Shadow" (Ashlee Simpson song)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Shag Times]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Show No Mercy]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Show Your Hand]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Simple Kind of Life]]"&nbsp;–
[[Six Moments Musicaux (Rachmaninoff)|''Six Moments Musicaux'' (Rachmaninoff)]]&nbsp;–
[[Slipknot (album)|''Slipknot'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
''[[So Amazin']]''&nbsp;–
"[[So Under Pressure]]"&nbsp;–
[[Some Girls (Rachel Stevens song)|"Some Girls" (Rachel Stevens song)]]&nbsp;–
[[Speed of Sound (song)|"Speed of Sound" (song)]]&nbsp;–
[[Starlight (song)|"Starlight" (song)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Straight Outta Compton]]&nbsp;–
"[[Strawberry Fields Forever]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Suga Mama]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Summer of '69]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Summerteeth]]''&nbsp;–
[[Sunday Bloody Sunday (song)|"Sunday Bloody Sunday" (song)]]&nbsp;–
"[[Sunsets]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Superunknown]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Sweet Escape]]''&nbsp;–
[[The Sweet Escape (song)|"The Sweet Escape" (song)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Systematic Chaos]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Tago Mago]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Tautiška giesmė]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Tea & Sympathy]]''&nbsp;–
[[Ten (Pearl Jam album)|''Ten'' (Pearl Jam album)]]&nbsp;–
[[These Days (Powderfinger song)|"These Days" (Powderfinger song)]]&nbsp;–
''[[These Days: Live in Concert]]''&nbsp;–
"[[These Words]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Thriller 25]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Through the Wire]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Time on Earth]]"&nbsp;–
[[To the Stars (album)|''To the Stars'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
"[[Tomorrow Never Knows]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Tonight, Tonight]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Touch Me Like That]]"&nbsp;–
[[Tracy (song)|"Tracy" (song)]]&nbsp;–
[[Transfusion (EP)|''Transfusion'' (EP)]]&nbsp;–
"[[Tumbling Dice]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Underneath It All]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Undisputed Attitude]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Unhalfbricking]]''&nbsp;–
''[[United Abominations]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Upgrade U]]"&nbsp;–
''[[The Velvet Underground & Nico]]''&nbsp;–
[[Venus and Adonis (opera)|''Venus and Adonis'' (opera)]]&nbsp;–
[[Violin Concerto (Mendelssohn)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Vitalogy]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Voices of the Lifestream]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Voliminal: Inside the Nine]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Voodoo (album)]]''&nbsp;–
[[Vs. (album)|''Vs.'' (album)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Vulture Street]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Waking Up the Neighbours]]''&nbsp;–
[[Wannabe (song)|"Wannabe" (song)]]&nbsp;–
"[[We Belong Together]]"&nbsp;–
[[Weezer (1994 album)|''Weezer'' (1994 album)]]&nbsp;–
"[[What Goes Around.../...Comes Around]]"&nbsp;–
"[[What Time Is Love?]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Where the Streets Have No Name]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Where We Land]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Whitney Joins The JAMs]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Who Really Cares (Featuring the Sound of Insanity)]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Why Should the Fire Die?]]''&nbsp;–
[[Wind It Up (Gwen Stefani song)|"Wind It Up" (Gwen Stefani song)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Winter in America]]''&nbsp;–
''[[X&Y]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Xenogears Original Soundtrack]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Yankee Hotel Foxtrot]]''&nbsp;–
[[Yeah! (Usher song)|"Yeah!" (Usher song)]]&nbsp;–
[[Yellow (song)|"Yellow" (song)]]&nbsp;–
"[[Yes! I Am a Long Way from Home]]"&nbsp;–
''[[Young Modern]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Zaireeka]]''&nbsp;–
<small> (289&nbsp;articles)</small>


====The Sophists====
</div>
Organized thought about public speaking began in [[Ancient Greece]].<ref>cf. Kennedy, G.A. (1994). A New History of Classical Rhetoric. Princeton University Press. p. 3.</ref> Possibly, the first study about the power of language may be attributed to the philosopher [[Empedocles]] (d. ca. 444 BC), whose theories on human knowledge would provide a basis for many future rhetoricians. The first written manual is attributed to [[Corax of Syracuse|Corax]] and his pupil [[Tisias]]. Their work, as well as that of many of the early rhetoricians, grew out of the courts of law; Tisias, for example, is believed to have written judicial speeches that others delivered in the courts. Teaching in oratory was popularized in the 5th century BC by itinerant teachers known as [[sophist]]s, the best known of whom were [[Protagoras]] (c.481-420 BC), [[Gorgias]] (c.483-376 BC), and [[Isocrates]] (436-338 BC). The Sophists were a disparate group who travelled from city to city making public displays to attract students who were then charged a fee for their education. Their central focus was on [[logos]] or what we might broadly refer to as [[discourse]], its functions and powers. They defined parts of speech, analyzed poetry, parsed close synonyms, invented argumentation strategies, and debated the nature of reality. They claimed to make their students "better," or, in other words, to teach [[virtue]]. They thus claimed that human "excellence" was not an accident of fate or a prerogative of noble birth, but an art or "''techne''" that could be taught and learned. They were thus among the first humanists. Several sophists also questioned received wisdom about the gods and the Greek culture, which they believed was taken for granted by Greeks of their time, making them among the first agnostics. For example, they argued that cultural practices were a function of convention or ''[[nomos]]'' rather than blood or birth or ''phusis''. They argued even further that morality or immorality of any action could not be judged outside of the cultural context within which it occurred. The well-known phrase, "Man is the measure of all things" arises from this belief. One of their most famous, and infamous, doctrines has to do with probability and counter arguments. They taught that every argument could be countered with an opposing argument, that an argument's effectiveness derived from how "likely" it appeared to the audience (its probability of seeming true), and that any probability argument could be countered with an inverted probability argument. Thus, if it seemed likely that a strong, poor man were guilty of robbing a rich, weak man, the strong poor man could argue, on the contrary, that this very likelihood (that he would be a suspect) makes it unlikely that he committed the crime, since he would most likely be apprehended for the crime. They also taught and were known for their ability to make the weaker (or worse) argument the stronger (or better). [[Aristophanes]] famously parodies the clever inversions that sophists were known for in his play ''The Clouds''.
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<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Video-x-generic.svg |22px|left]]Theatre, film and drama</div>
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The word "sophistry" developed strong negative connotations in ancient Greece that continue today, but in ancient Greece sophists were nevertheless popular and well-paid professionals, widely respected for their abilities but also widely criticized for their excesses.
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See [[Jacqueline de Romilly]], ''The Great Sophists in Periclean Athens'' (French orig. 1988; English trans. Clarendon Press/Oxford University Press, 1992).
=====Actors, models, performers and celebrities=====
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[[Christian Bale|Bale, Christian]]&nbsp;–
[[Lucille Ball|Ball, Lucille]]&nbsp;–
[[Barbette (performer)]]&nbsp;–
[[Rutland Barrington|Barrington, Rutland]]&nbsp;–
[[Drew Barrymore|Barrymore, Drew]]&nbsp;–
[[Sean Bean|Bean, Sean]]&nbsp;–
[[Jason Beghe|Beghe, Jason]]&nbsp;–
[[Paudge Behan|Behan, Paudge]]&nbsp;–
[[Kristen Bell|Bell, Kristen]]&nbsp;–
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[[Pierce Brosnan|Brosnan, Pierce]]&nbsp;–
[[Amanda Bynes|Bynes, Amanda]]&nbsp;–
[[Drew Carey|Carey, Drew]]&nbsp;–
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[[André Morell|Morell, André]]&nbsp;–
[[David Morse (actor)|Morse, David]]&nbsp;–
[[Ulrich Mühe|Mühe, Ulrich]]&nbsp;–
[[James Nesbitt|Nesbitt, James]]&nbsp;–
[[Leslie Nielsen|Nielsen, Leslie]]&nbsp;–
[[Edward Norton|Norton, Edward]]&nbsp;–
[[Larisa Oleynik|Oleynik, Larisa]]&nbsp;–
[[Lloyd Owen|Owen, Lloyd]]&nbsp;–
[[Michael Palin|Palin, Michael]]&nbsp;–
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[[Alex Pettyfer|Pettyfer, Alex]]&nbsp;–
[[Brad Pitt|Pitt, Brad]]&nbsp;–
[[Natalie Portman|Portman, Natalie]]&nbsp;–
[[Jonathan Pryce|Pryce, Jonathan]]&nbsp;–
[[Emilie de Ravin|Ravin, Emilie de]]&nbsp;–
[[Emma Roberts|Roberts, Emma]]&nbsp;–
[[Andrew Robinson|Robinson, Andrew]]&nbsp;–
[[Brandon Routh|Routh, Brandon]]&nbsp;–
[[Winona Ryder|Ryder, Winona]]&nbsp;–
[[Riya Sen|Sen, Riya]]&nbsp;–
[[Charlie Sheen|Sheen, Charlie]]&nbsp;–
[[Kevin Spacey|Spacey, Kevin]]&nbsp;–
[[Cole & Dylan Sprouse|Sprouse, Dylan and Cole]]&nbsp;–
[[Ben Stiller|Stiller, Ben]]&nbsp;–
[[Tetsuji Takechi|Takechi, Tetsuji]]&nbsp;–
[[Reginald Tate|Tate, Reginald]]&nbsp;–
[[Scout Taylor-Compton|Taylor-Compton, Scout]]&nbsp;–
[[Tila Tequila|Tequila, Tila]]&nbsp;–
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[[Forest Whitaker|Whitaker, Forest]]&nbsp;–
[[Gene Wilder|Wilder, Gene]]&nbsp;–
[[Bruce Willis|Willis, Bruce]]&nbsp;–
[[Evan Rachel Wood|Wood, Evan Rachel]]&nbsp;–
[[Trinny Woodall|Woodall, Trinny]]&nbsp;–
<small> (109&nbsp;articles)</small>


=====Animation=====
====Isocrates====
[[Isocrates]] (436-338 BC), (not to be confused with the philosopher [[Socrates]]) like the [[sophists]], taught public speaking as a means of human improvement, but he worked to distinguish himself from the Sophists, whom he saw as claiming far more than they could deliver. He suggested that while an art of virtue or excellence did exist, it was only one piece, and the least, in a process of self-improvement that relied much more heavily on native talent and desire, constant practice, and the imitation of good models. Isocrates believed that practice in speaking publicly about noble themes and important questions would function to improve the character of both speaker and audience while also offering the best service to a state. <ref>Isocrates. "Against the Sophists." In ''Isocrates with an English Translation in three volumes'', by George Norlin, Ph.D., LL.D. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1980.; Isocrates. "Antidosis." In ''Isocrates with an English Translation in three volumes'', by George Norlin, Ph.D., LL.D. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1980.</ref> He thus wrote his speeches as "models" for his students to imitate in the same way that poets might imitate Homer or Hesiod. His was the first permanent school in [[Athens]] and it is likely that [[Plato's Academy]] and [[Aristotle's Lyceum]] were founded in part as a response to Isocrates. Though he left no handbooks, his speeches (''"Antidosis"'' and ''"Against the Sophists"'' are most relevant to students of rhetoric) became models of oratory (he was one of the canonical "[[Ten Attic Orators]]") and he had a marked influence on [[Cicero]] and [[Quintilian]], and through them, on the entire educational system of the west.
''[[.hack//Sign]]''&nbsp;–
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<small> (13&nbsp;articles)</small>


[[Image:Plato-raphael.jpg|thumb|right|280px|Plato outlined the difference between true and false rhetoric.]]
=====Cinema=====
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[[Golden Film]]&nbsp;–
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<small> (5&nbsp;articles)</small>


====Plato====
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<small> (55&nbsp;articles)</small>


[[Plato]] (427-347 BC) famously outlined the differences between true and false rhetoric in a number of dialogues, but especially the Gorgias and the Phaedrus. Both dialogues are complex and difficult, but in both Plato disputes the Sophistic notion that an art of persuasion, the art of the Sophists which he calls "rhetoric" (after the public speaker or rhêtôr), can exist independent of the art of dialectic. Plato claims that since Sophists appeal only to what seems likely or probable, rather than to what is true, they are not at all making their students and audiences "better," but simply flattering them with what they want to hear. While Plato's condemnation of rhetoric is clear in the Gorgias, in the Phaedrus he seems to suggest the possibility of a true art of rhetoric based upon the knowledge produced by dialectic, and he relies on such a dialectically informed rhetoric to appeal to the main character, Phaedrus, to take up philosophy. It is possible that in developing his own theory of knowledge, Plato coined the term "rhetoric" both to denounce what he saw as the false wisdom of the sophists, and to advance his own views on knowledge and method. Plato's animosity against the Sophists derives not only from their inflated claims to teach virtue and their reliance on appearances, but from the fact that his teacher, Socrates, was accused of being a sophist and ultimately sentenced to death for his teaching.
=====Films=====
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[[Empire of the Sun (film)|''Empire of the Sun'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
[[Enchanted (film)|''Enchanted'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
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[[From Russia with Love (film)|''From Russia with Love'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
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[[Gladiator (2000 film)|''Gladiator'' (2000 film)]]&nbsp;–
''[[GoldenEye]]''&nbsp;–
[[Goldfinger (film)|''Goldfinger'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
[[Granpa (film)|''Granpa'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
[[Grindhouse (film)|''Grindhouse'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
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[[Halloween (franchise)|''Halloween'' (franchise)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hancock (film)|''Hancock'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hannibal (film)|''Hannibal'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
[[A Hard Day's Night (film)|''A Hard Day's Night'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
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[[Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone (film)|''Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
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[[Hey Good Lookin' (film)|''Hey Good Lookin<nowiki>'</nowiki>'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
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[[Hook (film)|''Hook'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
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[[Juno (film)|''Juno'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
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[[King Kong (2005 film)|''King Kong'' (2005 film)]]&nbsp;–
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''[[Lipstick and Dynamite, Piss and Vinegar: The First Ladies of Wrestling]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Little Shop of Horrors]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Live Free or Die Hard]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Living Daylights]]''&nbsp;–
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''[[The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Lost World: Jurassic Park]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Marilena from P7]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Meerkat Manor: The Story Begins]]''&nbsp;–
[[Memento (film)|''Memento'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
[[Minority Report (film)|''Minority Report'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
''[[A Month in the Country (film)]]''&nbsp;–
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''[[National Lampoon's Animal House]]''&nbsp;–
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[[No Country for Old Men (film)|''No Country for Old Men'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Not Quite Hollywood]]''&nbsp;–
[[Notting Hill (film)|''Notting Hill'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
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''[[Octopussy]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Pan's Labyrinth]]''&nbsp;–
[[Parineeta (2005 film)|''Parineeta'' (2005 film)]]&nbsp;–
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''[[Pee-wee's Big Adventure]]''&nbsp;–
[[Pirates of the Caribbean (film series)|''Pirates of the Caribbean'' film series]]&nbsp;–
''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End]]''&nbsp;–
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''[[Pound Puppies and the Legend of Big Paw]]''&nbsp;–
[[The Prestige (film)|''The Prestige'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
[[Primer (film)|''Primer'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
[[Psycho (1960 film)|''Psycho'' (1960 film)]]&nbsp;–
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''[[Rang De Basanti]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Reservoir Dogs]]''&nbsp;–
[[Resident Evil (film)|''Resident Evil'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
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[[Rocky Balboa (film)|''Rocky Balboa'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
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[[Silent Hill (film)|''Silent Hill'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Singapore Dreaming]]''&nbsp;–
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[[Solaris (1972 film)|''Solaris'' (1972 film)]]&nbsp;–
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[[The Thin Red Line (1998 film)|''The Thin Red Line'' (1998 film)]]&nbsp;–
[[Thunderball (film)|''Thunderball'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
[[Titanic (1997 film)|''Titanic'' (1997 film)]]&nbsp;–
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''[[The Truman Show]]''&nbsp;–
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''[[Ultime grida dalla savana]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Unnale Unnale]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Usual Suspects]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Vanaja (film)]]''&nbsp;–
''[[A View to a Kill]]''&nbsp;–
''[[WALL-E]]''&nbsp;–
''[[When Harry Met Sally...]]''&nbsp;–
[[The Wiz (film)|''The Wiz'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
[[Wizards (film)|''Wizards'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
''[[The World Is Not Enough]]''&nbsp;–
[[X-Men (film)|''X-Men'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
[[X-Men (film series)|''X-Men'' film series]]&nbsp;–
''[[X-Men: The Last Stand]]''&nbsp;–
[[X2 (film)|''X2'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
[[You Only Live Twice (film)|''You Only Live Twice'' (film)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Zero Patience]]''&nbsp;–
<small> (198&nbsp;articles)</small>


=====Television and radio drama=====
====Aristotle====
Plato's student [[Aristotle]] (384-322 BC) famously set forth an extended treatise on rhetoric that still repays careful study today.
<!--Includes drama series, soap operas, sitcoms, cartoons, and dramatic comedy-->
''[[30 Rock]]''&nbsp;–
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[[Cold Feet (series 1)|''Cold Feet'' (series 1)]]&nbsp;–
[[Cold Feet (series 5)|''Cold Feet'' (series 5)]]&nbsp;–
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''[[Mr. Bean]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Museum of Curiosity]]''&nbsp;–
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''[[One Foot in the Grave]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Our World (American TV series)]]''&nbsp;–
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[[Quatermass (TV serial)|''Quatermass'' (TV serial)]]&nbsp;–
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[[The Twilight Zone (1959 TV series)|''The Twilight Zone'' (1959 TV series)]]&nbsp;–
[[Underbelly (TV series)|''Underbelly'' (TV series)]]&nbsp;–
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''[[What It's Like Being Alone]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Where no man has gone before]]"&nbsp;–
''[[The X-Files]]''&nbsp;–
<small> (50&nbsp;articles)</small>


In the first sentence of [[Rhetoric (Aristotle)|The Art of Rhetoric]], Aristotle says that "rhetoric is the counterpart [literally, the [[antistrophe]]] of dialectic." As the "antistrophe" of a Greek [[ode]] responds to and is patterned after the structure of the "[[strophe]]" (they form two sections of the whole and are sung by two parts of the chorus), so the art of rhetoric follows and is structurally patterned after the art of dialectic because both are arts of discourse production. Thus, while dialectical methods are necessary to find truth in theoretical matters, rhetorical methods are required in practical matters such as adjudicating somebody's guilt or innocence when charged in a court of law, or adjudicating a prudent course of action to be taken in a deliberative assembly.
=====Television episodes=====
For Plato and Aristotle, dialectic involves persuasion, so when Aristotle says that rhetoric is the [[antistrophe]] of dialectic, he means that rhetoric as he uses the term has a domain or scope of application that is parallel to but different from the domain or scope of application of dialectic. In ''Nietzsche Humanist'' (1998: 129), Claude Pavur explains that "[t]he Greek prefix 'anti' does not merely designate opposition, but it can also mean 'in place of.'" When Aristotle characterizes rhetoric as the antistrophe of dialectic, he no doubt means that rhetoric is used in place of dialectic when we are discussing civic issues in a court of law or in a legislative assembly. The domain of rhetoric is civic affairs and practical decision making in civic affairs, not theoretical considerations of operational definitions of terms and clarification of thought -- these, for him, are in the domain of dialectic.
"[['Round Springfield]]"&nbsp;–
"[[22 Short Films About Springfield]]"&nbsp;–
[[The Aftermath (30 Rock)|"The Aftermath" (''30 Rock'')]]&nbsp;–
"[[Airport '07]]"&nbsp;–
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[[Some Enchanted Evening (The Simpsons)|"Some Enchanted Evening" (''The Simpsons'')]]&nbsp;–
[[Somebody to Love (30 Rock)|"Somebody to Love" (''30 Rock'')]]&nbsp;–
"[[Something Nice Back Home]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Sozin's Comet: The Final Battle]]"&nbsp;–
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"[[There's No Disgrace Like Home]]"&nbsp;–
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"[[The Trouble with Trillions]]"&nbsp;–
"[[The Twisted World of Marge Simpson]]"&nbsp;–
[[Two for the Road (Lost)|"Two for the Road" (''Lost'')]]&nbsp;–
"[[The Two Mrs. Nahasapeemapetilons]]"&nbsp;–
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"[[Unending]]"&nbsp;–
[[Up All Night (30 Rock)|"Up All Night" (''30 Rock'')]]&nbsp;–
[[Valentine's Day (The Office)|"Valentine's Day" (''The Office'')]]&nbsp;–
[[Voyage of the Damned (Doctor Who)|"Voyage of the Damned" (''Doctor Who'')]]&nbsp;–
[[Ways and Means (The West Wing)|"Ways and Means" (''The West Wing'')]]&nbsp;–
"[[Whacking Day]]"&nbsp;–
"[[What Kind of Day Has It Been]]"&nbsp;–
"[[When You Dish Upon a Star]]"&nbsp;–
"[[Where No Man Has Gone Before]]"&nbsp;–
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"[[Wild Barts Can't Be Broken]]"&nbsp;–
[[Window of Opportunity (Stargate SG-1)|"Window of Opportunity" (''Stargate SG-1'')]]&nbsp;–
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Aristotle's treatise on rhetoric is an attempt to systematically describe civic rhetoric as a human art or skill (techne). His definition of rhetoric as "the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion," essentially a mode of discovery, seems to limit the art to the inventional process, and Aristotle heavily emphasizes the logical aspect of this process. But the treatise in fact also discusses not only elements of style and (briefly) delivery, but also emotional appeals (pathos) and characterological appeals (ethos). He thus identifies three steps or "offices" of rhetoric--invention, arrangement, and style--and three different types of rhetorical proof:
=====Theatre and musical theatre=====
[[Gilbert and Sullivan]]&nbsp;–
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*[[ethos]]: how the character and credibility of a speaker influence an audience to consider him to be believable.
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**This could be any position in which the speaker--from being a college professor of the subject, to being an acquaintance of person who experienced the matter in question--knows about the topic.
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**For instance, when a magazine claims that, ''A [[MIT]] professor predicts that the robotic era is coming in 2050'', the use of big name "MIT" (a world-renown college for advanced research in math, science, and technology) establishes the strong credibility.
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*[[pathos]]: the use of emotional appeals to alter the audience's judgment.
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**This can be done through metaphor, amplification, storytelling, or presenting the topic in a way that evokes strong emotions in the audience.
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*[[logos]]: the use of reasoning, either inductive or deductive, to construct an argument.
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**Logos appeals include appeals to statistics, math, logic, and ''objectivity.'' For instance, when advertisements claim that their product is ''37% more effective than the competition,'' they are making a logical appeal.
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**[[Inductive reasoning]] uses examples (historical, mythical, or hypothetical) to draw conclusions.
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**[[Deductive reasoning]], or "enthymematic" reasoning, uses generally accepted propositions to derive specific conclusions. The term ''logic'' evolved from ''logos''. Aristotle emphasized enthymematic reasoning as central to the process of rhetorical invention, though later rhetorical theorists placed much less emphasis on it.
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Aristotle also identifies three different types or genres of civic rhetoric: ''[[forensic]]'' (also known as judicial, was concerned with determining ''[[truth]]'' or ''falsity'' of events that took place in the ''[[past]]'', issues of guilt), ''[[deliberative]]'' (also known as political, was concerned with determining whether or not particular actions ''should'' or should not be taken in the ''[[future]]''), and ''[[epideictic]]'' (also known as ceremonial, was concerned with praise and blame, values, right and wrong, demonstrating beauty and skill in the ''present'').
==&shy;&nbsp;==


One of the most fruitful of Aristotelian doctrines was the idea of topics (also referred to as common topics or commonplaces). Though the term had a wide range of application (as a memory technique or compositional exercise, for example) it most often referred to the "seats of argument"--the list of categories of thought or modes of reasoning--that a speaker could use in order to generate arguments or proofs. The topics were thus a heuristic or inventional tool designed to help speakers categorize and thus better retain and apply frequently used types of argument. For example, since we often see effects as "like" their causes, one way to invent an argument (about a future effect) is by discussing the cause (which it will be "like"). This and other rhetorical topics derive from Aristotle's belief that there are certain predictable ways in which humans (particularly non-specialists) draw conclusions from premises. Based upon and adapted from his dialectical Topics, the rhetorical topics became a central feature of later rhetorical theorizing, most famously in Cicero's work of that name.
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See Eugene Garver, ''Aristotle's Rhetoric: An Art of Character'' (University of Chicago Press,1994).
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===Roman rhetoricians ===
=====Words and linguistics=====
The Romans, for whom oration also became an important part of public life, saw much value in Greek rhetoric, hiring Greek rhetoricians to teach in their schools and as private tutors, and imitating and adapting Greek rhetorical works in Latin and with Roman examples. Roman rhetoric thus largely extends upon and develops its Greek roots, though it tends to prefer practical advice to the theoretical speculations of Greek rhetoricians. [[Cicero]] (106-43 BC) and [[Quintilian]] (35-100 AD) were chief among Roman rhetoricians, and their work is an extension of sophistic, Isocratean, Platonic and Aristotelian rhetorical theory.
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Latin rhetoric was developed out of the Rhodian schools of rhetoric. In the second century BC, [[Rhodes]] became an important educational center, particularly of rhetoric, and the sons of noble Roman families studied there.
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Although not widely read in Roman times, the ''[[Rhetorica ad Herennium]]'' (sometimes attributed to Cicero, but probably not his work) is a notable early work on Latin rhetoric. Its author was probably a Latin rhetorician in Rhodes, and for the first time we see a systematic treatment of Latin ''elocutio''. The ''Ad Herennium'' provides a glimpse into the early development of Latin rhetoric, and in the [[Middle Ages]] and [[Renaissance]], it achieved wide publication as one of the basic school texts on rhetoric.
==&shy;&nbsp;==


Whether or not he wrote the ''Rhetorica ad Herennium'', Cicero, along with Quintilian (the most influential Roman teacher of rhetoric), is considered one of the most important Roman rhetoricians. His works include the early and very influential ''De Inventione'' (On Invention, often read alongside the ''Ad Herennium'' as the two basic texts of rhetorical theory throughout the Middle Ages and into the Renaissance), ''De Oratore'' (a fuller statement of rhetorical principles in dialogue form), ''Topics'' (a rhetorical treatment of common topics, highly influential through the Renaissance), ''Brutus'' (a discussion of famous orators) and ''Orator'' (a defense of Cicero's style). Cicero also left a large body of speeches and letters which would establish the outlines of Latin eloquence and style for generations to come. It was the rediscovery of Cicero's speeches (such as the defence of Archias) and letters (to Atticus) by Italians like [[Petrarch]] that, in part, ignited the cultural innovations that we know as the Renaissance.
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<small> (26&nbsp;articles)</small>


Quintilian's career began as a pleader in the courts of law; his reputation grew so great that [[Vespasian]] created a chair of rhetoric for him in Rome. The culmination of his life's work was the ''Institutio oratoria'' (or ''Institutes of Oratory''), a lengthy treatise on the training of the orator in which he discusses the training of the "perfect" orator from birth to old age and, in the process, reviews the doctrines and opinions of many influential rhetoricians who preceded him.
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[[Orochimaru (Naruto)]]&nbsp;–
[[Persian literature]]&nbsp;–
[[Reception history of Jane Austen]]&nbsp;–
[[Shared universe]]&nbsp;–
[[Space Science Fiction Magazine]]&nbsp;–
[[Swedish literature]]&nbsp;–
[[Textual criticism]]&nbsp;–
[[Tree: A Life Story]]&nbsp;–
[[Venture Science Fiction Magazine]]&nbsp;–
[[Yotsuya Kaidan]]&nbsp;–
<small> (18&nbsp;articles)</small>


In the Institutes, Quintilian organizes rhetorical study through the stages of education that an aspiring orator would undergo, beginning with the selection of a nurse. Aspects of elementary education (training in reading and writing, grammar, and literary criticism) are followed by preliminary rhetorical exercises in composition (the progymnasmata) that include maxims and fables, narratives and comparisons, and finally full legal or political speeches. The delivery of speeches within the context of education or for entertainment purposes became widespread and popular under the term "declamation." Rhetorical training proper was categorized under five canons that would persist for centuries in academic circles:
=====Visual novels, cartoons and manga=====
*''[[Inventio]]'' (invention) is the process that leads to the development and refinement of an argument.
''[[Azumanga Daioh]]''&nbsp;–
*Once arguments are developed, ''[[dispositio]]'' (disposition, or arrangement) is used to determine how it should be organized for greatest effect, usually beginning with the ''[[exordium (rhetoric)|exordium]]''.
[[Clannad (visual novel)|''Clannad'' (visual novel)]]&nbsp;–
*Once the speech content is known and the structure is determined, the next steps involve ''[[elocutio]]'' (style) and ''[[pronuntiatio]]'' (presentation).
''[[Death Note]]''&nbsp;–
*''[[Memoria]]'' (memory) comes to play as the speaker recalls each of these elements during the speech.
''[[Fate/stay night]]''&nbsp;–
*''[[Actio]]'' (delivery) is the final step as the speech is presented in a gracious and pleasing way to the audience - the [[Grand Style]].
''[[Fist of the North Star]]''&nbsp;–
[[Golden Boy (manga)|''Golden Boy'' (manga)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Hibiki's Magic]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Higurashi no Naku Koro ni]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Kanon]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Kashimashi: Girl Meets Girl]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Lupin III]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Marvel 1602]]&nbsp;–
''[[One: Kagayaku Kisetsu e]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Otome wa Boku ni Koishiteru]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Planetarian: Chiisana Hoshi no Yume]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Sailor Moon]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Strawberry Panic!]]''&nbsp;–
[[Suzuka (manga)|''Suzuka'' (manga)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Thrud the Barbarian]]''&nbsp;–
[[X (manga)|''X'' (manga)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Yotsuba&!]]''&nbsp;–
<small> (21&nbsp;articles)</small>


This work was available only in fragments in medieval times, but the discovery of a complete copy at [[Abbey of St. Gall]] in 1416 led to its emergence as one of the most influential works on rhetoric during the Renaissance.
=====Works=====
''[[The Absent-Minded Beggar]]''&nbsp;–
''[[After This]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Agrippa (a book of the dead)]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Amazing Stories]]''&nbsp;–
''[[And the Band Played On]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Apex Hides the Hurt]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Ars moriendi]]''&nbsp;–
[[Artemis Fowl (novel)|''Artemis Fowl'' (novel)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Atlas of Australian Birds]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Botanic Garden]]''&nbsp;–
''[[A Canticle for Leibowitz]]''&nbsp;–
[[The CIA and September 11 (book)|''The CIA and September 11'' (book)]]&nbsp;–
''[[The Clean Tech Revolution]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Concerned]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Crime and Punishment]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Danny Deever]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Dragons of Autumn Twilight]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Either/Or]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Eldest]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Erast Fandorin]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Eureka: A Prose Poem]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Euston Manifesto]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Facundo]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Feast of the Goat]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Fight Club]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Floris and Blancheflour]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Frankenstein]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Halo: First Strike]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Halo: Ghosts of Onyx]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Halo: The Fall of Reach]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Halo: The Flood]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Harry Potter]]''&nbsp;–
[[Harry Potter influences and analogues|''Harry Potter'' influences and analogues]]&nbsp;–
''[[Help at Any Cost]]''&nbsp;–
''[[History of a Six Weeks' Tour]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The History of the Fairchild Family]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Hobbit]]''&nbsp;–
''[[I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings]]''&nbsp;–
''[[I, the Supreme]]''&nbsp;–
''[[In Praise of Limestone]]''&nbsp;–
[[Legal disputes over the Harry Potter series|Legal disputes over ''Harry Potter'']]&nbsp;–
''[[Les Chouans]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Libris Mortis]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Light House: A Trifle]]''&nbsp;–
[[Live and Let Die (novel)|''Live and Let Die'' (novel)]]&nbsp;–
[[The Man with the Golden Gun (novel)|''The Man with the Golden Gun'' (novel)]]&nbsp;–
[[Maurice (Shelley)|''Maurice'' (Shelley)]]&nbsp;–
[[Midas (Shelley)|''Midas '' (Shelley)]]&nbsp;–
[[Moonrise (Warriors)|''Moonrise'' (''Warriors'')]]&nbsp;–
''[[A More Perfect Union: Advancing New American Rights]]''&nbsp;–
"[[Mounseer Nongtongpaw]]"&nbsp;–
"[[The Murders in the Rue Morgue]]"&nbsp;–
''[[My Opposition]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Myst Reader]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Nemesis of Faith]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Newshounds]]''&nbsp;–
''[[No Man Knows My History: The Life of Joseph Smith]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Outrageous Betrayal]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Ramona]]''&nbsp;–
[[The Rape of Nanking (book)|''The Rape of Nanking'' (book)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Romeo and Juliet]]''&nbsp;–
''[[A Series of Unfortunate Events]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Sonnet 18]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Soxaholix]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Strawberry Panic!]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Sword of Shannara]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Tales of Beedle the Bard]]''&nbsp;–
[[Three Mile Island (book)|''Three Mile Island'' (book)]]&nbsp;–
''[[To the Stars (novel)|To the Stars]]&nbsp;–
[[The Transformers (IDW Publishing)|''The Transformers'' (IDW Publishing)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Treasure Island]]''&nbsp;–
[[Underground (stories)|''Underground'' (stories)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Valérian and Laureline]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Watership Down]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Y Gododdin]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories]]''&nbsp;–
<small> (76&nbsp;articles)</small>


Quintilian's work attempts to describe not just the art of rhetoric, but the formation of the perfect orator as a politically active, virtuous, publicly minded citizen. His emphasis on the real life application of rhetorical training was in part nostalgia for the days when rhetoric was an important political tool, and in part a reaction against the growing tendency in Roman schools toward standardization of themes and techniques and increasing separation between school exercises and actual legal practice, a tendency equally powerful today in public schools and law schools alike. At the same time that rhetoric was becoming divorced from political decision making, rhetoric rose as a culturally vibrant and important mode of entertainment and cultural criticism in a movement known as the "second sophistic," a development which gave rise to the charge (made by Quintilian and others) that teachers were emphasizing ornamentation over substance in rhetoric. Quintilian's masterful work was not enough to curb this movement, but his dismayed response cemented the scholarly opinion that 2nd century C.E. rhetoric fell into decadence and political irrelevance, despite its wide popularity and cultural importance.
=====Writers, publishers and critics=====
[[Khachatur Abovian|Abovian, Khachatur]]&nbsp;–
[[Aeschylus]]&nbsp;–
[[Algonquin Round Table]]&nbsp;–
[[W. H. Auden|Auden, W. H.]]&nbsp;–
[[Julia Baird|Baird, Julia]]&nbsp;–
[[Matsuo Bashō|Bashō, Matsuo]]&nbsp;–
[[Gertrude Barrows Bennett|Bennett, Gertrude Barrows]]&nbsp;–
[[A. Scott Berg|Berg, A. Scott]]&nbsp;–
[[Ann Eliza Bleecker|Bleecker, Ann Eliza]]&nbsp;–
[[Jorge Luis Borges|Borges, Jorge Luis]]&nbsp;–
[[Charles Étienne Brasseur de Bourbourg|Brasseur de Bourbourg, Charles Étienne]]&nbsp;–
[[Fawn M. Brodie|Brodie, Fawn M.]]&nbsp;–
[[Mike Bullen|Bullen, Mike]]&nbsp;–
[[John W. Campbell|Campbell, John W.]]&nbsp;–
[[Michael Chabon|Chabon, Michael]]&nbsp;–
[[Thomas Holley Chivers|Chivers, Thomas Holley]]&nbsp;–
[[Mary Higgins Clark|Clark, Mary Higgins]]&nbsp;–
[[Jack Coggins|Coggins, Jack]]&nbsp;–
[[Stephen Crane|Crane, Stephen]]&nbsp;–
[[Death of Edgar Allan Poe]]&nbsp;–
[[Domingo Faustino Sarmiento|Domingo Faustino Sarmiento]]&nbsp;–
[[Andrea Dworkin|Dworkin, Andrea]]&nbsp;–
[[Elizabeth F. Ellet|Ellet, Elizabeth F.]]&nbsp;–
[[Fujiwara no Teika]]&nbsp;–
[[Gabriel García Márquez|García Márquez, Gabriel]]&nbsp;–
[[Abraham Goldfaden|Goldfaden, Abraham]]&nbsp;–
[[Clare Winger Harris|Harris, Clare Winger]]&nbsp;–
[[Nathaniel Hawthorne|Hawthorne, Nathaniel]]&nbsp;–
[[L. Ron Hubbard|Hubbard, L. Ron]]&nbsp;–
[[Washington Irving|Irving, Washington]]&nbsp;–
[[Pauline Johnson|Johnson, Pauline]]&nbsp;–
[[Joyce Kilmer|Kilmer, Joyce]]&nbsp;–
[[Stanisław Lem|Lem, Stanisław]]&nbsp;–
[[Jonathan Lethem|Lethem, Jonathan]]&nbsp;–
[[C. S. Lewis|Lewis, C. S.]]&nbsp;–
[[Henry Wadsworth Longfellow|Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth]]&nbsp;–
[[William March|March, William]]&nbsp;–
[[May Pang|Pang, May]]&nbsp;–
[[Dorothy Parker|Parker, Dorothy]]&nbsp;–
[[Harold Pinter|Pinter, Harold]]&nbsp;–
[[James Planché|Planché, James]]&nbsp;–
[[William Henry Leonard Poe|Poe, William Henry Leonard]]&nbsp;–
[[Terry Pratchett|Pratchett, Terry]]&nbsp;–
[[Bolesław Prus|Prus, Bolesław]]&nbsp;–
[[Jacob Riis|Riis, Jacob]]&nbsp;–
[[Augusto Roa Bastos|Roa Bastos, Augusto]]&nbsp;–
[[J. D. Salinger|Salinger, J. D.]]&nbsp;–
[[George Bernard Shaw|Shaw, George Bernard]]&nbsp;–
[[Sophocles]]&nbsp;–
[[Tristan Tzara|Tzara, Tristan]]&nbsp;–
[[Arthur Upfield|Upfield, Arthur]]&nbsp;–
[[Walt Whitman|Whitman, Walt]]&nbsp;–
[[Oscar Wilde|Wilde, Oscar]]&nbsp;–
[[Anna Wintour|Wintour, Anna]]&nbsp;–
<small> (54&nbsp;articles)</small>


A valuable collection of studies can be found in Stanley E. Porter, ed., ''Handbook of Classical Rhetoric in the Hellenistic Period 330 B.C. - A.D. 400'' (Brill, 1997).
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<span id="Philosophy and religion" />
<div style="padding:5px 5px 8px 5px; background-color:#CCCCFF; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Yin yang.svg|22px|left]]'''Philosophy and religion'''</div>
<div style="text-align:left;">
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<span id="Philosophy" />
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Yin yang.svg|22px|left]]Philosophy</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">


===Rhetoric from the Medieval period to the Enlightenment===
==&shy;&nbsp;==
After the breakup of the western Roman Empire, the study of rhetoric continued to be central to the study of the verbal arts; but the study of the verbal arts went into decline for several centuries, followed eventually by a gradual rise in formal education, culminating in the rise of medieval universities. But rhetoric transmuted during this period into the arts of letter writing (''[[ars dictaminis]]'') and sermon writing (''ars praedicandi''). As part of the ''[[trivium (education)|trivium]]'', rhetoric was secondary to the study of logic, and its study was highly scholastic: students were given repetitive exercises in the creation of discourses on historical subjects (''suasoriae'') or on classic legal questions (''controversiae'').


[[Image:Augustinusbishop.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Augustine of Hippo]]
=====Philosophers=====
[[Al-Kindi]]&nbsp;–
[[Jerry Fodor|Fodor, Jerry]]&nbsp;–
[[David Hume|Hume, David]]&nbsp;–
[[Larry Sanger|Sanger, Larry]]&nbsp;–
[[Sun Tzu]]&nbsp;–
<small> (5&nbsp;articles)</small>


Although he is not commonly regarded as a rhetorician, [[Augustine of Hippo|St. Augustine]] (354-430) was trained in rhetoric and was at one time a professor of Latin rhetoric in Milan. After his conversion to Christianity, he became interested in using these "[[Paganism|pagan]]" arts for spreading his religion. This new use of rhetoric is explored in the Fourth Book of his ''De Doctrina Christiana'', which laid the foundation of what would become [[homiletics]], the rhetoric of the sermon. Augustine begins the book by asking why "the power of eloquence, which is so efficacious in pleading either for the erroneous cause or the right", should not be used for righteous purposes (IV.3).
=====Philosophies and movements=====
[[CrimethInc.]]&nbsp;–
[[Empiricism]]&nbsp;–
[[Flat Earth]]&nbsp;–
[[History of Raëlism]]&nbsp;–
''[[Power: A New Social Analysis]]''&nbsp;–
[[Two-level utilitarianism]]&nbsp;–
<small> (6&nbsp;articles)</small>


One early concern of the medieval Christian church was its attitude to classical rhetoric itself. [[Jerome]] (d. 420) complained, "What has [[Horace]] to do with the Psalms, [[Virgil]] with the Gospels, Cicero with the Apostles?" Augustine is also remembered for arguing for the preservation of pagan works and fostering a church tradition which led to conservation of numerous pre-Christian rhetorical writings.
=====Philosophical topics=====
''[[Consolation of Philosophy]]''&nbsp;–
[[Dualism (philosophy of mind)]]&nbsp;–
[[Eliminative materialism]]&nbsp;–
[[Global justice]]&nbsp;–
[[Philosophy of language]]&nbsp;–
<small> (5&nbsp;articles)</small>


Rhetoric would not regain its classical heights until the renaissance, but new writings did advance rhetorical thought. [[Boethius]] (480?-524), in his brief ''Overview of the Structure of Rhetoric'', continues Aristotle's taxonomy by placing rhetoric in subordination to philosophical argument or dialectic.<ref>Patricia Bizzell and Bruce Herzberg ''The Rhetorical Tradition: Readings from Classical Times to the Present'', Boston: Bedford / St. Martins, 2nd ed., 2001, p. 486.</ref> One positive consequence of the [[Crusades]] was the introduction of Arab scholarship and renewed interest in Aristotle, leading to what some historians call the twelfth century renaissance. A number of medieval grammars and studies of poetry and rhetoric appeared.
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<span id="Religion, mysticism and mythology" />
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:ReligiousSymbols.svg|22px|left]]Religion, mysticism and mythology</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">


Late medieval rhetorical writings include those of St. [[Thomas Aquinas]] (1225?-1294), [[Matthew of Vendome]] (''Ars Versificatoria'', 1175?), and [[Geoffrey of Vinsauf]] (''Poetria Nova'', 1200-1216). Pre-modern female rhetoricians, outside of Socrates' friend [[Aspasia]], are rare; but medieval rhetoric produced by women either in religious orders, such as [[Julian of Norwich]] (d. 1415), or the very well-connected [[Christine de Pizan]] (1364?-1430?), did occur if not always recorded in writing.
==&shy;&nbsp;==


In his 1943 [[Cambridge University]] doctoral dissertation in English, Canadian [[Marshall McLuhan]] (1911-1980) surveys the verbal arts from approximately the time of [[Cicero]] down to the time of [[Thomas Nashe]] (1567-1600?).<ref>McLuhan's dissertation is scheduled to be published in a critical edition by Gingko Press in April of 2006 with the title ''The Classical Trivium: The Place of Thomas Nashe in the Learning of His Time''.</ref> His dissertation is still noteworthy for undertaking to study the history of the verbal arts together as the trivium, even though the developments that he surveys have been studied in greater detail since he undertook his study. As noted below, McLuhan became one of the most widely publicized thinkers in the 20th century, so it is important to note his scholarly roots in the study of the history of rhetoric and dialectic.
=====Divinities and protohistoric figures=====
[[Allah]]&nbsp;–
[[Chamunda]]&nbsp;–
[[Consorts of Ganesha]]&nbsp;–
[[Dellingr]]&nbsp;–
[[God]]&nbsp;–
[[Iðunn]]&nbsp;–
[[Inari (mythology)]]&nbsp;–
[[Isaac]]&nbsp;–
[[Ishmael]]&nbsp;–
[[Jesus]]&nbsp;–
[[Kālī]]&nbsp;–
[[Krishna]]&nbsp;–
[[Manasa]]&nbsp;–
[[Matrikas]]&nbsp;–
[[Njörðr]]&nbsp;–
[[Prithu]]&nbsp;–
[[Pythia]]&nbsp;–
[[Rama]]&nbsp;–
[[Revanta]]&nbsp;–
[[Shiva]]&nbsp;–
[[Sif]]&nbsp;–
[[Sigyn]]&nbsp;–
[[Sinthgunt]]&nbsp;–
[[Sól (Sun)]]&nbsp;–
[[Terminus (god)]]&nbsp;–
[[Þorgerðr Hölgabrúðr and Irpa]]&nbsp;–
[[Tuisto]]&nbsp;–
[[Víðarr]]&nbsp;–
[[Vithoba]]&nbsp;–
<small> (29&nbsp;articles)</small>


Another interesting record of medieval rhetorical thought can be seen in the many [[medieval debate literature|animal debate poems]] popular in England and the continent during the Middle Ages, such as [[The Owl and the Nightingale]] (13th century) and [[Geoffrey Chaucer]]'s [[Parliament of Fowls]] (1382?).
=====Myths, mythology and miracles=====
[[Æsir-Vanir War]]&nbsp;–
[[Ala (demon)]]&nbsp;–
[[Ask and Embla]]&nbsp;–
[[Atlantis]]&nbsp;–
[[Cailleach]]&nbsp;–
[[Dagr]]&nbsp;–
[[Eleusinian Mysteries]]&nbsp;–
[[Hjúki and Bil]]&nbsp;–
[[Leprechaun]]&nbsp;–
[[Moberly-Jourdain incident]]&nbsp;–
[[Nótt]]&nbsp;–
[[Prester John]]&nbsp;–
[[Putana]]&nbsp;–
[[Ragnarök]]&nbsp;–
[[Splitting of the moon]]&nbsp;–
[[Sumarr and Vetr]]&nbsp;–
[[Tengu]]&nbsp;–
[[Urðarbrunnr]]&nbsp;–
[[Valhalla]]&nbsp;–
[[Vampire folklore by region]]&nbsp;–
<small> (20&nbsp;articles)</small>


====Sixteenth century====
=====Religious doctrines, teachings, texts and symbols =====
Walter J. Ong's encyclopedia article "Humanism" in the 1967 ''New Catholic Encyclopedia'' provides a well-informed survey of Renaissance humanism, which defined itself broadly as disfavoring medieval scholastic logic and dialectic and as favoring instead the study of classical Latin style and grammar and philology and rhetoric. (Reprinted in Ong's ''Faith and Contexts'' (Scholars Press, 1999; 4: 69-91.))
[[Ahimsa]]&nbsp;–
[[Alcohol in the Bible]]&nbsp;–
[[Baraminology]]&nbsp;–
[[Bhagavad Gita]]&nbsp;–
[[Catholic social teaching]]&nbsp;–
[[Christianity and alcohol]]&nbsp;–
[[Comma Johanneum]]&nbsp;–
[[East Asian religions]]&nbsp;–
[[Mahābhārata]]&nbsp;–
[[Merseburg Incantations]]&nbsp;–
[[Qoyllur Rit'i]]&nbsp;–
[[Sources of Islamic law]]&nbsp;–
[[Star of Bethlehem]]&nbsp;–
[[Thelema]]&nbsp;–
[[Vix Pervenit]]&nbsp;–
[[Wicked Priest]]&nbsp;–
<small> (16&nbsp;articles)</small>


[[Image:Holbein-erasmus.jpg|left|thumb|180px|'''Desiderius Erasmus''' was an exponent of classical rhetoric]]
=====Religious figures and leaders=====
One influential figure in the rebirth of interest in classical rhetoric was [[Erasmus]] (c.1466-1536). His 1512 work, ''De Duplici Copia Verborum et Rerum'' (also known as ''[[Copia: Foundations of the Abundant Style]]''), was widely published (it went through more than 150 editions throughout Europe) and became one of the basic school texts on the subject. Its treatment of rhetoric is less comprehensive than the classic works of antiquity, but provides a traditional treatment of ''res-verba'' (matter and form): its first book treats the subject of [[elocutio]], showing the student how to use [[figure of speech|schemes and tropes]]; the second book covers [[inventio]]. Much of the emphasis is on abundance of variation (''copia'' means "plenty" or "abundance", as in copious or cornucopia), so both books focus on ways to introduce the maximum amount of variety into discourse. For instance, in one section of the ''De Copia'', Erasmus presents two hundred variations of the sentence ''"Semper, dum vivam, tui meminero"''. Another of his works, the extremely popular [[The Praise of Folly]], also had considerable influence on the teaching of rhetoric in the later sixteenth century. Its orations in favour of qualities such as madness spawned a type of exercise popular in Elizabethan grammar schools, later called [[adoxography]], which required pupils to compose passages in praise of useless things.
[[Albin of Brechin]]&nbsp;–
[[Aldred]]&nbsp;–
[[Alphege]]&nbsp;–
[[Thomas Aquinas|Aquinas, Thomas]]&nbsp;–
[[Baldwin of Exeter]]&nbsp;–
[[Lope de Barrientos|Barrientos, Lope de]]&nbsp;–
[[Bede|Bede, Venerable]]&nbsp;–
[[Robert Jefferson Breckinridge|Breckinridge, Robert Jefferson]]&nbsp;–
[[John Calvin|Calvin, John]]&nbsp;–
[[Henry Chadwick (theologian)|Chadwick, Henry]]&nbsp;–
[[John Chrysostom|Chrysostom, John]]&nbsp;–
[[Claudius of Turin]]&nbsp;–
[[Thomas de Rossy|de Rossy, Thomas]]&nbsp;–
[[Dunstan]]&nbsp;–
[[Edward the Martyr]]&nbsp;–
[[Janet Farrar|Farrar, Janet]]&nbsp;–
[[Stewart Farrar|Farrar, Stewart]]&nbsp;–
[[Henry de Lichton]]&nbsp;–
[[Daniel Dunglas Home|Home, Daniel Dunglas]]&nbsp;–
[[Islamic view of Ezra]]&nbsp;–
[[Jesus in Islam]]&nbsp;–
[[Peter Jones (missionary)|Jones, Peter]]&nbsp;–
[[Jovan Vladimir]]&nbsp;–
[[Kaundinya]]&nbsp;–
[[Laozi]]&nbsp;–
[[Marcel Lefebvre|Lefebvre, Marcel]]&nbsp;–
[[Luan Da]]&nbsp;–
[[Henry Martyn|Martyn, Henry]]&nbsp;–
[[Meher Baba]]&nbsp;–
[[Thomas S. Monson|Monson, Thomas S.]]&nbsp;–
[[Mother Teresa]]&nbsp;–
[[Muhammad]]&nbsp;–
[[Nicholas de Balmyle]]&nbsp;–
[[Oswald of Worcester]]&nbsp;–
[[John Peckham|Peckham, John]]&nbsp;–
[[Peter of Bruys]]&nbsp;–
[[Pontius Pilate's wife]]&nbsp;–
[[Pope Benedict XVI]]&nbsp;–
[[Ralph d'Escures]]&nbsp;–
[[Robert of Jumièges]]&nbsp;–
[[Gene Robinson|Robinson, Gene]]&nbsp;–
[[Roger de Pont L'Evêque]]&nbsp;–
[[Seung Sahn|Sahn, Seung]]&nbsp;–
[[Sai Baba of Shirdi]]&nbsp;–
[[Saint Patrick]]&nbsp;–
[[John E. Sanders|Sanders, John E.]]&nbsp;–
[[James Strang|Strang, James]]&nbsp;–
[[Billy Sunday|Sunday, Billy]]&nbsp;–
[[Emanuel Swedenborg|Swedenborg, Emanuel]]&nbsp;–
[[Thomas (Bishop of Finland)]]&nbsp;–
[[Thomas de Buittle]]&nbsp;–
[[Thomas de Dundee]]&nbsp;–
[[Thomas of Bayeux]]&nbsp;–
[[Thurstan]]&nbsp;–
[[Claude Vorilhon|Vorilhon, Claude]]&nbsp;–
[[William of York]]&nbsp;–
[[Robert Winchelsey|Winchelsey, Robert]]&nbsp;–
[[Wulfstan II]]&nbsp;–
[[Ravi Zacharias|Zacharias, Ravi]]&nbsp;–
[[Elias Zoghby|Zoghby, Elias]]&nbsp;–
<small> (60&nbsp;articles)</small>


[[Juan Luis Vives]] (1492 - 1540) also helped shape the study of rhetoric in England. A Spaniard, he was appointed in 1523 to the Lectureship of Rhetoric at Oxford by [[Cardinal Wolsey]], and was entrusted by [[Henry VIII of England|Henry VIII]] to be one of the tutors of Mary. Vives fell into disfavor when Henry VIII divorced [[Catherine of Aragon]] and left England in 1528. His best-known work was a book on education, ''De Disciplinis'', published in 1531, and his writings on rhetoric included ''Rhetoricae, sive De Ratione Dicendi, Libri Tres'' (1533), ''De Consultatione'' (1533), and a rhetoric on letter writing, ''De Conscribendis Epistolas'' (1536).
=====Religious movements, traditions and organizations=====
[[Azusa Street Revival]]&nbsp;–
[[Beth Hamedrash Hagadol]]&nbsp;–
[[Black church]]&nbsp;–
[[Black Hebrew Israelites]]&nbsp;–
[[Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church]]&nbsp;–
[[Celtic Reconstructionist Paganism]]&nbsp;–
[[East Midwood Jewish Center]]&nbsp;–
[[English Reformation]]&nbsp;–
[[Five Pillars of Islam]]&nbsp;–
[[Ghost Dance]]&nbsp;–
[[Girls' Brigade]]&nbsp;–
[[History of Shaktism]]&nbsp;–
[[Isaac Newton's religious views]]&nbsp;–
[[Lingbao School]]&nbsp;–
[[Liturgical calendar (Lutheran)]]&nbsp;–
[[Messianic Judaism]]&nbsp;–
[[Mormon Trail]]&nbsp;–
[[The Northern Celestial Masters]]&nbsp;–
[[Opus Dei]]&nbsp;–
[[Orthodox Church in America]]&nbsp;–
[[Papal conclave]]&nbsp;–
[[Papal conclave, 1492]]&nbsp;–
[[Papal conclave, 1549–1550]]&nbsp;–
[[Papal conclave, 1769]]&nbsp;–
[[Papal election, 1268–1271]]&nbsp;–
[[Papal election, 1292–1294]]&nbsp;–
[[Pennsylvania Ministerium]]&nbsp;–
[[Priory of Sion]]&nbsp;–
[[Raëlian beliefs and practices]]&nbsp;–
[[Raëlism]]&nbsp;–
[[Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago]]&nbsp;–
[[Roman Catholic Church]]&nbsp;–
[[Roman Catholicism in Afghanistan]]&nbsp;–
[[Roman Catholicism in Mongolia]]&nbsp;–
[[Roman Catholicism in Nepal]]&nbsp;–
[[Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia]]&nbsp;–
[[Seventh-day Adventist Church]]&nbsp;–
[[Shaktism]]&nbsp;–
[[Stregheria]]&nbsp;–
[[Taoism]]&nbsp;–
[[Temple Sinai (Oakland, California)]]&nbsp;–
[[Towson United Methodist Church]]&nbsp;–
[[Wicca]]&nbsp;–
[[Witchcraft]]&nbsp;–
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<small> (46&nbsp;articles)</small>


It is likely that many well-known English writers would have been exposed to the works of [[Erasmus]] and [[Vives]] (as well as those of the Classical rhetoricians) in their schooling, which was conducted in Latin (not English) and often included some study of Greek and placed considerable emphasis on rhetoric. See, for example, T.W. Baldwin's ''William Shakspere's Small Latine and Lesse Greeke'', 2 vols. (University of Illinois Press, 1944).
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The mid-1500s saw the rise of vernacular rhetorics &mdash; those written in English rather than in the Classical languages; adoption of works in English was slow, however, due to the strong orientation toward Latin and Greek. A successful early text was Thomas Wilson's ''The Arte of Rhetorique'' (1553), which presents a traditional treatment of rhetoric. For instance, Wilson presents the five canons of rhetoric (Invention, Disposition, [[Elocutio]], [[Memoria]], and Utterance or [[Actio]]). Other notable works included Angel Day's ''The English Secretorie'' (1586, 1592), [[George Puttenham]]'s ''The Arte of English Poesie'' (1589), and [[Richard Rainholde]]'s ''Foundacion of Rhetorike'' (1563).
==&shy;&nbsp;==


During this same period, a movement began that would change the organization of the school curriculum in Protestant and especially Puritan circles and lead to rhetoric losing its central place. A French scholar, Pierre de la Ramée, in Latin [[Petrus Ramus]] (1515-1572), dissatisfied with what he saw as the overly broad and redundant organization of the [[trivium (education)|trivium]], proposed a new curriculum. In his scheme of things, the five components of rhetoric no longer lived under the common heading of rhetoric. Instead, invention and disposition were determined to fall exclusively under the heading of dialectic, while style, delivery, and memory were all that remained for rhetoric. See [[Walter J. Ong]], ''Ramus, Method, and the Decay of Dialogue: From the Art of Discourse to the Art of Reason'' (Harvard University Press, 1958; reissued by the University of Chicago Press, 2004, with a new foreword by Adrian Johns). Ramus, rightly accused of sodomy and erroneously of atheism, was martyred during the French Wars of Religion. His teachings, seen as inimical to Catholicism, were short-lived in France but found a fertile ground in the Netherlands, Germany and England.<ref>See [[Marc Fumaroli]], ''Age de l'Éloquence'', 1980, for an extensive presentation of the intricate political and religious debates concerning rhetoric in France and Italy at the time</ref>
=====Agriculture and farming=====
[[Agricultural extension]]&nbsp;–
[[Avondale Agricultural Research Station]]&nbsp;–
[[John Parkinson (botanist)]]&nbsp;–
<small> (3&nbsp;articles)</small>


[[Image:John Milton - Project Gutenberg eText 13619.jpg|thumbnail|right|150px|'''John Milton''', English poet and rhetorician]]
=====Horticulture and forestry=====
One of Ramus' French followers, Audomarus Talaeus (Omer Talon) published his rhetoric, ''Institutiones Oratoriae'', in 1544. This work provided a simple presentation of rhetoric that emphasized the treatment of style, and became so popular that it was mentioned in John Brinsley's (1612) ''Ludus literarius; or The Grammar Schoole'' as being the "most used in the best schooles." Many other Ramist rhetorics followed in the next half-century, and by the 1600s, their approach became the primary method of teaching rhetoric in Protestant and especially Puritan circles. See Walter J. Ong, ''Ramus and Talon Inventory'' (Harvard University Press, 1958); Joseph S. Freedman, ''Philosophy and the Art Europe, 1500-1700: Teaching and Texts at Schools and Universities'' (Ashgate, 1999). [[John Milton]] (1608-1674) wrote a textbook in logic or dialectic in Latin based on Ramus' work, which has now been translated into English by Walter J. Ong and Charles J. Ermatinger in ''The Complete Prose Works of John Milton'' (Yale University Press, 1982; 8: 206-407), with a lengthy introduction by Ong (144-205). The introduction is reprinted in Ong's ''Faith and Contexts'' (Scholars Press, 1999; 4: 111-41).
[[Christmas tree cultivation]]&nbsp;–
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Ramism could not exert any influence on the established Catholic schools and universities, which remained by and large stuck in Scholasticism, or on the new Catholic schools and universities founded by members of the religious orders known as the [[Society of Jesus]] or the Oratorians, as can be seen in the [[Jesuit]] curriculum (in use right up to the 19th century, across the Christian world) known as the [[Ratio Studiorum]] (that Claude Pavur, S.J., has recently translated into English, with the Latin text in the parallel column on each page (St. Louis: Institute of Jesuit Sources, 2005). If the influence of Cicero and Quintilian permeates the [[Ratio Studiorum]], it is through the lenses of devotion and the militancy of the Counter-Reformation. The ''Ratio'' was indeed imbued with a sense of the divine, of the incarnate logos, that is of rhetoric as an eloquent and humane means to reach further devotion and further action in the Christian city, which was absent from Ramist formalism. The Ratio is, in rhetoric, the answer to St Ignatius Loyola's practice, in devotion, of "spiritual exercizes". This complex oratorical-prayer system is absent from Ramism.
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====The English Tradition in the Seventeenth Century====
==&shy;&nbsp;==
In New England and at [[Harvard College]] (founded 1636), Ramus and his followers dominated, as [[Perry Miller]] shows in ''The New England Mind: The Seventeenth Century'' (Harvard University Press, 1939). However, in England, several writers influenced the course of rhetoric during the seventeenth century, many of them carrying forward the dichotomy that had been set forth by Ramus and his followers during the preceding decades. Of greater importance is that this century saw the development of a modern, vernacular style that looked to English, rather than to Greek, Latin, or French models.


[[Francis Bacon]] (1561-1626), although not a rhetorician, contributed to the field in his writings. One of the concerns of the age was to find a suitable style for the discussion of scientific topics, which needed above all a clear exposition of facts and arguments, rather than the ornate style favored at the time. Bacon in his ''The Advancement of Learning'' criticized those who are preoccupied with style rather than "the weight of matter, worth of subject, soundness of argument, life of invention, or depth of judgment." On matters of style, he proposed that the style conform to the subject matter and to the audience, that simple words be employed whenever possible, and that the style should be agreeable. See [[Lisa Jardine]], ''Francis Bacon: Discovery and the Art of Discourse'' ([[Cambridge University Press]], 1975).
=====Cuisines=====
[[Aztec cuisine]]&nbsp;–
[[Cuisine of the Thirteen Colonies]]&nbsp;–
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<small> (5&nbsp;articles)</small>


[[Thomas Hobbes]] (1588-1679) also wrote on rhetoric. Along with a shortened translation of [[Aristotle]]'s ''Rhetoric'', Hobbes also produced a number of other works on the subject. Sharply contrarian on many subjects, Hobbes, like Bacon, also promoted a simpler and more natural style that used figures of speech sparingly.
=====Food and drink people=====
[[Otto Frederick Hunziker|Hunziker, Otto Frederick]]&nbsp;–
[[Nigella Lawson|Lawson, Nigella]]&nbsp;–
<small> (2&nbsp;articles)</small>


Perhaps the most influential development in English style came out of the work of the [[Royal Society]] (founded in 1660), which in 1664 set up a committee to improve the English language. Among the committee's members were [[John Evelyn]] (1620-1706), [[Thomas Sprat]] (1635-1713), and [[John Dryden]] (1631-1700). Sprat regarded "fine speaking" as a disease, and thought that a proper style should "reject all amplifications, digressions, and swellings of style" and instead "return back to a primitive purity and shortness" (''History of the Royal Society'', 1667).
=====Food=====
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<small> (7&nbsp;articles)</small>


While the work of this committee never went beyond planning, John Dryden is often credited with creating and exemplifying a new and modern English style. His central tenet was that the style should be proper "to the occasion, the subject, and the persons." As such, he advocated the use of English words whenever possible instead of foreign ones, as well as vernacular, rather than Latinate, syntax. His own prose (and his poetry) became exemplars of this new style.
=====Drink=====
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==Modern Rhetoric==
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At the turn of the twentieth century, there was a revival of rhetorical study manifested in the establishment of departments of rhetoric and speech at academic institutions, as well as the formation of national and international professional organizations. Theorists generally agree that a significant reason for the revival of the study of rhetoric was the renewed importance of language and persuasion in the increasingly mediated environment of the twentieth century (see [[Linguistic turn]]). The rise of [[advertising]] and of [[mass media]] such as [[photography]], [[telegraphy]], [[radio]], and [[film]] brought rhetoric more prominently into people's lives.
==&shy;&nbsp;==


=====American football=====
===Theorists and Theories===
====Chaim Perelman and Lucie Olbrechts-Tyteca====
[[1986 New York Giants season]]&nbsp;–
[[1990 New York Giants season]]&nbsp;–
[[Marcus Allen|Allen, Marcus]]&nbsp;–
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[[Jon Vaughn|Vaughn, Jon]]&nbsp;–
[[Marquise Walker|Walker, Marquise]]&nbsp;–
[[Al Wistert|Wistert, Al]]&nbsp;–
[[Whitey Wistert|Wistert, Whitey]]&nbsp;–
[[Butch Woolfolk|Woolfolk, Butch]]&nbsp;–
<small> (68&nbsp;articles)</small>


[[Chaim Perelman]] was a philosopher of law, who studied, taught, and lived most of his life in Brussels. He was among the most important [[argumentation theory|argumentation]] theorists of the twentieth century. His chief work is the Traité de l'argumentation - la nouvelle rhétorique (1958), with Lucie Olbrechts-Tyteca, which was translated into English as The New Rhetoric: A Treatise on Argumentation, by John Wilkinson and Purcell Weaver (1969). Perelman and Olbrechts-Tyteca move rhetoric from the periphery to the center of argumentation theory. Among their most influential concepts are "the universal audience," "quasi-logical argument," and "presence."
=====American college football=====
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[[1966 Liberty Bowl]]&nbsp;–
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<small> (23&nbsp;articles)</small>


=====Association football people=====
====Henry Johnstone Jr.====
[[Ken Barnes (footballer)|Barnes, Ken]]&nbsp;–
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[[Joey Barton|Barton, Joey]]&nbsp;–
[[David Beckham|Beckham, David]]&nbsp;–
[[David Beharall|Beharall, David]]&nbsp;–
[[Darren Bent|Bent, Darren]]&nbsp;–
[[Stig Inge Bjørnebye|Bjørnebye, Stig Inge]]&nbsp;–
[[Jesper Blomqvist|Blomqvist, Jesper]]&nbsp;–
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[[Chris Brandon|Brandon, Chris]]&nbsp;–
[[Mark Bresciano|Bresciano, Mark]]&nbsp;–
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[[Chris Cohen|Cohen, Chris]]&nbsp;–
[[Sam Cowan|Cowan, Sam]]&nbsp;–
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[[Clayton Donaldson|Donaldson, Clayton]]&nbsp;–
[[Stuart Elliott (footballer born 1977)|Elliott, Stuart]]&nbsp;–
[[Steve Evans (footballer born 1962)|Evans, Steve]]&nbsp;–
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[[Robbie Fowler|Fowler, Robbie]]&nbsp;–
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[[Emile Heskey|Heskey, Emile]]&nbsp;–
[[Andy Hessenthaler|Hessenthaler, Andy]]&nbsp;–
[[Ritchie Humphreys|Humphreys, Ritchie]]&nbsp;–
[[Klaas-Jan Huntelaar|Huntelaar, Klaas-Jan]]&nbsp;–
[[Michael Ingham (footballer)|Ingham, Michael]]&nbsp;–
[[Matthew Jarvis|Jarvis, Matthew]]&nbsp;–
[[Tommy Johnson (footballer born 1900)|Johnson, Tommy]]&nbsp;–
[[Kenwyne Jones|Jones, Kenwyne]]&nbsp;–
[[Georgi Kinkladze|Kinkladze, Georgiou]]&nbsp;–
[[Henrik Larsson|Larsson, Henrik]]&nbsp;–
[[Stuart McCall|McCall, Stuart]]&nbsp;–
[[William McGregor|McGregor, William]]&nbsp;–
[[Mido (footballer)|Mido]]&nbsp;–
[[Adam Miller (footballer)|Miller, Adam]]&nbsp;–
[[Liam Miller|Miller, Liam]]&nbsp;–
[[James Milner|Milner, James]]&nbsp;–
[[Kyle Nix|Nix, Kyle]]&nbsp;–
[[Marc Pugh|Pugh, Marc]]&nbsp;–
[[Andy Reid (footballer)|Reid, Andy]]&nbsp;–
[[Arjen Robben|Robben, Arjen]]&nbsp;–
[[Alan Shearer|Shearer, Alan]]&nbsp;–
[[Jimmy Speirs|Speirs, Jimmy]]&nbsp;–
[[Mark Stimson|Stimson, Mark]]&nbsp;–
[[Jamie Stuart|Stuart, Jamie]]&nbsp;–
[[Michael Symes|Symes, Michael]]&nbsp;–
[[Fernando Torres|Torres, Fernando]]&nbsp;–
[[Ronnie Wallwork|Wallwork, Ronnie]]&nbsp;–
[[Curtis Woodhouse|Woodhouse, Curtis]]&nbsp;–
[[Simon Wormull|Wormull, Simon]]&nbsp;–
<small> (50&nbsp;articles)</small>


[[Henry Johnstone Jr.]] was an American philosopher and rhetorician known especially for his notion of the "rhetorical wedge" and his re-evaluation of the ad hominem fallacy. He was the founder and longtime editor of the journal ''Philosophy and Rhetoric.'' <ref>Enos, R.J. (2000). Always... An Epitaphios to Henry W. Johnstone, Jr. (1920-2000). Rhetoric Review, Vol. 19, nos. 1/2, Fall.</ref>
=====Association football teams and events=====
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[[1956 FA Cup Final]]&nbsp;–
[[2000 Football League Second Division playoff final]]&nbsp;–
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[[2006 FIFA World Cup controversies]]&nbsp;–
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[[Bristol Rovers F.C. season 2006–07]]&nbsp;–
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[[Crabble Stadium]]&nbsp;–
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[[FC Bayern Munich]]&nbsp;–
[[FIFA World Cup Trophy]]&nbsp;–
[[Fulham F.C.]]&nbsp;–
[[Hartsdown Park]]&nbsp;–
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[[History of Aston Villa F.C. (1874–1961)]]&nbsp;–
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====Kenneth Burke====
=====Australian rules, rugby and other football=====
[[Adelaide Rams]]&nbsp;–
[[Boston RFC]]&nbsp;–
[[Brisbane Broncos]]&nbsp;–
[[Peter Canavan|Canavan, Peter]]&nbsp;–
[[Cardiff Arms Park]]&nbsp;–
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[[Glebe (rugby league team)]]&nbsp;–
[[Frank Hadden|Hadden, Frank]]&nbsp;–
[[Mark Hammett|Hammett, Mark]]&nbsp;–
[[Tom Hawkins (footballer)|Hawkins, Tom]]&nbsp;–
[[Highlanders (rugby)]]&nbsp;–
[[History of rugby union matches between All Blacks and France]]&nbsp;–
[[History of the Highlanders]]&nbsp;–
[[Hunter Mariners]]&nbsp;–
[[Jonah Lomu|Lomu, Jonah]]&nbsp;–
[[Melbourne Storm]]&nbsp;–
[[Enda Muldoon|Muldoon, Enda]]&nbsp;–
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[[Joel Selwood|Selwood, Joel]]&nbsp;–
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<small> (24&nbsp;articles)</small>


[[Kenneth Burke]] was a rhetorical theorist, philosopher, and poet. Many of his works are central to modern rhetorical theory: ''A Rhetoric of Motives'' (1969), ''A Grammar of Motives'' (1945), ''Language as Symbolic Action'' (1966), and ''Counterstatement'' (1931). Among his influential concepts are "identification," "consubstantiality," and the "dramatic pentad."
=====Baseball=====
[[2007 Major League Baseball All-Star Game]]&nbsp;–
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[[Cy Young|Young, Cy]]&nbsp;–
<small> (33&nbsp;articles)</small>


=====Basketball=====
====LLoyd Bitzer====
[[LLoyd Bitzer]] is a rhetorician who is best known for his notion of "the rhetorical situation." <ref>Bitzer. L. (1968). The rhetorical situation. Philosophy and Rhetoric. 1:1. 1-14.</ref>
[[1997-98 Tennessee Lady Vols basketball team]]&nbsp;–
====Marshall McLuhan====
[[2006–07 Toronto Raptors season]]&nbsp;–
[[Shareef Abdur-Rahim|Abdur-Rahim, Shareef]]&nbsp;–
[[Red Auerbach|Auerbach, Red]]&nbsp;–
[[José Juan Barea|Barea, José Juan]]&nbsp;–
[[Charles Barkley|Barkley, Charles]]&nbsp;–
[[Chris Bosh|Bosh, Chris]]&nbsp;–
[[Bruce Bowen|Bowen, Bruce]]&nbsp;–
[[Wilt Chamberlain|Chamberlain, Wilt]]&nbsp;–
[[Bob Cousy|Cousy, Bob]]&nbsp;–
[[David Falk|Falk, David]]&nbsp;–
[[Pau Gasol|Gasol, Pau]]&nbsp;–
[[Manu Ginóbili|Ginóbili, Manu]]&nbsp;–
[[Kirk Hinrich|Hinrich, Kirk]]&nbsp;–
[[James Naismith]]&nbsp;–
[[Yi Jianlian|Jianlian, Yi]]&nbsp;–
[[Dennis Johnson|Johnson, Dennis]]&nbsp;–
[[Magic Johnson|Johnson, Magic]]&nbsp;–
[[Key (basketball)]]&nbsp;–
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[[George Mikan|Mikan, George]]&nbsp;–
[[Minnesota Golden Gophers men's basketball]]&nbsp;–
[[Steve Nash|Nash, Steve]]&nbsp;–
[[Andrés Nocioni|Nocioni, Andrés]]&nbsp;–
[[Dirk Nowitzki|Nowitzki, Dirk]]&nbsp;–
[[Hakeem Olajuwon|Olajuwon, Hakeem]]&nbsp;–
[[Pacers-Pistons brawl]]&nbsp;–
[[Anthony Parker|Parker, Anthony]]&nbsp;–
[[Tony Parker|Parker, Tony]]&nbsp;–
[[Rob Pelinka|Pelinka, Rob]]&nbsp;–
[[Portland Trail Blazers]]&nbsp;–
[[Eldridge Recasner|Recasner, Eldridge]]&nbsp;–
[[Oscar Robertson|Robertson, Oscar]]&nbsp;–
[[Dennis Rodman|Rodman, Dennis]]&nbsp;–
[[Rose Garden (arena)]]&nbsp;–
[[Mendy Rudolph|Rudolph, Mendy]]&nbsp;–
[[Seattle SuperSonics relocation to Oklahoma City]]&nbsp;–
[[Dean Smith|Smith, Dean]]&nbsp;–
[[Tennessee Lady Volunteers basketball]]&nbsp;–
[[Dwyane Wade|Wade, Dwyane]]&nbsp;–
[[Jerry West|West, Jerry]]&nbsp;–
[[Albert White (basketball)|White, Albert]]&nbsp;–
<small> (44&nbsp;articles)</small>


[[Marshall McLuhan]] was a media theorist whose discoveries are important to the study of rhetoric. McLuhan's famous dictum "the medium is the message" highlighted the important role of the mass media in modern communication. <ref>When McLuhan was working on his 1943 Cambridge University doctoral dissertation on the verbal arts and Nashe, mentioned above, he was also preparing the materials that were eventually published as the book ''The Mechanical Bride: The Folklore of Industrial Man'' (Vanguard Press, 1951). This book is a compilation of exhibits of ads and other materials from popular culture with short essays about them by McLuhan. The essays involve rhetorical analyses of the ways in which the material in an item aims to persuade and comment on the persuasive strategies in each item.
=====Billiards, pool and snooker=====
[[Jean Balukas|Balukas, Jean]]&nbsp;–
[[Bottle pool]]&nbsp;–
[[Carom billiards]]&nbsp;–
[[Irving Crane|Crane, Irving]]&nbsp;–
[[Jimmy Moore|Moore, Jimmy]]&nbsp;–
[[Rudolf Wanderone|Walderone Jr., Rudolf]]&nbsp;–
<small> (6&nbsp;articles)</small>


After studying the persuasive strategies involved in such an array of items in popular culture, McLuhan shifted the focus of his rhetorical analysis and began to consider how communication media themselves have an impact on us as persuasive devices. In other words, the communication media as such embody and carry a persuasive dimension. McLuhan uses [[hyperbole]] to express this insight when he says "[[The medium is the message]]". This shift in focus from his 1951 book led to his two most widely known books, ''The Gutenberg Galaxy: The Making of Typographic Man'' (University of Toronto Press, 1962) and ''Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man'' (McGraw-Hill, 1964). These two books led McLuhan to become one of the most publicized thinkers in the 20th century. No other scholar of the history and theory of rhetoric was as widely publicized in the 20th century as McLuhan.
=====Board and card games=====
[[Backgammon]]&nbsp;–
''[[Book of Vile Darkness]]''&nbsp;–
[[Dice]]&nbsp;–
[[Go (game)]]&nbsp;–
[[Junta (game)|''Junta'' (game)]]&nbsp;–
[[Lone Wolf (gamebooks)|''Lone Wolf'' (gamebooks)]]&nbsp;–
''[[The Lord of the Rings Strategy Battle Game]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Magic: The Gathering]]''&nbsp;–
''[[My Life with Master]]''&nbsp;–
[[Ogre (game)|''Ogre'' (game)]]''&nbsp;–
[[Once Upon a Time (game)]]&nbsp;–
[[Ravenloft (D&D module)|''Ravenloft'' (D&D module)]]&nbsp;–
[[Snap-dragon (game)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tafl games]]&nbsp;–
<small> (14&nbsp;articles)</small>


McLuhan read Lonergan's ''Insight'', mentioned above, in 1957 (see ''Letters of Marshall McLuhan'', 1987: 251). Lonergan's book is an elaborate guidebook to cultivate one's inwardness and on attending to and reflecting on one's inward consciousness. McLuhan's 1962 and 1964 books represent an inward turn to attending to one's consciousness that is far more pronounced than anything found in his 1951 book or in his 1943 dissertation. By contrast, many other thinkers in the study of rhetoric are more outward oriented toward sociological considerations and symbolic interaction.</ref>
=====Chess=====
====I.A. Richards====
[[Alexander Alekhine|Alekhine, Alexander]]&nbsp;–
[[I.A. Richards]] was a literary critic and rhetorician. His ''Philosophy of Rhetoric'' is an important text in modern rhetorical theory.
[[Bughouse chess]]&nbsp;–
[[Chess boxing]]&nbsp;–
[[Endgame tablebase]]&nbsp;–
[[Stuart Milner-Barry|Milner-Barry, Stuart]]&nbsp;–
[[Howard Staunton|Staunton, Howard]]&nbsp;–
<small> (6&nbsp;articles)</small>


=====Cricket=====
====Stephen Toulmin====
[[Stephen Toulmin]] is a philosopher whose models of argumentation have had great influence on modern rhetorical theory. His ''Uses of Argument'' is an important text in modern rhetorical theory and [[argumentation theory]].<ref>{{cite book | first= Stephen| last=Toulmin| authorlink= Stephen Toulmin| year=2003| title= The Uses of Argument |publisher = [[Cambridge University Press]] | isbn = 978-0521534833}}</ref>
[[Warwick Armstrong|Armstrong, Warwick]]&nbsp;–
[[Brian Booth|Booth, Brian]]&nbsp;–
[[Herbie Collins|Collins, Herbie]]&nbsp;–
[[Joe Darling|Darling, Joe]]&nbsp;–
[[Alan Davidson (cricketer)|Davidson, Alan]]&nbsp;–
[[Mahendra Singh Dhoni|Dhoni, Mahendra Singh]]&nbsp;–
[[Jack Fingleton|Fingleton, Jack]]&nbsp;–
[[Ron Hamence|Hamence, Ron]]&nbsp;–
[[Neil Harvey|Harvey, Neil]]&nbsp;–
[[Bill Johnston (cricketer)|Johnston, Bill]]&nbsp;–
[[Kapil Dev as Indian national cricket coach]]&nbsp;–
[[Dinesh Karthik|Karthik, Dinesh]]&nbsp;–
[[Murali Kartik|Kartik, Murali]]&nbsp;–
[[Robert Key (cricketer)|Key, Robert]]&nbsp;–
[[Alan Kippax|Kippax, Alan]]&nbsp;–
[[John Lester|Lester, John]]&nbsp;–
[[Ray Lindwall|Lindwall, Ray]]&nbsp;–
[[Stan McCabe|McCabe, Stan]]&nbsp;–
[[Colin McCool|McCool, Colin]]&nbsp;–
[[Ian Meckiff|Meckiff, Ian]]&nbsp;–
[[Norm O'Neill|O'Neill, Norm]]&nbsp;–
[[Irfan Pathan|Pathan, Irfan]]&nbsp;–
[[Ron Saggers|Saggers, Ron]]&nbsp;–
[[Graeme Smith|Smith, Graeme]]&nbsp;–
[[Wisden Trophy]]&nbsp;–
[[Bill Woodfull|Woodfull, Bill]]&nbsp;–
<small> (26&nbsp;articles)</small>


=====Golf=====
===Methods of Analysis===
{{Expand-section|date=September 2008}}
[[Byron Nelson|Nelson, Byron]]&nbsp;–
====Rhetorical Criticism====
[[Jack Nicklaus|Nicklaus, Jack]]&nbsp;–
The process of sytematically investigating and explaining symbolic acts and artifacts for the purpose of understanding rhetorical process
[[Annika Sörenstam|Sörenstam, Annika]]&nbsp;–
{{Expand-section|date=September 2008}}
[[Thomas Trueblood|Trueblood, Thomas]]&nbsp;–
====Conversation Analysis====
[[Tiger Woods|Woods, Tiger]]&nbsp;–
{{Expand-section|date=September 2008}}
<small> (5&nbsp;articles)</small>
====Discourse Analysis====
{{Expand-section|date=September 2008}}
====Argument Reconstruction====
{{Expand-section|date=September 2008}}


==French Rhetoric in the Modern and Contemporary Periods==
=====Ice hockey=====
[[2007–08 Pittsburgh Penguins season]]&nbsp;–
[[2008 NHL Winter Classic]]&nbsp;–
[[Luc Bourdon|Bourdon, Luc]]&nbsp;–
[[Calgary Tigers]]&nbsp;–
[[Colorado Avalanche]]&nbsp;–
[[Sidney Crosby|Crosby, Sidney]]&nbsp;–
[[Elite Ice Hockey League]]&nbsp;–
[[The French Connection (hockey)|The French Connection]]&nbsp;–
[[Charlie Gardiner (ice hockey)|Gardiner, Charlie]]&nbsp;–
[[History of the National Hockey League (1967–1992)]]&nbsp;–
[[History of the National Hockey League (1992–present)]]&nbsp;–
[[History of the Ottawa Senators (1992–)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hap Holmes|Holmes, Hap]]&nbsp;–
[[Curtis Joseph|Joseph, Curtis]]&nbsp;–
[[Hughie Lehman|Lehman, Hughie]]&nbsp;–
[[Frank McGee (ice hockey)|McGee, Frank]]&nbsp;–
[[Paddy Moran (ice hockey)|Moran, Paddy]]&nbsp;–
[[Pete Muldoon|Muldoon, Pete]]&nbsp;–
[[Markus Näslund|Näslund, Markus]]&nbsp;–
[[National Hockey League]]&nbsp;–
[[Ottawa Senators]]&nbsp;–
[[Gilbert Perreault|Perreault, Gilbert]]&nbsp;–
[[Punch-up in Piestany]]&nbsp;–
[[Tiny Thompson|Thompson, Tiny]]&nbsp;–
[[Traditions and anecdotes associated with the Stanley Cup]]&nbsp;–
[[Victoria Skating Rink]]&nbsp;–
<small> (26&nbsp;articles)</small>


Rhetoric was part of the curriculum in Jesuit and, to a lesser extent, Oratorian colleges until the French Revolution. For Jesuits, right from the foundation, in France, of the Society, rhetoric was an integral part of the training of young men toward taking up leadership positions in the Church and in State institutions, as [[Marc Fumaroli]] has shown it in his foundational ''Age de l’éloquence'' (1980). The Oratorians, by contrast, reserved it a lesser place, in part due to the stress they placed on modern languages acquisition and a more sensualist philosophy (Bernard Lamy’s ''Rhetoric'' is an excellent example of their approach).Nonetheless, in the 18th Century, rhetoric was the armature and crowning of college education, with works such as Rollin’s ''Treatise of Studies'' achieving a wide and enduring fame across the Continent.<ref>See Thomas M. Conley, ''Rhetoric in the European Tradition'', University of Chicago Press, 1990 for insights on French pre-1789 rhetoricians;for a fuller historical review with excerpts, Philippe-Joseph Salazar, ''L'art de parler'', Paris, Klincksieck, 2003.</ref>
=====Martial arts and boxing=====
[[Chess boxing]]&nbsp;–
[[Miguel Cotto|Cotto, Miguel]]&nbsp;–
[[Daitō-ryū Aiki-jūjutsu]]&nbsp;–
[[Kano Jigoro|Jigoro, Kano]]&nbsp;–
[[Zab Judah|Judah, Zab]]&nbsp;–
[[Takanohana Kōji|Kōji, Takanohana]]&nbsp;–
[[Mitsuyo Maeda]]&nbsp;–
[[Rhee Taekwon-Do]]&nbsp;–
[[Sugar Ray Robinson|Robinson, Sugar Ray]]&nbsp;–
[[Daniel Santos (boxer)|Santos, Daniel]]&nbsp;–
[[Shintō Musō-ryū]]&nbsp;–
[[Félix Trinidad|Trinidad, Félix]]&nbsp;–
[[Mike Tyson|Tyson, Mike]]&nbsp;–
[[Yamashita Yoshiaki|Yoshiaki, Yamashita]]&nbsp;–
<small> (14&nbsp;articles)</small>


The French Revolution, however, turned this around. Philosophers like Condorcet, who drafted the French revolutionary chart for a people’s education under the rule of reason, dismissed rhetoric as an instrument of oppression in the hands of clerics in particular. The Revolution went as far as suppressing the Bar, arguing that forensic rhetoric did disservice to a rational system of justice, by allowing fallacies and emotions to come into play. Nonetheless, as later historians of the 19th century were keen to explain, the Revolution was a high moment of eloquence and rhetorical prowess, yet, against a background of rejection of rhetoric.
=====Motorsport=====
[[1997 European Grand Prix]]&nbsp;–
[[2007 24 Hours of Le Mans]]&nbsp;–
[[2007 Australian Grand Prix]]&nbsp;–
[[2007 Canadian Grand Prix]]&nbsp;–
[[2007 French Grand Prix]]&nbsp;–
[[2007 Malaysian Grand Prix]]&nbsp;–
[[Mario Andretti|Andretti, Mario]]&nbsp;–
[[Fittipaldi Automotive]]&nbsp;–
[[Formula BMW]]&nbsp;–
[[Formula Three Euroseries]]&nbsp;–
[[Forti]]&nbsp;–
[[A. J. Foyt IV|Foyt IV, Anthony Joseph]]&nbsp;–
[[Mauricio Gugelmin|Gugelmin, Mauricio]]&nbsp;–
[[Lewis Hamilton|Hamilton, Lewis]]&nbsp;–
[[Eddie Hill|Hill, Eddie]]&nbsp;–
[[Howmet TX]]&nbsp;–
[[Alan Kulwicki|Kulwicki, Alan]]&nbsp;–
[[Monaco Grand Prix]]&nbsp;–
[[Max Mosley|Mosley, Max]]&nbsp;–
[[Procar]]&nbsp;–
[[RevoPower]]&nbsp;–
[[Richard Lloyd Racing]]&nbsp;–
[[Michael Schumacher|Schumacher, Michael]]&nbsp;–
[[Henri Toivonen|Toivonen, Henri]]&nbsp;–
[[Gilles Villeneuve|Villeneuve, Gilles]]&nbsp;–
[[Mark Webber|Webber, Mark]]&nbsp;–
<small> (26&nbsp;articles)</small>


Under the First Empire and its wide ranging educational reforms, imposed on or imitated across the Continent, rhetoric regained little ground. In fact instructions to the newly founded Polytechnic School, tasked with training the scientific and technical elites, made it clear that written reporting was to supersede oral reporting. Rhetoric re-entered the college curriculum in fits and starts, but never regained the prominence it enjoyed under the ancien régime, although the penultimate year of college education was known as the Class of Rhetoric. When manuals were redrafted in the mid-century, in particular after the 1848 Revolution, care was taken by writers in charge of formulating a national curriculum to distance their approach to rhetoric from that of the Church seen as an agent of conservatism and reactionary politics.
=====Olympics=====
By the end of the 1870s, a major change had taken place: philosophy, of the rationalist or eclectic kind, by and large Kantian, had taken over rhetoric as the true terminal stage in secondary education, (the so-called Class of Philosophy bridged college and university education). Rhetoric was then relegated to the study of literary figures of speech, a discipline later on taught as Stylistics within the French literature curriculum. More decisively, in 1890 a new standard written exercise superseded the rhetorical exercises of speech writing, letter writing and narration. The new genre, called dissertation, had been invented, in 1866, for the purpose of rational argument in the philosophy class. Typically, in a dissertation, a question is asked, such as: “Is history a sign of humanity’s freedom?” The structure of a dissertation consists in an introduction that elucidates the basic definitions involved in the question as set, followed by an argument or thesis, a counter-argument or antithesis, and a resolving argument or synthesis that is not a compromise between the former but the production of a new argument, ending with a conclusion that does not sum up the points but opens onto a new problem. The dissertation design was influenced by Hegelianism. It remains today the standard of writing in the humanities.
[[Archery at the 2004 Summer Olympics]]&nbsp;–
[[Belarus at the Olympics]]&nbsp;–
[[Biathlon at the 2006 Winter Olympics]]&nbsp;–
[[Great Britain at the 2008 Summer Olympics]]&nbsp;–
[[London 2012 Olympic bid]]&nbsp;–
[[Olympic sports]]&nbsp;–
[[Rugby union at the Summer Olympics]]&nbsp;–
<small> (7&nbsp;articles)</small>


By the beginning of the 20th century rhetoric was fast losing the remains of its former importance, to be taken out of the school curriculum altogether at the time of the Separation of State and Churches (1905) – part of the argument was indeed that rhetoric remained the last element of irrationality, driven by religious arguments, in what was perceived as inimical to Republican education. The move initiated in 1789 found its resolution in 1902 when rhetoric is expunged from all curricula. However, it must be noted that, at the same time, Aristotelian rhetoric, owing to a revival of Thomistic philosophy initiated by Rome, regained ground in what was left of Catholic education in France, in particular at the prestigious Faculty of Theology of Paris, now a private entity. Yet, for all intents and purposes, rhetoric vanished from the French scene, educational or intellectual, for some 60 years.
=====Poker=====
[[Badugi]]&nbsp;–
[[Joe Beevers|Beevers, Joe]]&nbsp;–
[[Barny Boatman|Boatman, Barny]]&nbsp;–
[[Ross Boatman|Boatman, Ross]]&nbsp;–
[[Mike Matusow|Matusow, Mike]]&nbsp;–
[[Texas hold 'em]]&nbsp;–
[[World Series of Poker bracelet]]&nbsp;–
<small> (7&nbsp;articles)</small>


In the early 1960s a change began to take place, as the word rhetoric, let alone the body of knowledge it covers, started to be used again, in a modest and near confidential way. The new linguistic turn, through the rise of [[semiotics]] as well as structural [[linguistics]], brought to the fore a new interest in figures of speech as signs, the metaphor in particular (in the works of [[Roman Jakobson]], Michel Charles, Gérard Genette) while famed Structuralist [[Roland Barthes]], a classicist by training, perceived how some basic elements of rhetoric could be of use in the study of narratives, fashion and ideology. Knowledge of rhetoric was so dim in the early 1970s, that his short memoir on rhetoric was seen as highly innovative. Basic as it was, it did help rhetoric regain some currency in avant-garde circles. Psycho-analyst [[Jacques Lacan]], his contemporary, makes references to rhetoric, in particular to the Pre-Socratics. Philosopher [[Jacques Derrida]] wrote on Voice.
=====Professional wrestling=====
[[Acolytes Protection Agency]]&nbsp;–
[[Brian Adams (wrestler)|Adams, Brian]]&nbsp;–
[[Kurt Angle|Angle, Kurt]]&nbsp;–
[[Ricky Banderas|Banderas, Ricky]]&nbsp;–
[[Briscoe Brothers]]&nbsp;–
[[Stacy Carter|Carter, Stacy]]&nbsp;–
[[John Cena|Cena, John]]&nbsp;–
[[Chyna]]&nbsp;–
[[Carly Colón|Colón, Carly]]&nbsp;–
[[Al Costello|Costello, Al]]&nbsp;–
[[Ion Croitoru|Croitoru, Ion]]&nbsp;–
[[Amy Dumas|Dumas, Amy]]&nbsp;–
[[Dwayne Johnson]]&nbsp;–
[[The Fabulous Kangaroos]]&nbsp;–
[[Faces of Fear]]&nbsp;–
[[Nora Greenwald|Greenwald, Nora]]&nbsp;–
[[Jeff Hardy|Hardy, Jeff]]&nbsp;–
[[Matt Hardy|Hardy, Matt]]&nbsp;–
[[Mickie James|James, Mickie]]&nbsp;–
[[Juggernaut (wrestler)]]&nbsp;–
[[Maria Kanellis|Kanellis, Maria]]&nbsp;–
[[Stacy Keibler|Keibler, Stacy]]&nbsp;–
[[Brian Kendrick|Kendrick, Brian]]&nbsp;–
[[Don Kent (wrestler)|Kent, Don]]&nbsp;–
[[Konnan]]&nbsp;–
[[Jos LeDuc|LeDuc, Jos]]&nbsp;–
[[Brock Lesnar|Lesnar, Brock]]&nbsp;–
[[Paul London|London, Paul]]&nbsp;–
[[The Mega Bucks]]&nbsp;–
[[Rena Mero|Mero, Rena]]&nbsp;–
[[Shawn Michaels|Michaels, Shawn]]&nbsp;–
[[Candice Michelle|Michelle, Candice]]&nbsp;–
[[Money Inc.]]&nbsp;–
[[Katsuhiko Nakajima|Nakajima, Katsuhiko]]&nbsp;–
[[Randy Orton|Orton, Randy]]&nbsp;–
[[Melina Perez|Perez, Melina]]&nbsp;–
[[Dawn Marie Psaltis|Psaltis, Dawn Marie]]&nbsp;–
[[Sarah Stock|Stock, Sarah]]&nbsp;–
[[Trish Stratus|Stratus, Trish]]&nbsp;–
[[Triple H]]&nbsp;–
[[Lisa Marie Varon|Varon, Lisa Marie]]&nbsp;–
[[Torrie Wilson|Wilson, Torrie]]&nbsp;–
<small> (42&nbsp;articles)</small>


However, at the same time, more profound work was taking place that, eventually, gave rise to the French school of rhetoric as it exists today.<ref>See also article on Rhétorique in French wikipedia</ref>
=====Professional wrestling events=====
[[Armageddon (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Backlash (2003)]]&nbsp;–
[[Backlash (2004)]]&nbsp;–
[[Backlash (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Backlash (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Bad Blood (2003)]]&nbsp;–
[[Bad Blood (2004)]]&nbsp;–
[[Cyber Sunday (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[ECW One Night Stand (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[ECW One Night Stand (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[The Great American Bash (2004)]]&nbsp;–
[[The Great American Bash (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[In Your House 1]]&nbsp;–
[[Judgment Day (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Judgment Day (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[King of the Ring (1994)]]&nbsp;–
[[Lockdown (2008)]]&nbsp;–
[[New Year's Revolution (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[No Mercy (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[No Way Out (2004)]]&nbsp;–
[[No Way Out (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[One Night Stand (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Over the Edge (1999)]]&nbsp;–
[[Royal Rumble (1994)]]&nbsp;–
[[Royal Rumble (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Royal Rumble (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Sacrifice (2008)]]&nbsp;–
[[SummerSlam (1988)]]&nbsp;–
[[SummerSlam (1992)]]&nbsp;–
[[SummerSlam (1993)]]&nbsp;–
[[SummerSlam (1994)]]&nbsp;–
[[SummerSlam (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Survivor Series (1993)]]&nbsp;–
[[Survivor Series (1994)]]&nbsp;–
[[Survivor Series (2004)]]&nbsp;–
[[Survivor Series (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Unforgiven (2004)]]&nbsp;–
[[Unforgiven (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Unforgiven (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Unforgiven (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Vengeance (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Vengeance: Night of Champions]]&nbsp;–
[[WrestleMania (1985)]]&nbsp;–
[[WrestleMania III]]&nbsp;–
[[WrestleMania IX]]&nbsp;–
[[WrestleMania X]]&nbsp;–
<small> (46&nbsp;articles)</small>


This rhetorical revival took place on two fronts.<ref>See Philippe-Joseph Salazar's overview, "Rhetoric Achieves Nature. A View from Old Europe",'' Philosophy & Rhetoric'' 40(1), 2007, 71-88</ref>
=====Public parks and zoos=====
Firstly, in the area of 17th century French studies, the mainstay of French literary education, awareness grew that rhetoric was necessary to push further the limits of knowledge, and also provide an antidote to [[Structuralism]] and its denial of historicism in culture. This was the pioneering work of Marc Fumaroli who, building on the work of classicist and Neo-Latinist Alain Michel and French scholars such as Roger Zuber, published his famed ''Age de l’Eloquence'' (1980), was one of the founders of the International Society for the History of Rhetoric and was eventually elevated to a chair in rhetoric at the prestigious College de France. He is the editor in chief of a monumental ''History of Rhetoric in Modern Europe''.<ref>''Histoire de la rhétorique dans l'Europe moderne 1450-1950'', [[Marc Fumaroli]] ed., Paris, Presses Universitaires de France, 1999. ISBN 2130495265</ref>
[[Burnham Park (Chicago)]]&nbsp;–
His disciples form the second generation,<ref>Refer to celebratory volume, « De l’éloquence à la rhétoricité, trente années fastes », ''Dix-Septième Siècle'' 236, LIX (3), 2007, 421-426 ISBN 978-2-13-056096-8</ref> with rhetoricians such as Françoise Waquet, Delphine Denis both of the Sorbonne, or [[Philippe-Joseph Salazar]][http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippe-Joseph_Salazar] until recently at Derrida's College international de philosophie.
[[Columbus Zoo and Aquarium]]&nbsp;–
Secondly, in the area of Classical studies, Latin scholars, in the wake of Alain Michel, fostered a renewal in Cicero studies, breaking away from a pure literary reading of his orations, in an attempt to embed Cicero in European ethics, while, among Greek scholars literary historian and philologist Jacques Bompaire, philologist and philosopher E. Dupréel and, somewhat later and in a more popular fashion, historian of literature [[Jacqueline de Romilly]] pioneered new studies in the Sophists and the Second Sophistic.
[[Douglas Park (Chicago park)]]&nbsp;–
The second generation of Classicists, often trained in philosophy as well (following [[Heidegger]] and Derrida, mainly), built on their work, with authors such as [[Marcel Detienne]](now at Johns Hopkins), Nicole Loraux (d. in 2006), Medievalist and logician Alain De Libera (Geneva), Ciceronian scholar Carlos Lévy (Sorbonne, Paris) and [[Barbara Cassin]] (Collége international de philosophie, Paris).<ref>Barbara Cassin,''L'effet sophistique'', Paris, Gallimard, 1995</ref> Sociologist of science [[Bruno Latour]] and economist Romain Laufer may also be considered part of, or close to this group.
[[Edinburgh Zoo]]&nbsp;–
Links between the two strands, the literary and the philosophical, of the French school of rhetoric are strong and collaborative and bear witness to the revival of rhetoric in France.<ref>At the margins of the French school, the work of Belgians [[Chaim Perelman]] and his disciple Michel Meyer is noteworthy although Perelman’s foundational work remained by and large ignored in France until the 1990s, which remains somewhat of a puzzle.</ref>
[[Leo J. Ryan Memorial Park]]&nbsp;–
[[McCormick Tribune Plaza & Ice Rink]]&nbsp;–
[[Phoenix Zoo]]&nbsp;–
[[Prospect Park Zoo]]&nbsp;–
[[Washington Park (Chicago park)]]<!--The two washington parks are distinct-->&nbsp;–
[[Washington Square Park (Chicago)]]<!--The two washington parks are distinct-->&nbsp;–
<small> (10&nbsp;articles)</small>


==Rhetoric Beyond Western Civilization==
=====Running, track and field=====
[http://homepage.mac.com/tehart/Asian_Rhetoric_frame.html Indian and Chinese Rhetoric]
[[Usain Bolt|Bolt, Usain]]&nbsp;–
[[Chicago Marathon]]&nbsp;–
[[Dwain Chambers]]&nbsp;–
[[Carl Lewis|Lewis, Carl]]&nbsp;–
[[John McFall (athlete)|McFall, John]]&nbsp;–
[[Oscar Pistorius|Pistorius, Oscar]]&nbsp;–
[[Andreas Thorkildsen|Thorkildsen, Andreas]]&nbsp;–
[[Willis Ward|Ward, Willis]]&nbsp;–
[[Thomas Wilcher|Wilcher, Thomas]]&nbsp;–
<small> (9&nbsp;articles)</small>


== See also ==
=====Swimming and water sports=====
{{Portal}}
[[Neil Brooks|Brooks, Neil]]&nbsp;–
{{columns-list|3|
[[Peter Evans (swimmer)|Evans, Peter]]&nbsp;–
* [[Argumentation Theory]]
[[Theresa Goh|Goh, Theresa]]&nbsp;–
* [[Artes Liberales]]
[[Jesus College Boat Club (Oxford)]]&nbsp;–
* [[Casuistry]]
[[Mark Kerry|Kerry, Mark]]&nbsp;–
* [[Civic humanism]]
[[Faith Leech|Leech, Faith]]&nbsp;–
* [[Critical thinking]]
[[Tao Li|Li, Tao]]&nbsp;–
* [[Critical Theory]]
[[Sandra Morgan|Morgan, Sandra]]&nbsp;–
* [[Demagogy]]
[[Kevin O'Halloran|O'Halloran Kevin]]&nbsp;–
* [[Dialogue]]
[[Quietly Confident Quartet]]&nbsp;–
* [[Elocution]]
[[Rowing (sport)|Rowing]]&nbsp;–
* [[eRhetoric]]
[[Swimming at the 2008 Summer Olympics - Men's 100 metre butterfly]]&nbsp;–
* [[Fallacies]]
[[Henry Taylor (swimmer)|Taylor, Henry]]&nbsp;–
* [[Grammar]]
[[Mark Tonelli|Tonelli, Mark]]&nbsp;–
* [[Hermeneutics]]
[[Weymouth and Portland National Sailing Academy]]&nbsp;–
* [[Homiletics]]
[[Bob Windle|Windle, Bob]]&nbsp;–
* [[Intellectual dishonesty]]
<small> (16&nbsp;articles)</small>
* [[Language and thought]]
* [[Linguistics]]
* [[Logic]]
* [[Monroe's motivated sequence]]
* [[Orator]]
* [[Oratory]]
* [[Parallelism (rhetoric)]]
* [[Persuasion]]
* [[Persuasion technology]]
* [[Phenomenology (philosophy)|Phenomenology]]
* [[Political dissent]]
* [[Political rhetoric]]
* [[Post-structuralism]]
* [[Propaganda]]
* [[Public speaking]]
* [[Rhetorical criticism]]
* [[Rhetorical reason]]
* [[Rogerian argument]]
* [[Sophism]]
* [[Technical communication]]
* [[Technological nationalism]]
* [[Third Persona]]
* [[Trivium (education)]]
* [[Toastmasters International]]
* [[Visual rhetoric]]
}}


=== Miscellaneous terms ===
=====Sports mascots and supporters=====
{{columns-list|4|
[[Buzz (mascot)]]&nbsp;–
* [[Ad captandum]]
[[Hogettes]]&nbsp;–
* [[Allusion]]
[[Jack the Bulldog]]&nbsp;–
* [[Anaptyxis]]
[[Keggy the Keg]]&nbsp;–
* [[Ambiguity]]
[[Ralphie]]&nbsp;–
* [[Antimetabole]]
[[Sparty]]&nbsp;–
* [[Aphesis]]
<small> (6&nbsp;articles)</small>
* [[Aphorism]]
* [[Apologue]]
* [[Aposiopesis]]
* [[Archaism]]
* [[Atticism]]
* [[Brachyology]]
* [[Cacophony]]
* [[Catachresis]]
* [[Chiasmus]]
* [[Circumlocution]]
* [[Climax]]
* [[Conceit]]
* [[Eloquence]]
* [[Enthymeme]]
* [[Ethos]]
* [[Euphemism]]
* [[Figure of speech]]
* [[Formal equivalence]]
* [[Hendiadys]]
* [[Hysteron-proteron]]
* [[Idiom]]
* [[Innuendo]]
* [[Ipsedixitism]]
* [[Kenning]]
* [[Literary topos]]
* [[Logical fallacies]]
* [[Merism]]
* [[Mnemonic]]
* [[Negation]]
* [[Overdetermination]]
* [[Parable]]
* [[Paraphrase]]
* [[Paraprosdokian]]
* [[Pericope]]
* [[Period (rhetoric)|Period]]
* [[Perissologia]]
* [[Praeteritio]]
* [[Proverb]]
* [[Rhetorical device]]
* [[Rhetorical figure]]
* [[Rhetoric of science]]
* [[Soundbite]]
* [[Synchysis]]
* [[Synesis]]
* [[Synonymia]]
* [[Tautology]]
* [[Tertium comparationis]]
* [[Trope (linguistics)|Trope]]
* [[Truism]]
* [[Word play]]
}}


===Political speech resources===
=====Miscellaneous sport=====
* [[List of speeches]]
[[10 metre air pistol]]&nbsp;–
* [[List of political slogans]]
[[2008 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship]]&nbsp;–
* [http://www.americanrhetoric.com AmericanRhetoric.com]
[[Ralph W. Aigler|Aigler, Ralph W.]]&nbsp;–
[[Badminton]]&nbsp;–
[[Ian Browne (cyclist)|Browne, Ian]]&nbsp;–
[[Peter Bynoe|Bynoe, Peter]]&nbsp;–
[[Carmelo Camet|Camet, Carmelo]]&nbsp;–
[[Myron Cope|Cope, Myron]]&nbsp;–
[[Georgetown Hoyas]]&nbsp;–
[[Harness Racing Museum & Hall of Fame]]&nbsp;–
[[Li Jiawei|Jiawei, Li]]&nbsp;–
[[Nastia Liukin|Liukin, Nastia]]&nbsp;–
[[Evan Lysacek|Lysacek, Evan]]&nbsp;–
[[Tony Marchant|Marchant, Tony]]&nbsp;–
[[Kimmie Meissner|Meissner, Kimmie]]&nbsp;–
[[Michigan State Spartans]]&nbsp;–
[[National Collegiate Athletic Association (Philippines)]]&nbsp;–
[[Leander Paes|Paes, Leander]]&nbsp;–
[[Parkour]]&nbsp;–
[[Alicia Sacramone|Sacramone, Alicia]]&nbsp;–
[[The Simpsons Ride]]&nbsp;–
[[Laurentia Tan|Tan, Laurentia]]&nbsp;–
[[Team CSC Saxo Bank]]&nbsp;–
[[Feng Tianwei|Tianwei, Feng]]&nbsp;–
[[Vinkensport]]&nbsp;–
[[Washington Park Race Track]]&nbsp;–
<small> (26&nbsp;articles)</small>


==References==
</div>
===Primary texts===
</div>
The ''locus classicus'' for Greek and Latin primary texts on rhetoric is the [[Loeb Classical Library]] of the [[Harvard University Press]], published with an English translation on the facing page. For other translations, see the references in each author's Wikipedia entry.
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="Video and computer games"/>
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Gamepad.svg|22px|left]]Video and computer games</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">


Available online texts include:
==&shy;&nbsp;==
*[[Aristotle]]. ''[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Aristot.+Rh.+1.1.1 Rhetoric.]''
*[[Cicero]]. [http://dobc.unipv.it/scrineum/wight/invs1.htm ''De Inventione.]'' Latin only.
*------. ''[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Cic.+de+Orat.+1.1 De Oratore.]'' Latin only.
*[[Demosthenes]]. ''Orations''. [http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Dem.+21+1 Greek.] [http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/gutbook/lookup?num=9060 English.]
*[[Herennius]]. ''[http://dobc.unipv.it/scrineum/wight/herm1.htm De Ratione Dicendi.]'' Latin only.
*[[Isocrates]]. ''[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Isoc.+13+1 Against the Sophists.]''
*[[Henry Peacham]]. ''[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.03.0096 The Garden of Eloquence.]''
*[[George Puttenham]]. ''[http://eir.library.utoronto.ca/rpo/display/displayprose.cfm?prosenum=17 The Arte of Poesie.]''
*[[Quintilian]]. ''[http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Quintilian/Institutio_Oratoria/home.html Institutio oratoria.]''
*[[Johannes Susenbrotus]]. ''[http://visualiseur.bnf.fr/Visualiseur?Destination=Gallica&O=NUMM-83897 Epitome troporum.]''
*[[Thomas Wilson (rhetorician)|Thomas Wilson]]. ''[http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/%7Erbear/arte/arte.htm The Arte of Rhetorique.]''


=====Video game characters=====
=== Notes ===
{{reflist}}
[[Aerith Gainsborough]]&nbsp;–
[[Alucard (Castlevania)|Alucard (''Castlevania'')]]&nbsp;–
[[Arbiter (Halo)|Arbiter (''Halo'')]]&nbsp;–
[[Argonian]]&nbsp;–
[[Ayu Tsukimiya]]&nbsp;–
[[Characters in Devil May Cry|Characters in ''Devil May Cry'']]&nbsp;–
[[Characters of Final Fantasy XII|Characters of ''Final Fantasy XII'']]&nbsp;–
[[Characters of Halo|Characters of ''Halo'']]&nbsp;–
[[Characters of StarCraft|Characters of ''StarCraft'']]&nbsp;–
[[Cloud Strife]]&nbsp;–
[[Covenant (Halo)|Covenant (''Halo'')]]&nbsp;–
[[Dante (Devil May Cry)|Dante (''Devil May Cry'')]]&nbsp;–
[[Elite (Halo)|Elite (''Halo'')]]&nbsp;–
[[Gravemind]]&nbsp;–
[[Kirby (character)]]&nbsp;–
[[Kratos (God of War)|Kratos (''God of War'')]]&nbsp;–
[[Kyo Kusanagi]]&nbsp;–
[[Necrid]]&nbsp;–
[[Nicole (Dead or Alive)|Nicole (''Dead or Alive'')]]&nbsp;–
[[Organization XIII]]&nbsp;–
[[Pikachu]]&nbsp;–
[[Poison (Final Fight)|Poison (''Final Fight'')]]&nbsp;–
[[Rinoa Heartilly]]&nbsp;–
[[Sarah Kerrigan]]&nbsp;–
[[Solid Snake]]&nbsp;–
[[Soma Cruz]]&nbsp;–
[[Squall Leonhart]]&nbsp;–
[[Tidus]]&nbsp;–
<small> (28&nbsp;articles)</small>


== Rhetoric in the visual arts ==
=====Video game fictional elements=====
* Ralf van Bühren: ''Die Werke der Barmherzigkeit in der Kunst des 12.–18. Jahrhunderts. Zum Wandel eines Bildmotivs vor dem Hintergrund neuzeitlicher Rhetorikrezeption'' (Studien zur Kunstgeschichte, vol. 115), Hildesheim / Zürich / New York: Verlag Georg Olms 1998. ISBN 3-487-10319-2
[[Ivalice]]&nbsp;–
[[Universe of Kingdom Hearts|Universe of ''Kingdom Hearts'']]&nbsp;–
[[World of Final Fantasy VIII|World of ''Final Fantasy VIII'']]&nbsp;–
<small> (3&nbsp;articles)</small>


== External links ==
=====Video game series=====
[[CD-i games from The Legend of Zelda series|CD-i games from ''The Legend of Zelda'' series]]&nbsp;–
[[Chrono (series)|''Chrono'' (series)]]&nbsp;–
[[Devil May Cry (series)|''Devil May Cry'' (series)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Dragon Quest]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Fire Emblem]]''&nbsp;–
[[Grand Theft Auto (series)|''Grand Theft Auto'' (series)]]&nbsp;–
[[Guitar Hero|''Guitar Hero'' (series)]]&nbsp;–
[[Halo (series)|''Halo'' (series)]]&nbsp;–
[[The Legend of Zelda (series)|''The Legend of Zelda'' (series)]]&nbsp;–
[[Metroid (series)|''Metroid'' (series)]]&nbsp;–
[[Naruto: Clash of Ninja (series)|''Naruto: Clash of Ninja'' (series)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Pokémon]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Resident Evil]]''&nbsp;–
[[StarCraft (series)|''StarCraft'' (series)]]&nbsp;–
[[Super Smash Bros. (series)|''Super Smash Bros.'' (series)]]&nbsp;–
[[Wild Arms (series)|''Wild Arms'' (series)]]&nbsp;–
[[WWE SmackDown (video game series)|''WWE SmackDown'' (video game series)]]&nbsp;–
<small> (17&nbsp;articles)</small>


{{wikiquote}}
=====Video games=====
{{Wiktionary}}
''[[24: The Game]]''&nbsp;–
*[http://rhetoricafrica.org/ African Rhetoric] and [http://www.rhetoricafrica.org/pdf/RhetoricAfrica.pdf/ ''Rhetoric in Africa'', article by Sanya Osha.]
''[[Advance Wars: Days of Ruin]]''&nbsp;–
*[http://americanrhetoric.com/ American Rhetoric.]
''[[Age of Empires III]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Age of Empires III: The Asian Dynasties]]''&nbsp;–
[[Air (visual novel)|''Air'' (visual novel)]]&nbsp;–
''[[All Star Pro-Wrestling]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Anarchy Online]]''&nbsp;–
[[Ballistics (video game)|''Ballistics'' (video game)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Black Isle's Torn]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Blue Wing Blitz]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Breath of Fire III]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Breath of Fire IV]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Bunnies & Burrows]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Call of Duty 2]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Castlevania: Portrait of Ruin]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Chocobo Racing]]''&nbsp;–
[[Chocolatier (video game)|''Chocolatier'' (video game)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Chrono Break]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Chrono Resurrection]]''&nbsp;–
[[Clannad (visual novel)|''Clannad'' (visual novel)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Club Penguin]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Code Age Commanders: Tsugu Mono Tsuga Reru Mono]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Codename: Gordon]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Crash Boom Bang!]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Crash of the Titans]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Crystalis]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Day of Defeat: Source]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Descent: FreeSpace — The Great War]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Deus Ex]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Devil May Cry 4]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Dragon Quest VI: Realms of Reverie]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Dragon Warrior III]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Driving Emotion Type-S]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Duck Hunt]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Dynasty Warriors 4]]''&nbsp;–
[[E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (video game)|''E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial'' (video game)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Ef: A Fairy Tale of the Two.]]&nbsp;–
''[[Einhänder]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Elder Scrolls IV: Knights of the Nine]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Empire Earth]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Empire Earth: The Art of Conquest]]''&nbsp;–
[[Eragon (video game)|''Eragon'' (video game)]]&nbsp;–
''[[F-Zero X]]''&nbsp;–
''[[F.E.A.R.]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Fate/stay night]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Final Fantasy II]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Final Fantasy III]]&nbsp;–
''[[Final Fantasy V]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Final Fantasy VII]]''&nbsp;–
[[Final Fantasy VII (Famicom)|''Final Fantasy VII'' (Famicom)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Final Fantasy XII: Revenant Wings]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Final Fantasy Adventure]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Final Fantasy Chronicles]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Final Fantasy Fables: Chocobo Tales]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Final Fantasy Mystic Quest]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Final Fantasy Tactics Advance]]''&nbsp;–
[[Fire Emblem (video game)|''Fire Emblem'' (video game)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Fire Emblem: Radiant Dawn]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Fire Emblem: The Sacred Stones]]''&nbsp;–
[[Freelancer (video game)|''Freelancer'' (video game)]]&nbsp;–
''[[FreeSpace 2]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Gears of War]]''&nbsp;–
[[Geist (video game)|''Geist'' (video game)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Geneforge]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Goemon's Great Adventure]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Golden Sun: The Lost Age]]''&nbsp;–
''[[GT Advance Championship Racing]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Guardian Legend]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Guitar Hero II]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Guitar Hero III Mobile]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Guitar Hero Encore: Rocks the 80s]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Guitar Hero: Aerosmith]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Guitar Hero: On Tour]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Half-Life 2: Episode One]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Half-Life 2: Episode Two]]''&nbsp;–
[[Half-Life (video game)|''Half-Life'' (video game)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Higurashi no Naku Koro ni]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Hotel Mario]]''&nbsp;–
''[[I Love Bees]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Incoming]]''&nbsp;–
[[Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (NES)|''Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom'' (NES)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Kanon]]''&nbsp;–
''[[KiKi KaiKai]]''&nbsp;–
[[King Arthur & the Knights of Justice (video game)|''King Arthur & the Knights of Justice'' (video game)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Kirby's Dream Land]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Legend of Zelda]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Legend of Zelda: The Minish Cap]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Little Busters!]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Luigi's Mansion]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Lunar: Silver Star Story Complete]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Lunar: The Silver Star]]''&nbsp;–
[[Major League Baseball (video game)|''Major League Baseball'' (video game)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Mario Golf: Toadstool Tour]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Mario Party 4]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Mario Party 5]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Mega Man 2]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Mega Man Zero 4]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Metal Gear Solid]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Metroid Prime 3: Corruption]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Moon.]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Movie Battles]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Naruto: Clash of Ninja]]''&nbsp;–
[[Ninja Gaiden (2004 video game)|''Ninja Gaiden'' (2004 video game)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Off-Road Velociraptor Safari]]''&nbsp;–
''[[One: Kagayaku Kisetsu e]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Orange Box]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Otome wa Boku ni Koishiteru]]''&nbsp;–
[[Over the Hedge (handheld game)|''Over the Hedge'' (handheld game)]]&nbsp;–
[[Overlord (2007 video game)|''Overlord'' (2007 video game)]]&nbsp;–
''[[P.N.03]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Paper Mario]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Planetarian: Chiisana Hoshi no Yume]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Pokémon Diamond and Pearl]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Pokémon Gold and Silver]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Pokémon Red and Blue]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Portopia Renzoku Satsujin Jiken]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Project Sylpheed]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Ratchet & Clank: Up Your Arsenal]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Rise of Nations: Thrones and Patriots]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Rock Band]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Secret of Evermore]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Serious Sam II]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Shuffle!]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Silent Hill 2]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Silent Hill 3]]''&nbsp;–
[[Space Hulk (video game)|''Space Hulk'' (video game)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Star Fox Command]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Star Wars Jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast]]''&nbsp;–
''[[StarCraft: Brood War]]''&nbsp;–
''[[StarCraft: Ghost]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Super Mario Bros.]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Super Mario Land]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Super Mario Strikers]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Super Mario Sunshine]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Super Smash Bros.]]''&nbsp;–
''[[System Shock 2]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Team Fortress 2]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Turtles in Time]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Tomoyo After: It's a Wonderful Life]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Turok 2: Seeds of Evil]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Turok: Dinosaur Hunter]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Uncharted: Drake's Fortune]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Victorious Boxers: Ippo's Road to Glory]]''&nbsp;–
[[Warhawk (PlayStation 3 game)|''Warhawk'' (PlayStation 3 game)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Wario World]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Wild Arms]]''&nbsp;–
''[[WWE SmackDown! vs. Raw 2006]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Yoshi Touch & Go]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Yoshi's Island DS]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Zelda II: The Adventure of Link]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Ø Story]]''&nbsp;–
<small> (164&nbsp;articles)</small>


*[[b:Rhetoric and Composition|Wikibooks: Rhetoric and Composition]]
=====Video games people and miscellanea=====
*Irmsher, Karen ''[http://www.ericdigests.org/1996-3/skills.htm Communication Skills]
[[Bungie]]&nbsp;–
*Lauer, Janice. ''[http://wac.colostate.edu/books/lauer%5Finvention/ Invention in Rhetoric and Composition.]''
[[Development history of The Elder Scrolls series|Development history of ''The Elder Scrolls'' series]]&nbsp;–
*Mitchell, Anthony. ''[http://www.crmbuyer.com/story/39361.html A Primer for Business Rhetoric.]'' Discusses how messages are dumbed down to make them acceptable to wide audiences.
[[Final Fantasy character classes|''Final Fantasy'' character classes]]&nbsp;–
*Newall, Paul. ''[http://www.galilean-library.org/int21.html An introduction to Rhetoric and Rhetorical Figures.]'' Aimed at beginners.
[[Game Boy Micro]]&nbsp;–
*Taylor, Alan. [http://wethemedia.edublogs.org/hello-welcome - Blog] on ''We the Media...'', a study of the rhetorical representation of the USA broadcast news industry in Hollywood films, 1977-99.
[[Government simulation game]]&nbsp;–
*[http://www.rhetorosaurus.co.uk/rhetoric/base/home.aspx Rhetorosaurus.] Searchable database for rhetorical terms.
[[History of video game consoles (seventh generation)]]&nbsp;–
*[http://rhet.net/ rhet.net Portal for rhetoricians.]
[[Massively multiplayer online role-playing game]]&nbsp;–
*[http://humanities.byu.edu/rhetoric/silva.htm Silva Rhetoricae.]
[[Chris Metzen|Metzen, Chris]]&nbsp;–
*[http://www.figarospeech.com/ It Figures - Figures of Speech.]
[[Nintendo DS]]&nbsp;–
*[http://www.uky.edu/ArtsSciences/Classics/rhetoric.html A Glossary of Rhetorical Terms with Examples] by the Division of Classics at The University of Kentucky.
[[Personal computer game]]&nbsp;–
*[http://www.mnecho.com/ Moreira Necho Institute.]
[[Platform game]]&nbsp;–
*[http://www.specgram.com/CXLVII.3/09.seely.rhetoric.html Twenty Special Forms of Rhetoric.] A satirical look at non-traditional but commonly used rhetorical forms.
[[PlayStation Portable]]&nbsp;–
* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/history/inourtime/inourtime_20041028.shtml BBC Radio 4's In Our Time programme on Rhetoric] (requires [[RealAudio]])
[[Sega Mega Drive]]&nbsp;–
* [http://www.gresham.ac.uk/text.asp?PageId=22 Rodney Barker], [[Gresham College]] Professor of Rhetoric, with links to his free public lectures in London.
[[Species of StarCraft]]&nbsp;–
*[http://www.voicesofdemocracy.com Voices of Democracy.] Promotes the study of great speeches and public debates in the humanities undergraduate classroom.
[[Speedrun]]&nbsp;–
</blockquote>
[[Xbox 360]]&nbsp;–
<small> (16&nbsp;articles)</small>


[[Category:Narratology]]
</div>
[[Category:Rhetoric|*]]
</div>
[[Category:Greek loanwords]]
<div style="clear:both;">
<span id="Social sciences and society" />
<div style="padding:5px 5px 8px 5px; background-color:#CCCCFF; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Nuvola apps kuser.svg|22px|left]]'''Social sciences and society'''</div>
<div style="text-align:left;">
</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="Culture and society"/>
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Nuvola apps kuser.svg|22px|left]]Culture and society</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">


[[az:Ritorika]]
==&shy;&nbsp;==
[[bg:Реторика]]

[[ca:Retòrica]]
=====Cultural and social studies=====
[[cs:Rétorika]]
[[Community]]&nbsp;–
[[da:Retorik]]
[[Cultural depictions of spiders]]&nbsp;–
[[de:Rhetorik]]
[[Culture]]&nbsp;–
[[el:Ρητορική]]
[[Weapon dance]]&nbsp;–
[[es:Retórica]]
<small> (4&nbsp;articles)</small>
[[eo:Retoriko]]

[[fa:علوم بلاغت]]
=====Cultural phenomena, movements and subcultures=====
[[fr:Rhétorique]]
[[Anti-nuclear movement in Australia]]&nbsp;–
[[gl:Retórica]]
[[Average Joe]]&nbsp;–
[[ko:수사학]]
[[Banditti of the Prairie]]&nbsp;–
[[io:Retoriko]]
[[Banglapedia]]&nbsp;–
[[id:Retorika]]
[[Dolphin drive hunting]]&nbsp;–
[[is:Mælskufræði]]
[[est and The Forum in popular culture]]&nbsp;–
[[it:Retorica]]
[[Furry convention]]&nbsp;–
[[he:רטוריקה]]
[[Fursuit]]&nbsp;–
[[ka:რიტორიკა]]
[[Gay bathhouse]]&nbsp;–
[[la:Ars rhetorica]]
[[Harry Potter fandom]]&nbsp;–
[[lt:Retorika]]
[[Ho Yuen Hoe]]&nbsp;–
[[li:Retorica]]
[[Holocaust denial]]&nbsp;–
[[hu:Retorika]]
[[James McCune Smith]]&nbsp;–
[[mk:Реторика]]
[[Janet Jackson as gay icon]]&nbsp;–
[[ms:Retorik]]
[[Jayne Mansfield in popular culture]]&nbsp;–
[[nl:Retorica]]
[[José Sarria]]&nbsp;–
[[ja:修辞学]]
[[Lolicon]]&nbsp;–
[[no:Retorikk]]
[[Long hair]]&nbsp;–
[[nn:Retorikk]]
[[María del Luján Telpuk]]&nbsp;–
[[oc:Retorica]]
[[Midge Hadley]]&nbsp;–
[[pl:Retoryka]]
[[Mutiny of the Matoika|Mutiny of the ''Matoika'']]&nbsp;–
[[pt:Retórica]]
[[Overhill Cherokee]]&nbsp;–
[[ru:Риторика]]
[[Pokémon]]&nbsp;–
[[sq:Gojëtaria]]
[[Polish culture during World War II]]&nbsp;–
[[simple:Rhetoric]]
[[Project Chanology]]&nbsp;–
[[sk:Rétorika]]
[[Sikh diaspora]]&nbsp;–
[[sl:Retorika]]
[[Sindy]]&nbsp;–
[[sr:Реторика]]
[[Smoking]]&nbsp;–
[[fi:Retoriikka]]
[[Tree That Owns Itself]]&nbsp;–
[[sv:Retorik]]
<small> (29&nbsp;articles)</small>
[[tr:Retorik]]

[[uk:Риторика]]
=====Cultural symbols and objects=====
[[zh:修辞学]]
[[Amanda (award)]]&nbsp;–
[[Anthony Eden hat]]&nbsp;–
[[Aodai]]&nbsp;–
[[Black Swan emblems and popular culture]]&nbsp;–
[[Canada's Walk of Fame]]&nbsp;–
[[Early Founders Memorial Stone]]&nbsp;–
[[Grill (jewelry)]]&nbsp;–
[[Teresa Hsu Chih|Hsu Chih, Teresa]]&nbsp;–
[[Palestinian costumes]]&nbsp;–
[[Silver center cent]]&nbsp;–
<small> (10&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Internet culture=====
[[300-page iPhone bill]]&nbsp;–
[[AACS encryption key controversy]]&nbsp;–
[[Jim Bell|Bell, Jim]]&nbsp;–
[[Citizendium]]&nbsp;–
[[Chris Crocker (Internet celebrity)|Crocker, Chris]]&nbsp;–
[[Essjay controversy]]&nbsp;–
''[[Homestar Runner]]''&nbsp;–
[[Jack (webcomic)|''Jack'' (webcomic)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Kevin and Kell]]''&nbsp;–
[[On the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog]]&nbsp;–
''[[Ozy and Millie]]''&nbsp;–
[[Wikipedia]]&nbsp;–
<small> (12&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Organizations, members and cultural events=====
[[Amateur Station Operator's Certificate]]&nbsp;–
[[Association for the Study of Ethnicity and Nationalism]]&nbsp;–
[[Baltimore Urban Debate League]]&nbsp;–
[[Boy Scout]]&nbsp;–
[[Boy Scouting (Boy Scouts of America)]]&nbsp;–
[[Boy Scouts of America]]&nbsp;–
[[Bud Billiken Parade and Picnic]]&nbsp;–
[[Century 21 Exposition]]&nbsp;–
[[Eeyore's Birthday Party]]&nbsp;–
[[Hull House]]&nbsp;–
[[Independent Women's Forum]]&nbsp;–
[[Rainbow/PUSH]]&nbsp;–
[[Royal Canadian Air Cadets]]&nbsp;–
[[The Scout Association]]&nbsp;–
[[South African Scout Association]]&nbsp;–
[[Students Harness Aid for the Relief of the Elderly]]&nbsp;–
<small> (16&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Peoples and cultural groups=====
[[African American culture]]&nbsp;–
[[Amish]]&nbsp;–
[[Banat Bulgarians]]&nbsp;–
[[Francis Bok|Bok, Francis]]&nbsp;–
[[British Bangladeshi]]&nbsp;–
[[Eskaya]]&nbsp;–
[[Foreign domestic helpers in Hong Kong]]&nbsp;–
[[Greeks]]&nbsp;–
[[Icelanders]]&nbsp;–
[[Irish people]]&nbsp;–
[[Ivatan people]]&nbsp;–
[[Iyer]]&nbsp;–
[[Jew]]&nbsp;–
[[Khoo Kheng-Hor]]&nbsp;–
[[Pied-Noir]]&nbsp;–
[[Polish minority in the Czech Republic]]&nbsp;–
[[Sakhalin Koreans]]&nbsp;–
[[Sri Lankan Tamil people]]&nbsp;–
[[Tsugaru clan]]&nbsp;–
[[Whites in Zimbabwe]]&nbsp;–
[[Yavapai people]]&nbsp;–
<small> (21&nbsp;articles)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="Education" />
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Nuvola apps edu miscellaneous.svg|22px|left]]Education</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Educational institutions=====
[[Appalachian School of Law]]&nbsp;–
[[Aquinas College, Perth]]&nbsp;–
[[Arlington Senior High School]]&nbsp;–
[[Ashland Community and Technical College]]&nbsp;–
[[Ateneo de Manila University]]&nbsp;–
[[Auburn High School]]&nbsp;–
[[Balboa High School (San Francisco, California)]]&nbsp;–
[[Benjamin Franklin High School (New Orleans, Louisiana)]]&nbsp;–
[[Brigham Young University]]&nbsp;–
[[Brigham Young University Jerusalem Center]]&nbsp;–
[[Broad Run High School]]&nbsp;–
[[Campus of Michigan State University]]&nbsp;–
[[Caulfield Grammar School]]&nbsp;–
[[College of the Holy Cross]]&nbsp;–
[[Dartmouth Medical School]]&nbsp;–
[[De La Salle University-Manila]]&nbsp;–
[[De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde]]&nbsp;–
[[De La Salle-Santiago Zobel School]]&nbsp;–
[[Earle Mack School of Law]]&nbsp;–
[[East Carolina University]]&nbsp;–
[[Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University]]&nbsp;–
[[Florida International University]]&nbsp;–
[[Florida State University]]&nbsp;–
[[Georgia Institute of Technology]]&nbsp;–
[[Gordon Parks High School]]&nbsp;–
[[Harold B. Lee Library]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurst-Euless-Bedford Independent School District]]&nbsp;–
[[Jesus College, Oxford]]&nbsp;–
[[Lane Technical College Prep High School]]&nbsp;–
[[Lethbridge Collegiate Institute]]&nbsp;–
[[Litchfield Towers]]&nbsp;–
[[Lubbock High School]]&nbsp;–
[[Marriott School of Management]]&nbsp;–
[[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]]&nbsp;–
[[McGill University]]&nbsp;–
[[Michigan State University academics]]&nbsp;–
[[Michigan State University Libraries]]&nbsp;–
[[New York University]]&nbsp;–
[[North Community High School]]&nbsp;–
[[Patrick Henry College]]&nbsp;–
[[Phi Delta Theta]]&nbsp;–
[[Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney]]&nbsp;–
[[Preuss School]]&nbsp;–
[[Pūnana Leo]]&nbsp;–
[[Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute]]&nbsp;–
[[Robert College]]&nbsp;–
[[Scotch College, Perth]]&nbsp;–
[[Seal of Dartmouth College]]&nbsp;–
[[Seton Hall University]]&nbsp;–
[[Stonyhurst College]]&nbsp;–
[[Tepper School of Business]]&nbsp;–
[[Thayer School of Engineering]]&nbsp;–
[[United States Air Force Academy]]&nbsp;–
[[United States Naval Academy]]&nbsp;–
[[University College London]]&nbsp;–
[[University College, Durham]]&nbsp;–
[[University of Bristol]]&nbsp;–
[[University of California, Santa Cruz]]&nbsp;–
[[University of Cambridge]]&nbsp;–
[[University of Chicago]]&nbsp;–
[[University of Glasgow]]&nbsp;–
[[University of Houston]]&nbsp;–
[[University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill]]&nbsp;–
[[University of North Dakota]]&nbsp;–
[[University of Nottingham]]&nbsp;–
[[University of Oklahoma]]&nbsp;–
[[University of Oxford]]&nbsp;–
[[University of Santo Tomas]]&nbsp;–
[[University of Saskatchewan]]&nbsp;–
[[University of Surrey]]&nbsp;–
[[University of Virginia]]&nbsp;–
[[Vanderbilt University]]&nbsp;–
[[Westfield High School (Fairfax County, Virginia)]]&nbsp;–
[[Willamette University College of Law]]&nbsp;–
<small> (74&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Educators=====
[[John Baldwin (educator)|Baldwin, John]]&nbsp;–
[[Mary McLeod Bethune|Bethune, Mary McLeod]]&nbsp;–
[[Marion L. Brittain|Brittain, Marion L.]]&nbsp;–
[[Nathan C. Brooks|Brooks, Nathan C.]]&nbsp;–
[[Ward Churchill|Churchill, Ward]]&nbsp;–
[[Andrew Gonzalez (Lasallian)|Gonzalez, Andrew]]&nbsp;–
[[Percy Henn|Henn, Percy]]&nbsp;–
[[John Clough Holmes|Holmes, John Clough]]&nbsp;–
[[Herbert Armitage James|James, Herbert Armitage]]&nbsp;–
[[James Morris III|Morris, James III]]&nbsp;–
[[Randy Pausch|Pausch, Randy]]&nbsp;–
[[Andrew Truxal|Truxal, Andrew]]&nbsp;–
[[Andrew Dickson White|White, Andrew Dickson]]&nbsp;–
<small> (13&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Miscellaneous education=====
[[Beta Upsilon Chi]]&nbsp;–
[[Dartmouth College Greek organizations]]&nbsp;–
[[Education in Iceland]]&nbsp;–
[[Education in the United States]]&nbsp;–
[[Educational psychology]]&nbsp;–
[[Georgia Tech traditions]]&nbsp;–
[[History of Georgia Tech]]&nbsp;–
[[Raising of school leaving age in England and Wales]]&nbsp;–
[[Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams]]&nbsp;–
[[Traditions of Texas A&M University]]&nbsp;–
[[United States Academic Decathlon]]&nbsp;–
<small> (11&nbsp;articles)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="Economics and business"/>
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[image:Nuvola mimetypes kchart chrt.png|20px|left]]Economics and business</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Advertising and marketing=====
[[Evolution (Dove)]]&nbsp;–
[[Gorilla (Cadbury)]]&nbsp;–
[[Green marketing]]&nbsp;–
[[Us Tareyton smokers would rather fight than switch!]]&nbsp;–
[[Winston tastes good like a cigarette should]]&nbsp;–
<small> (5&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Businesspeople=====
[[Mona Best|Best, Mona]]&nbsp;–
[[Sir John Brunner, 1st Baronet|Brunner, John]]&nbsp;–
[[Tory Burch|Burch, Tory]]&nbsp;–
[[William Claiborne|Claiborne, William]]&nbsp;–
[[Steve Fossett|Fossett, Steve]]&nbsp;–
[[Heather Higgins|Higgins, Heather]]&nbsp;–
[[Seymour H. Knox I|Knox, Seymour H. I]]&nbsp;–
[[Charles M. Loring|Loring, Charles M.]]&nbsp;–
[[Stanley Marcus|Marcus, Stanley]]&nbsp;–
[[Gan Eng Seng|Seng, Gan Eng]]&nbsp;–
<small> (10&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Businesses=====
[[Black Cat Bar]]&nbsp;–
[[Boosey & Hawkes]]&nbsp;–
[[Burger King]]&nbsp;–
[[Cirque du Soleil]]&nbsp;–
[[Crazy Eddie]]&nbsp;–
[[Criticism of Wal-Mart]]&nbsp;–
[[Grameen Bank]]&nbsp;–
[[Gulf Oil]]&nbsp;–
[[Hochtief]]&nbsp;–
[[International Speedway Corporation]]&nbsp;–
[[Key (company)|Key]]&nbsp;–
[[L.A.M.B.]]&nbsp;–
[[Mzoli's]]&nbsp;–
[[National Westminster Bank]]&nbsp;–
[[Nittany Furnace]]&nbsp;–
[[Operation USA]]&nbsp;–
[[Pearson's Candy Company]]&nbsp;–
[[Pike Place Fish Market]]&nbsp;–
[[Pixar]]&nbsp;–
[[Port Authority of New York and New Jersey]]&nbsp;–
[[Renewable energy industry]]&nbsp;–
[[Sinclair Research]]&nbsp;–
[[Slackers CDs and Games]]&nbsp;–
[[Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company]]&nbsp;–
[[Tim Hortons]]&nbsp;–
[[Union Stock Yards]]&nbsp;–
[[Wal-Mart]]&nbsp;–
<small> (27&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Business management=====
[[Accounting period]]&nbsp;–
[[Single Audit]]&nbsp;–
<small> (2&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Economics=====
[[Affluence in the United States]]&nbsp;–
[[David Blanchflower|Blanchflower, David]]&nbsp;–
[[Economic development in India]]&nbsp;–
''[[The Economist]]''&nbsp;–
[[Economy of Ohio]]&nbsp;–
[[Euro]]&nbsp;–
[[Frank Fetter|Fetter, Frank]]&nbsp;–
[[Milton Friedman|Friedman, Milton]]&nbsp;–
[[Household income in the United States]]&nbsp;–
[[Income inequality in the United States]]&nbsp;–
[[Mathematical economics]]&nbsp;–
[[Oil shale industry]]&nbsp;–
[[Option (finance)]]&nbsp;–
[[Panic of 1907]]&nbsp;–
[[Peace Dollar]]&nbsp;–
[[Murray Rothbard|Rothbard, Murray]]&nbsp;–
[[Social Security (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[Muhammad Yunus|Yunus, Muhammad]]&nbsp;–
<small> (18&nbsp;articles)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="Law"/>
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[image:US_Department_of_Justice_Scales_Of_Justice.svg|20px|left]]Law</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Cases and domestic law=====
[[1993 child sexual abuse accusations against Michael Jackson]]&nbsp;–
''[[Brown v. Board of Education]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Brown v. Hotel and Restaurant Employees]]''&nbsp;–
[[Burger King legal issues]]&nbsp;–
[[Concurrent use registration]]&nbsp;–
[[Criminal damage in English law]]&nbsp;–
[[Demon Murder Trial]]&nbsp;–
''[[Hamdan v. Rumsfeld]]''&nbsp;–
[[House of Lords Act 1999]]&nbsp;–
''[[Jacobson v. United States]]''&nbsp;–
[[Microsoft vs. MikeRoweSoft]]&nbsp;–
[[National Popular Vote Interstate Compact]]&nbsp;–
''[[NLRB v. J. Weingarten, Inc.]]''&nbsp;–
[[Odex's actions against file-sharing]]&nbsp;–
''[[R v Thomas]]''&nbsp;–
[[Recognition of same-sex unions in Ireland]]&nbsp;–
[[Reform Act 1832]]&nbsp;–
[[Scientific jury selection]]&nbsp;–
[[Sources of Singapore law]]&nbsp;–
[[United States Code Congressional and Administrative News]]&nbsp;–
''[[Universal City Studios, Inc. v. Nintendo Co., Ltd.]]''&nbsp;–
[[USA PATRIOT Act, Title III]]&nbsp;–
[[USA PATRIOT Act, Title III, Subtitle B]]&nbsp;–
[[Yasui v. United States]]&nbsp;–
<small> (24&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Constitutional and international law=====
[[Charter Oath]]&nbsp;–
[[Constitution of Virginia]]&nbsp;–
[[Directive Principles in India]]&nbsp;–
[[Fundamental Rights in India]]&nbsp;–
[[International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights]]&nbsp;–
[[Kyoto Protocol]]&nbsp;–
[[Minority Treaties]]&nbsp;–
[[New Jersey State Constitution]]&nbsp;–
[[Section Thirty-four of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms]]&nbsp;–
[[Social contract (Malaysia)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tax protester constitutional arguments]]&nbsp;–
<small> (11&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Crime, criminals, punishment and victims=====
[[1985 Rajneeshee assassination plot]]&nbsp;–
[[1990 Strangeways Prison riot]]&nbsp;–
[[Alexander Litvinenko poisoning]]&nbsp;–
[[Bali Nine]]&nbsp;–
[[Beauchamp–Sharp Tragedy]]&nbsp;–
[[Boricua Popular Army]]&nbsp;–
[[Jon Burge|Burge, Jon]]&nbsp;–
[[Cerro Maravilla Incident]]&nbsp;–
[[Seung-Hui Cho|Cho, Seung-Hui]]&nbsp;–
[[Chris and Cru Kahui murders]]&nbsp;–
[[Matthew Cox|Cox, Matthew]]&nbsp;–
[[Jean Charles de Menezes|de Menezes, Jean Charles]]&nbsp;–
[[Disappearance of Madeleine McCann]]&nbsp;–
[[Miguel Etchecolatz|Etchecolatz, Miguel]]&nbsp;–
[[Albert Fish|Fish, Albert]]&nbsp;–
[[Gun violence in the United States]]&nbsp;–
[[Theodore Kaczynski|Kaczynski, Theodore]]&nbsp;–
[[Glenn Knight|Knight, Glenn]]&nbsp;–
[[Lady in the Lake trial]]&nbsp;–
[[Lana Stempien]]&nbsp;–
[[LaRouche conspiracy trials]]&nbsp;–
[[Marc Lépine|Lépine, Marc]]&nbsp;–
[[Murder of Amanda Dowler]]&nbsp;–
[[Murder of Tom ap Rhys Pryce]]&nbsp;–
[[Murder of Victoria Climbié]]&nbsp;–
[[Northern Illinois University shooting]]&nbsp;–
[[Oklahoma City bombing]]&nbsp;–
[[Platte Canyon High School shooting]]&nbsp;–
[[Katherine Ann Power|Power, Ann Katherine]]&nbsp;–
[[Sarah Conlon]]&nbsp;–
[[Siege of Lal Masjid]]&nbsp;–
[[Carl Tanzler|Tanzler, Carl]]&nbsp;–
[[United States Capitol shooting incident (1998)]]&nbsp;–
[[Westroads Mall shooting]]&nbsp;–
[[Zodiac Killer]]&nbsp;–
<small> (35&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Ethics=====
[[Henrietta Lacks|Lacks, Henrietta]]&nbsp;–
[[Terri Schiavo|Schiavo, Terri]]&nbsp;–
<small> (2&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Lawyers, judges and legal academics=====
[[Hugo Black|Black, Hugo]]&nbsp;–
[[Stephen Breyer|Breyer, Stephen]]&nbsp;–
[[Paul Cornell (lawyer)|Cornell, Paul]]&nbsp;–
[[Henry Pering Pellew Crease|Crease, Sir Henry]]&nbsp;–
[[Matthew Deady|Deady, Matthew]]&nbsp;–
[[Adrian S. Fisher|Fisher, Adrian S.]]&nbsp;–
[[Clifford Scott Green|Green, Clifford Scott]]&nbsp;–
[[John Marshall Harlan II|Harlan II, John Marshall]]&nbsp;–
[[Reginald Hugh Hickling|Hickling, Reginald Hugh]]&nbsp;–
[[Fern Hobbs|Hobbs, Fern]]&nbsp;–
[[A. Leon Higginbotham, Jr.|Leon Higginbotham, Jr., Aloyisus]]&nbsp;–
[[Luke Ravenstahl|Ravenstahl, Luke]]&nbsp;–
[[Jack Thompson (attorney)|Thompson, Jack]]&nbsp;–
<small> (13&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Legal institutions and buildings=====
[[DeKalb County Courthouse (Illinois)]]&nbsp;–
[[Demographics of the Supreme Court of the United States]]&nbsp;–
[[International Criminal Court]]&nbsp;–
[[Ogle County Courthouse]]&nbsp;–
[[Oregon Supreme Court]]&nbsp;–
<small> (5&nbsp;articles)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="Media and journalism"/>
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:TV-icon-2.svg |22px|left]]Media and journalism</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Journalism=====
[[Anna Politkovskaya]]&nbsp;–
[[Conscience-in-Media Award]]&nbsp;–
[[Emmett Watson]]&nbsp;–
''[[Frank Sinatra Has a Cold]]''&nbsp;–
[[Hrant Dink]]&nbsp;–
[[Jay Barbree]]&nbsp;–
[[John Stossel]]&nbsp;–
[[Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy|''Jyllands-Posten'' Muhammad cartoons controversy]]&nbsp;–
[[Mark Kellogg (reporter)|Mark Kellogg]]&nbsp;–
[[Michael Savage (commentator)|Michael Savage]]&nbsp;–
[[Neal Boortz]]&nbsp;–
[[Pauline Kael]]&nbsp;–
''[[Press pass]]''&nbsp;–
[[Robert Benchley]]&nbsp;–
[[Shawn Lonsdale]]&nbsp;–
[[Steve Dahl]]&nbsp;–
''[[The Technique]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Wall Street Journal]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Washington Blade]]''&nbsp;–
<small> (19&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Magazines and journals=====
''[[The Economist]]''&nbsp;–
[[Nature (journal)|''Nature'' (journal)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Portland Monthly]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Register-Guard]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Shojo Beat]]''&nbsp;–
''[[WSJ.]]''&nbsp;–
<small> (6&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Media=====
[[Al Jazeera]]&nbsp;–
[[BBC]]&nbsp;–
[[BBC News (TV channel)]]&nbsp;–
[[BBC UK regional TV on satellite]]&nbsp;–
[[Digital terrestrial television in Australia]]&nbsp;–
[[DuMont Television Network]]&nbsp;–
[[NBN Television]]&nbsp;–
[[Nelvana]]&nbsp;–
[[Prime Television]]&nbsp;–
[[Seven Network]]&nbsp;–
[[Television broadcasting in Australia]]&nbsp;–
[[Television in Australia]]&nbsp;–
[[WIN Television]]&nbsp;–
<small> (13&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Television and radio non-fiction=====
<!--Includes game shows, panel games, satire, comedy sketches, stand-up comedy, reality TV, and TV and radio advertising: television and radio drama is listed under "Theatre, film and drama" in "Arts and architecture"-->
[[The Apprentice (UK series three)|''The Apprentice'' (UK Series Three)]]&nbsp;–
[[Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader? (U.S. game show)|''Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader?'' (US game show)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Blue's Clues]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Chaser APEC pranks]]&nbsp;–
''[[The Chaser's War on Everything]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Colbert Report]]''&nbsp;–
''[[The Daily Show]]''&nbsp;–
[[Dunder Mifflin]]&nbsp;–
''[[The Judy Garland Show]]''&nbsp;–
[[Monty Python]]&nbsp;–
''[[A Nonpartisan Message from Governor Sarah Palin & Senator Hillary Clinton]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Philippine Idol]]''&nbsp;–
''[[QI]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Queer Eye]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Victoria Wood As Seen On TV]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Wank Week]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Who Made Huckabee?]]''&nbsp;–
<small> (17&nbsp;articles)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="Politics and government"/>
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Vote.svg|22px|left]]Politics and government</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Heads of state and heads of government=====
<!--For living Heads of State and Government, excluding monarchs, which belong under Royalty & nobility. Deceased Heads of State and Government belong under Historical Figures-->
[[Gordon Brown|Brown, Gordon]]&nbsp;–
[[George H. W. Bush|Bush, George H. W.]]&nbsp;–
[[George W. Bush|Bush, George W.]]&nbsp;–
[[Bill Clinton|Clinton, Bill]]&nbsp;–
[[Stephen Harper|Harper, Stephen]]&nbsp;–
[[Félix Houphouët-Boigny|Houphouët-Boigny, Félix]]&nbsp;–
[[Alexander Lukashenko|Lukashenko, Alexander]]&nbsp;–
[[Fredrik Reinfeldt|Reinfeldt, Fredrik]]&nbsp;–
[[Suharto]]&nbsp;–
<small> (9&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Intelligence and espionage=====
[[Australian Secret Intelligence Service]]&nbsp;–
[[Central Intelligence Agency]]&nbsp;–
[[Dixie Mission]]&nbsp;–
[[Federal Bureau of Investigation]]&nbsp;–
[[Julius and Ethel Rosenberg|Rosenberg, Julius & Ethel]]&nbsp;–
[[Secretaría de Inteligencia]]&nbsp;–
<small> (6&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====International organizations=====
[[Association of Southeast Asian Nations]]&nbsp;–
[[Council of the European Union]]&nbsp;–
[[European Coal and Steel Community]]&nbsp;–
[[European Council]]&nbsp;–
[[European Union]]&nbsp;–
[[Institutions of the European Union]]&nbsp;–
[[Location of European Union institutions]]&nbsp;–
[[NATO]]&nbsp;–
<small> (8&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Political and governmental institutions=====
[[39th Canadian Parliament]]&nbsp;–
[[Australian Senate committees]]&nbsp;–
[[Central Communications Command]]&nbsp;–
[[Convict era of Western Australia]]&nbsp;–
[[Diet of Japan]]&nbsp;–
[[European Council]]&nbsp;–
[[Government of France]]&nbsp;–
[[Governor of Maryland]]&nbsp;–
[[Indiana General Assembly]]&nbsp;–
[[Monarchies in Europe]]&nbsp;–
[[Ohio Department of Transportation]]&nbsp;–
[[Parliament of Malaysia]]&nbsp;–
[[President of Belarus]]&nbsp;–
[[Provisional Government of Oregon]]&nbsp;–
[[Provisional Legislature of Oregon]]&nbsp;–
[[Supreme Court of Indiana]]&nbsp;–
[[Swiss Federal Council]]&nbsp;–
<small> (17&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Political districts, direction and governance=====
[[Commission to Assess the Ballistic Missile Threat to the United States]]&nbsp;–
[[Compliance requirements]]&nbsp;–
[[ContactPoint]]&nbsp;–
[[Illinois' 3rd congressional district]]&nbsp;–
[[Local government in Peterborough]]&nbsp;–
[[Lorne (N.W.T. electoral district)]]&nbsp;–
[[Peterborough (UK Parliament constituency)]]&nbsp;–
[[Social contract (Malaysia)]]&nbsp;–
<small> (8&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Political events=====
[[2004 Istanbul summit]]&nbsp;–
[[2006 New Jersey State Government shutdown]]&nbsp;–
[[2006 Riga summit]]&nbsp;–
[[Christopher Dodd presidential campaign, 2008]]&nbsp;–
[[Duncan Hunter presidential campaign, 2008]]&nbsp;–
[[Joe Biden presidential campaign, 2008]]&nbsp;–
[[Old Court-New Court controversy]]&nbsp;–
[[Polish legislative election, 1957]]&nbsp;–
[[Salt Satyagraha]]&nbsp;–
[[Singaporean general election, 2006]]&nbsp;–
[[Tear down this wall]]&nbsp;–
[[Tom Tancredo presidential campaign, 2008]]&nbsp;–
[[United States Senate election in New York, 2000]]&nbsp;–
<small> (13&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Political figures=====
<!--For living politicians and other political figures, excluding Heads of State and Government (see above). Deceased politicians belong in the historical figures section-->
[[Leonore Annenberg|Annenberg, Leonore]]&nbsp;–
[[John Baird (Canadian politician)|Baird, John]]&nbsp;–
[[Román Baldorioty de Castro|Baldorioty de Castro, Román]]&nbsp;–
[[Gregory R. Ball|Ball, Gregory R.]]&nbsp;–
[[Berkley Bedell|Bedell, Berkley]]&nbsp;–
[[Joe Biden|Biden, Joe]]&nbsp;–
[[Reuben P. Boise|Boise, Reuben P.]]&nbsp;–
[[Laura Bush|Bush, Laura]]&nbsp;–
[[David Cameron|Cameron, David]]&nbsp;–
[[Mara Carfagna|Carfagna, Mara]]&nbsp;–
[[Matthew Charlton|Charlton, Matthew]]&nbsp;–
[[Chen Chi-mai]]&nbsp;–
[[Dick Cheney|Cheney, Richard Bruce "Dick"]]&nbsp;–
[[Lev Chernyi|Chernyi, Lev]]&nbsp;–
[[Hillary Rodham Clinton|Clinton, Hillary Rodham]]&nbsp;–
[[Jon Corzine|Corzine, Jon]]&nbsp;–
[[Tom DeLay|DeLay, Tom]]&nbsp;–
[[Jack Dormand|Dormand, Jack]]&nbsp;–
[[Don Getty|Getty, Don]]&nbsp;–
[[Dan Gibbs|Gibbs, Dan]]&nbsp;–
[[Barbara Gittings|Gittings, Barbara]]&nbsp;–
[[Neil Goldschmidt|Goldschmidt, Neil]]&nbsp;–
[[Al Gore|Gore, Al]]&nbsp;–
[[Mike Gravel|Gravel, Mike]]&nbsp;–
[[Knut Arild Hareide|Hareide, Knut Arild]]&nbsp;–
[[Mark Hatfield|Hatfield, Mark]]&nbsp;–
[[Hsu Tain-tsair]]&nbsp;–
[[Norman Hsu|Hsu, Norman]]&nbsp;–
[[Mike Hudema|Hudema, Mike]]&nbsp;–
[[Ollanta Humala|Humala, Ollanta]]&nbsp;–
[[Jesse Jackson, Jr.|Jackson, Jesse Jr]]&nbsp;–
[[John Kefalas|Kefalas, John]]&nbsp;–
[[Ruth Kelly|Kelly, Ruth]]&nbsp;–
[[Jack Kemp|Kemp, Jack]]&nbsp;–
[[Ted Kennedy|Kennedy, Ted]]&nbsp;–
[[Wilfrid Kent Hughes|Kent Hughes, Wilfrid]]&nbsp;–
[[Alan Keyes|Keyes, Alan]]&nbsp;–
[[Lolita Lebrón|Lebrón, Lolita]]&nbsp;–
[[David Lewis (politician)|Lewis, David]]&nbsp;–
[[Haakon Lie|Lie, Haakon]]&nbsp;–
[[Nelson Mandela|Mandela, Nelson]]&nbsp;–
[[Charles Mathias|Mathias, Charles]]&nbsp;–
[[Jack F. Matlock, Jr.|Matlock, Jack F. Jr]]&nbsp;–
[[Charles L. McNary|McNary, Charles L.]]&nbsp;–
[[Sylvia Mendez|Mendez, Sylvia]]&nbsp;–
[[Harvey Milk|Milk, Harvey]]&nbsp;–
[[Colin Campbell Mitchell|Mitchell, Colin Campbell]]&nbsp;–
[[James Turner Morehead (Kentucky)|Morehead, James Turner]]&nbsp;–
[[Rogers Morton|Morton, Rogers]]&nbsp;–
[[Gavin Newsom|Newsom, Gavin]]&nbsp;–
[[Michelle Obama|Obama, Michelle]]&nbsp;–
[[Leonard Orban|Orban, Leonard]]&nbsp;–
[[Joel Palmer|Palmer, Joel]]&nbsp;–
[[Ron Paul|Paul, Ron]]&nbsp;–
[[Toni Preckwinkle|Preckwinkle, Toni]]&nbsp;–
[[Richard Gavin Reid|Reid, Richard Gavin]]&nbsp;–
[[Condoleezza Rice|Rice, Condoleezza]]&nbsp;–
[[Joe Rice|Rice, Joe]]&nbsp;–
[[Ellen Roberts|Roberts, Ellen]]&nbsp;–
[[John Seigenthaler, Sr.|Seigenthaler Sr., John]]&nbsp;–
[[Teresa Bagioli Sickles|Sickles, Teresa]]&nbsp;–
[[Elizabeth Cady Stanton|Stanton, Elizabeth Cady]]&nbsp;–
[[John W. Stevenson|Stevenson, John W]]&nbsp;–
[[Robert Stewart, Viscount Castlereagh|Stewart, Robert]]&nbsp;–
[[Ronda Storms|Storms, Ronda]]&nbsp;–
[[Harry Strom|Strom, Harry]]&nbsp;–
[[Thomas H. Tongue|Tongue, Thomas H.]]&nbsp;–
[[Chai Trong-rong|Trong-rong, Chai]]&nbsp;–
<small> (68&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Political issues, theory and analysis=====
[[Anarchy in Somalia]]&nbsp;–
[[Congressional stagnation in the United States]]&nbsp;–
[[Finland Plot]]&nbsp;–
[[Great power]]&nbsp;–
[[Politics]]&nbsp;–
<small> (5&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Political parties and movements=====
[[Anarchism in Cuba]]&nbsp;–
[[Armenian Revolutionary Federation]]&nbsp;–
[[Democratic Action Party]]&nbsp;–
[[Norman Finkelstein|Finkelstein, Norman]]&nbsp;–
[[German Eastern Marches Society]]&nbsp;–
[[Green Party of Canada]]&nbsp;–
[[Hezbollah]]&nbsp;–
[[History of the Portuguese Communist Party]]&nbsp;–
[[Independent Women's Forum]]&nbsp;–
[[Portuguese Communist Party]]&nbsp;–
[[Prague Spring]]&nbsp;–
[[Stop the War Coalition]]&nbsp;–
[[United for Peace and Justice]]&nbsp;–
[[United Malays National Organisation]]&nbsp;–
<small> (14&nbsp;articles)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="Psychology"/>
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Psi2.svg|22px|left]]Psychology</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Psychologists and psychology=====
[[Anger]]&nbsp;–
[[Attachment disorder]]&nbsp;–
[[Marian Breland Bailey|Bailey, Marian Breland]]&nbsp;–
[[Beck Depression Inventory]]&nbsp;–
[[Conversion therapy]]&nbsp;–
[[Homosexual transsexual]]&nbsp;–
[[Kohlberg's stages of moral development]]&nbsp;–
[[Large Group Awareness Training]]&nbsp;–
[[Lucid dream]]&nbsp;–
[[Maternal deprivation]]&nbsp;–
''[[The Psychology of The Simpsons]]''&nbsp;–
<small> (11&nbsp;articles)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;">
<span id="Geography and places" />
<div style="padding:5px 5px 8px 5px; background-color:#CCCCFF; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Gnome-globe.svg|22px|left]]'''Geography and places'''</div>
<div style="text-align:left;">
</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="Geography" />
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Gnome-globe.svg|22px|left]]Geography</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Bodies of water and water formations=====
[[Castle Lake (California)]]&nbsp;–
[[Celilo Falls]]&nbsp;–
[[Columbia River]]&nbsp;–
[[Crater Lake]]&nbsp;–
[[Everglades]]&nbsp;–
[[Great Barrier Reef]]&nbsp;–
[[Great Salt Lake]]&nbsp;–
[[Gulf Stream]]&nbsp;–
[[Kennet and Avon Canal]]&nbsp;–
[[Lake Toba]]&nbsp;–
[[Lake Winfield Scott]]&nbsp;–
[[River Torrens]]&nbsp;–
[[Sembawang Hot Spring]]&nbsp;–
[[Serpentine (lake)]]&nbsp;–
[[Somerset Coal Canal]]&nbsp;–
<small> (15&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Geographers and explorers=====
[[Aurora's drift]]&nbsp;–
[[Tom Crean (explorer)|Crean, Tom]]&nbsp;–
[[Franklin's lost expedition]]&nbsp;–
[[Mary Meader|Meader, Mary]]&nbsp;–
<small> (4&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====General and human geography=====
[[Canadian postal code]]&nbsp;–
[[Emigrant Trail in Wyoming]]&nbsp;–
[[Environmental threats to the Great Barrier Reef]]&nbsp;–
[[Geography of Newfoundland and Labrador]]&nbsp;–
[[Historic district (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[Israeli West Bank barrier]]&nbsp;–
[[Nature]]&nbsp;–
[[Peak oil]]&nbsp;–
[[Renewable energy commercialization]]&nbsp;–
[[Renewable energy in Iceland]]&nbsp;–
[[Water supply and sanitation in Colombia]]&nbsp;–
[[Wells Gray-Clearwater volcanic field]]&nbsp;–
[[The World Factbook]]&nbsp;–
<small> (13&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Islands=====
[[Dubh Artach]]&nbsp;–
[[Flannan Isles]]&nbsp;–
[[Lundy]]&nbsp;–
[[Mingulay]]&nbsp;–
[[Papa Stour]]&nbsp;–
[[Pedra Branca, Singapore]]&nbsp;–
[[Raasay]]&nbsp;–
[[Rùm]]&nbsp;–
[[Skye]]&nbsp;–
[[Staffa]]&nbsp;–
<small> (10&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Landforms=====
[[Avachinsky]]&nbsp;–
[[Avon Gorge]]&nbsp;–
[[Ben Nevis]]&nbsp;–
[[Blackdown Hills]]&nbsp;–
[[British Isles]]&nbsp;–
[[Cheddar Gorge]]&nbsp;–
[[Chocolate Hills]]&nbsp;–
[[Gerlachovský štít]]&nbsp;–
[[Key Biscayne]]&nbsp;–
[[Long Ya Men]]&nbsp;–
[[Monte Testaccio]]&nbsp;–
[[Mount Adams (Washington)]]&nbsp;–
[[Mount Baker]]&nbsp;–
[[Mount Edziza volcanic complex]]&nbsp;–
[[Mount Garibaldi]]&nbsp;–
[[Mount Hood]]&nbsp;–
[[Mount Osmond, South Australia]]&nbsp;–
[[Mount Rainier]]&nbsp;–
[[Mount Vesuvius]]&nbsp;–
[[Nevado del Ruiz]]&nbsp;–
[[Osborne Reef]]&nbsp;–
[[Pinkham Notch]]&nbsp;–
[[Sakurajima]]&nbsp;–
[[Silverthrone Caldera]]&nbsp;–
[[Somerset Levels]]&nbsp;–
[[Weh Island]]&nbsp;–
[[Wilkins Peak]]&nbsp;–
<small> (27&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Nature reserves, conservation areas and countryside routes=====
[[Anstey Hill Recreation Park]]&nbsp;–
[[Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park]]&nbsp;–
[[Dryandra Woodland]]&nbsp;–
[[Golden Gate Highlands National Park]]&nbsp;–
[[Gran Paradiso National Park]]&nbsp;–
[[Hell's Gate National Park]]&nbsp;–
[[Jim Corbett National Park]]&nbsp;–
[[Kent Ridge Park]]&nbsp;–
[[Leeds Country Way]]&nbsp;–
[[Lurie Garden]]&nbsp;–
[[Nairobi National Park]]&nbsp;–
[[Nki National Park]]&nbsp;–
[[Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument]]&nbsp;–
[[Pettigrew State Park]]&nbsp;–
[[Quantock Hills]]&nbsp;–
[[Sapo National Park]]&nbsp;–
[[Silver Springs State Fish and Wildlife Area]]&nbsp;–
[[South West Coast Path]]&nbsp;–
[[Vogel State Park]]&nbsp;–
[[White Pines Forest State Park]]&nbsp;–
[[Whitton Bridge Pasture]]&nbsp;–
[[William W. Powers State Recreation Area]]&nbsp;–
<small> (22&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Urban and historical sites=====
[[Ambler's Texaco Gas Station]]&nbsp;–
[[Andriyivskyy Descent]]&nbsp;–
[[Civil War Memorial (Sycamore, Illinois)]]&nbsp;–
[[Congress Hall]]&nbsp;–
[[Covering of the Senne]]&nbsp;–
[[Fabyan Windmill]]&nbsp;–
[[Gazette Building]]&nbsp;–
[[Hampton National Historic Site]]&nbsp;–
[[Illinois Freedom Bell]]&nbsp;–
[[Islais Creek]]&nbsp;–
[[John Deere House and Shop]]&nbsp;–
[[Machu Picchu]]&nbsp;–
[[Millennium Park]]&nbsp;–
[[Newcastle town wall]]&nbsp;–
[[Old Stone House (Washington, D.C.)]]&nbsp;–
[[Piedmont Park]]&nbsp;–
[[Smithfield, London]]&nbsp;–
[[Trafalgar Square]]&nbsp;–
[[Trafford Park]]&nbsp;–
[[Underground City (Beijing)]]&nbsp;–
[[Wall Street]]&nbsp;–
[[Western Wall]]&nbsp;–
<small> (22&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Earthquakes=====
[[1992 Nicaragua earthquake]]&nbsp;–
[[2008 Chino Hills earthquake]]&nbsp;–
[[2008 Sichuan earthquake]]&nbsp;–
[[July 2006 Java earthquake]]&nbsp;–
<small> (4&nbsp;articles)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="Places" />
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:P countries.png|22px|left]]Places</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">
<!--Places includes only countries (listed together) and states, provinces, counties, cities, towns, neighborhoods, and other political designations (listed by region). Other locations belong somewhere else-->

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Countries=====
[[Afghanistan]]&nbsp;–
[[Brazil]]&nbsp;–
[[Burundi]]&nbsp;–
[[Comoros]]&nbsp;–
[[Iran]]&nbsp;–
[[Lebanon]]&nbsp;–
[[Mali]]&nbsp;–
[[People's Republic of China]]&nbsp;–
[[Russia]]&nbsp;–
[[Ukraine]]&nbsp;–
[[United States]]&nbsp;–
[[Zimbabwe]]&nbsp;–
<small> (12&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Africa=====
<!--Includes only cities, towns, neighborhoods, states, provinces, counties, and other subnational political designations. Other locations belong somewhere else-->
[[Fustat]]&nbsp;–
<small> (1&nbsp;article)</small>

=====Asia=====
<!--Includes only cities, towns, neighborhoods, states, provinces, counties, and other subnational political designations. Other locations belong somewhere else-->
[[Achaemenid Assyria]]&nbsp;–
[[Arad, Israel]]&nbsp;–
[[Ashdod]]&nbsp;–
[[Bethlehem]]&nbsp;–
[[Gifu, Gifu]]&nbsp;–
[[Haifa]]&nbsp;–
[[Ikata, Ehime]]&nbsp;–
[[Ir Ovot]]&nbsp;–
[[Jifna]]&nbsp;–
[[Kuala Lumpur]]&nbsp;–
[[Lam Tin]]&nbsp;–
[[Macau]]&nbsp;–
[[Mamilla]]&nbsp;–
[[Nablus]]&nbsp;–
[[Ratanakiri Province]]&nbsp;–
[[Santikhiri]]&nbsp;–
[[Sitakunda Upazila]]&nbsp;–
[[Tel Aviv]]&nbsp;–
<small> (18&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Australia and the Pacific=====
<!--Includes only cities, towns, neighborhoods, states, provinces, counties, and other subnational political designations. Other locations belong somewhere else-->
[[Cullacabardee, Western Australia]]&nbsp;–
[[Palm Island, Queensland]]&nbsp;–
[[St Kilda, South Australia]]&nbsp;–
[[Summer Hill, New South Wales]]&nbsp;–
[[Wagga Wagga, New South Wales]]&nbsp;–
<small> (5&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Europe=====
<!--Includes only cities, towns, neighborhoods, states, provinces, counties, and other subnational political designations. Other locations belong somewhere else-->
[[Ashton-under-Lyne]]&nbsp;–
[[Askam and Ireleth]]&nbsp;–
[[Banská Bystrica]]&nbsp;–
[[Basingstoke]]&nbsp;–
[[Belfast]]&nbsp;–
[[Birmingham]]&nbsp;–
[[Boden Fortress]]&nbsp;–
[[Canterbury]]&nbsp;–
[[Carnoustie]]&nbsp;–
[[Chew Magna]]&nbsp;–
[[City of Salford]]&nbsp;–
[[Cluj-Napoca]]&nbsp;–
[[Crawley]]&nbsp;–
[[Didsbury]]&nbsp;–
[[Dunham Massey]]&nbsp;–
[[Eastbourne]]&nbsp;–
[[Evanton]]&nbsp;–
[[Flat Holm]]&nbsp;–
[[Glasgow]]&nbsp;–
[[Hale Barns]]&nbsp;–
[[Kent]]&nbsp;–
[[London]]&nbsp;–
[[Middlesex]]&nbsp;–
[[Middlewich]]&nbsp;–
[[Milnrow]]&nbsp;–
[[Northallerton]]&nbsp;–
[[Penmon, Anglesey]]&nbsp;–
[[Poole]]&nbsp;–
[[Póvoa de Varzim]]&nbsp;–
[[Royal Tunbridge Wells]]&nbsp;–
[[Royton]]&nbsp;–
[[Runcorn]]&nbsp;–
[[Sale, Greater Manchester]]&nbsp;–
[[Scotland]]&nbsp;–
[[Shrewsbury]]&nbsp;–
[[Southampton]]&nbsp;–
[[Tameside]]&nbsp;–
[[Urmston]]&nbsp;–
[[Wallachia]]&nbsp;–
[[Warburton, Greater Manchester]]&nbsp;–
[[Widnes]]&nbsp;–
[[Žirmūnai]]&nbsp;–
<small> (42&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====North America=====
<!--Includes only cities, towns, neighborhoods, states, provinces, counties, and other subnational political designations. Other locations belong somewhere else-->
[[Amarillo, Texas]]&nbsp;–
[[Atlanta, Georgia]]&nbsp;–
[[Basin, Montana]]&nbsp;–
[[Calgary]]&nbsp;–
[[Chambersburg, Pennsylvania]]&nbsp;–
[[Columbia, Missouri]]&nbsp;–
[[Coral Springs, Florida]]&nbsp;–
[[Davenport, Iowa]]&nbsp;–
[[Denver, Colorado]]&nbsp;–
[[Flagstaff, Arizona]]&nbsp;–
[[Fort Lauderdale, Florida]]&nbsp;–
[[Hastings, Ontario]]&nbsp;–
[[Hillsboro, Oregon]]&nbsp;–
[[Hilton Head Island, South Carolina]]&nbsp;–
[[Hyde Park Township, Cook County, Illinois]]&nbsp;–
[[Lafayette Square, Buffalo]]&nbsp;–
[[Lakeshore East]]&nbsp;–
[[List of counties in Delaware]]&nbsp;–
[[Manhattan]]&nbsp;–
[[Milwaukee Avenue Historic District]]&nbsp;–
[[Mobile, Alabama]]&nbsp;–
[[Moncton]]&nbsp;–
[[Near South Side, Chicago]]&nbsp;–
[[Newark, New Jersey]]&nbsp;–
[[Newport News, Virginia]]&nbsp;–
[[Norfolk, Virginia]]&nbsp;–
[[North Carolina]]&nbsp;–
[[Northeast Philadelphia]]&nbsp;–
[[Old Louisville]]&nbsp;–
[[Omaha, Nebraska]]&nbsp;–
[[Pennsylvania]]&nbsp;–
[[Plymouth, Massachusetts]]&nbsp;–
[[Puerto Rico]]&nbsp;–
[[Pullman Square]]&nbsp;–
[[Richmond, Virginia]]&nbsp;–
[[River Oaks, Houston, Texas]]&nbsp;–
[[Rush Street (Chicago)]]&nbsp;–
[[Salt Lake City, Utah]]&nbsp;–
[[San Juan, Puerto Rico]]&nbsp;–
[[Scarborough, Ontario]]&nbsp;–
[[South Bend, Indiana]]&nbsp;–
[[Springfield, Illinois]]&nbsp;–
[[Streeterville]]&nbsp;–
[[Teaneck, New Jersey]]&nbsp;–
[[Toronto]]&nbsp;–
[[Virginia]]&nbsp;–
[[Virginia Beach, Virginia]]&nbsp;–
[[Washington Park, Chicago (neighborhood)]]&nbsp;–
[[West Virginia]]&nbsp;–
<small> (49&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====South America=====
<!--Includes only cities, towns, neighborhoods, states, provinces, counties, and other subnational political designations. Other locations belong somewhere else-->
<small> (0&nbsp;articles)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;">
<span id="History" />
<div style="padding:5px 5px 8px 5px; background-color:#CCCCFF; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Noia 64 apps kworldclock.png|22px|left]]'''History'''</div>
<div style="text-align:left;">
</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="Archaeology" />
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Map symbol museum 02.png|22px|left]]Archaeology</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Archaeology and archaeologists=====
[[Deva Victrix]]&nbsp;–
[[Fort Tanjong Katong]]&nbsp;–
[[Funerary art]]&nbsp;–
[[Gnezdovo]]&nbsp;–
[[Greece Runestones]]&nbsp;–
[[Jarlshof]]&nbsp;–
[[Lindow Man]]&nbsp;–
[[Mamucium]]&nbsp;–
[[Manchester Mummy]]&nbsp;–
[[Marmes Rockshelter]]&nbsp;–
[[Mesoamerican ballgame]]&nbsp;–
[[Mummy]]&nbsp;–
[[National Museum of Beirut]]&nbsp;–
[[Norton Priory]]&nbsp;–
[[Prehistoric Orkney]]&nbsp;–
[[Qianling Mausoleum]]&nbsp;–
[[Ring of Pietroassa]]&nbsp;–
[[Singapore Stone]]&nbsp;–
[[Valley of the Kings]]&nbsp;–
[[Western Mexico shaft tomb tradition]]&nbsp;–
<small> (20&nbsp;articles)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="World history"/>
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Noia 64 apps kworldclock.png |22px|left]]World history</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Historians, chroniclers and history books=====
[[Nuova Cronica]]&nbsp;–
[[Joshua Prawer|Prawer, Joshua]]&nbsp;–
[[Tacitean studies]]&nbsp;–
[[Thucydides]]&nbsp;–
<small> (4&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Historical figures: heads of state and heads of government=====
<!--For deceased heads of state or heads of government EXCEPT for monarchs, which belong under Royalty and nobility section. For living heads of state or heads of government, see its own section under Politics and Government-->
[[Idi Amin|Amin, Idi]]&nbsp;–
[[Winston Churchill|Churchill, Winston]]&nbsp;–
[[Constantine I]]&nbsp;–
[[Oliver Cromwell|Cromwell, Oliver]]&nbsp;–
[[Death and state funeral of Ronald Reagan]]&nbsp;–
[[Benjamin Disraeli|Disraeli, Benjamin]]&nbsp;–
[[Andrew Fisher|Fisher, Andrew]]&nbsp;–
[[Benjamin Harrison|Harrison, Benjamin]]&nbsp;–
[[William Henry Harrison|Harrison, William Henry]]&nbsp;–
[[Thomas Jefferson|Jefferson, Thomas]]&nbsp;–
[[Liaquat Ali Khan]]&nbsp;–
[[Napoleon I of France]]&nbsp;–
[[Nero]]&nbsp;–
[[P. V. Narasimha Rao|Rao, Pamulaparthi Venkata Narasimha]]&nbsp;–
[[Francis William Reitz|Reitz, Francis William]]&nbsp;–
[[Sejanus]]&nbsp;–
[[Early life of Jan Smuts|Smuts, Jan (early life)]]&nbsp;–
[[Gheorghe Tătărescu|Tătărescu, Gheorghe]]&nbsp;–
[[George Washington|Washington, George]]&nbsp;–
<small> (19&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Historical figures: politicians=====
<!--For historical politicians that were never heads of state or heads of government. Royalty and nobility belong under their own section. For living politicians, see its own section under Politics and Government-->
[[Jean-Hilaire Aubame|Aubame, Jean-Hilaire]]&nbsp;–
[[Luke P. Blackburn|Blackburn, Luke P.]]&nbsp;–
[[William O'Connell Bradley|Bradley, William O'Connell]]&nbsp;–
[[John Y. Brown (1835–1904)|Brown, John Y.]]&nbsp;–
[[Robert Burnell|Burnell, Robert]]&nbsp;–
[[Richard Francis Burton|Burton, Richard Francis]]&nbsp;–
[[Happy Chandler|Chandler, Happy]]&nbsp;–
[[William W. Chapman|Chapman, William W.]]&nbsp;–
[[Ventidius Cumanus|Cumanus, Ventidius]]&nbsp;–
[[Eugene V. Debs|Debs, Eugene V.]]&nbsp;–
[[Archibald Dixon|Dixon, Archibald]]&nbsp;–
[[William Edington|Edington, William]]&nbsp;–
[[William J. Fields|Fields, William J.]]&nbsp;–
[[Adrian S. Fisher|Fisher, Adrian]]&nbsp;–
[[Ranulf Flambard|Flambard, Ranulf]]&nbsp;–
[[Ralph Flanders|Flanders, Ralph]]&nbsp;–
[[John Floyd (Virginia politician)|Floyd, John]]&nbsp;–
[[Gilbert du Motier, marquis de Lafayette]]&nbsp;–
[[Joseph Goebbels|Goebbels, Joseph]]&nbsp;–
[[Paul Gondjout|Gondjout, Paul]]&nbsp;–
[[Serranus Clinton Hastings|Hastings, Serranus Clinton]]&nbsp;–
[[Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale]]&nbsp;–
[[Jonathan Jennings|Jennings, Jonathan]]&nbsp;–
[[George W. Johnson (governor)|Johnson, George W.]]&nbsp;–
[[Richard Mentor Johnson|Johnson, Richard Mentor]]&nbsp;–
[[Ted Jolliffe|Jolliffe, Ted]]&nbsp;–
[[Thomas Lee (Virginia colonist)|Lee, Thomas]]&nbsp;–
[[Asa Lovejoy|Lovejoy, Asa]]&nbsp;–
[[William Mahone|Mahone, William]]&nbsp;–
[[John Marshall|Marshall, John]]&nbsp;–
[[Joseph McCarthy|McCarthy, Joseph]]&nbsp;–
[[Anastas Mikoyan|Mikoyan, Anastas]]&nbsp;–
[[Lazarus W. Powell|Powell, Lazarus W.]]&nbsp;–
[[Wyndham Robertson|Robertson, Wyndham]]&nbsp;–
[[James F. Robinson|Robinson, James F.]]&nbsp;–
[[Boyle Roche|Roche, Boyle]]&nbsp;–
[[Leo Ryan|Ryan, Leo]]&nbsp;–
[[Charles Scott (governor of Kentucky)|Scott, Charles]]&nbsp;–
[[Solomon P. Sharp|Sharp, Solomon P.]]&nbsp;–
[[Gabriel Slaughter|Slaughter, Gabriel]]&nbsp;–
[[Jan Willem Spruyt|Spruyt, Jan Willem]]&nbsp;–
[[Charles Sumner|Sumner, Charles]]&nbsp;–
[[James "Honest Dick" Tate|Tate, James]]&nbsp;–
[[William Lowndes Yancey|Yancey, William Lowndes]]&nbsp;–
<small> (44&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Historical figures: other=====
<!--For historically significant persons that defy categorization. PLEASE CHECK ALL SECTIONS CAREFULLY. Most historically significant persons have a better place to go, both in the History section and elsewhere-->
[[Johnny Appleseed|Appleseed, Johnny]]&nbsp;–
[[Neil Armstrong|Armstrong, Neil]]&nbsp;–
[[Billy (pygmy hippo)]]&nbsp;–
[[Bolli Bollason|Bollason, Bolli]]&nbsp;–
[[John Wilkes Booth|Booth, John Wilkes]]&nbsp;–
[[George P. Burdell|Burdel, George P.]]&nbsp;–
[[Allegra Byron|Byron, Allegra]]&nbsp;–
[[Jeanne Calment|Calment, Jeanne]]&nbsp;–
[[Roberto Cofresí|Cofresi, Roberto]]&nbsp;–
[[William de Corbeil|de Corbeil, William]]&nbsp;–
[[Ygnacio del Valle|del Valle, Ygnacio]]&nbsp;–
[[Arthur Rose Eldred|Eldred, Arthur Rose]]&nbsp;–
[[Eugenio Espejo|Espejo, Eugenio]]&nbsp;–
[[Reginald Fitz Jocelin|fitz Jocelin, Reginald]]&nbsp;–
[[Gerard (Archbishop of York)]]&nbsp;–
[[Halotus]]&nbsp;–
[[Abram Lincoln Harris|Harris, Abram Lincoln]]&nbsp;–
[[Bill Haywood|Haywood, Bill]]&nbsp;–
[[Charles Heidsieck|Heidsieck, Charles]]&nbsp;–
[[Hilary of Chichester]]&nbsp;–
[[Robin Hood|Hood, Robin]]&nbsp;–
[[Hugh de Puiset]]&nbsp;–
[[Augustus Jones|Jones, Augustus]]&nbsp;–
[[Kechewaishke]]&nbsp;–
[[Jean Keene|Keene, Jean]]&nbsp;–
[[Julia Lennon|Lennon, Julia]]&nbsp;–
[[Lucy, Lady Duff-Gordon]]&nbsp;–
[[Dyer Lum|Lum, Dyer]]&nbsp;–
[[Malcolm X]]&nbsp;–
[[Hazel Miner|Miner, Hazel]]&nbsp;–
[[Hendrik Pieter Nicolaas Muller|Muller, Hendrik Pieter Nicolaas]]&nbsp;–
[[Nigel (Bishop of Ely)]]&nbsp;–
[[Olaf the Peacock]]&nbsp;–
[[Eva Perón|Perón, Eva]]&nbsp;–
[[Jeannette Piccard|Piccard, Jeannette]]&nbsp;–
[[Fernão Pires de Andrade|Pires de Andrade, Fernão]]&nbsp;–
[[Judith Quiney|Quiney, Judith]]&nbsp;–
[[Thomas Quiney|Quiney, Thomas]]&nbsp;–
[[Maria Rasputin|Rasputin, Maria]]&nbsp;–
[[Johannes Rebmann|Rebmann, Johannes]]&nbsp;–
[[José Rizal|Rizal, José]]&nbsp;–
[[Sitting Bull]]&nbsp;–
[[Su Song|Su, Song]]&nbsp;–
[[Henry Timberlake|Timberlake, Henry]]&nbsp;–
[[Raoul Wallenberg|Wallenberg, Roaoul]]&nbsp;–
[[Tong Yabghu|Yabghu, Tong]]&nbsp;–
<small> (46&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====African history=====
[[Aksumite currency]]&nbsp;–
[[Angolan Civil War]]&nbsp;–
[[Ishango bone]]&nbsp;–
[[Treaty of Butre (1656)]]&nbsp;–
<small> (4&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====North American history=====
[[2003 Chicago balcony collapse]]&nbsp;–
[[2008 Georgia sugar refinery explosion]]&nbsp;–
[[African Americans in Omaha, Nebraska]]&nbsp;–
[[Apple River Fort]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Trenton]]&nbsp;–
[[Big Stick Ideology]]&nbsp;–
[[Black history in Puerto Rico]]&nbsp;–
[[Boston Police Strike]]&nbsp;–
[[Cerro Maravilla Incident]]&nbsp;–
[[Chicago Race Riot of 1919]]&nbsp;–
[[Civil War token]]&nbsp;–
[[Craigflower Manor and Schoolhouse]]&nbsp;–
[[Cripple Creek miners' strike of 1894]]&nbsp;–
[[Execution of Lucy and James Sample]]&nbsp;–
[[Expo 67]]&nbsp;–
[[Federalist Papers]]&nbsp;–
[[Fort Senneville]]&nbsp;–
[[Fuerzas Armadas de Liberación Nacional (Puerto Rico)]]&nbsp;–
[[Gadsden Purchase]]&nbsp;–
[[Haymarket affair]]&nbsp;–
[[History of Dallas, Texas (1874-1929)]]&nbsp;–
[[History of Davenport, Iowa]]&nbsp;–
[[History of Indiana]]&nbsp;–
[[History of Minneapolis, Minnesota]]&nbsp;–
[[History of Northwest Territories capital cities]]&nbsp;–
[[History of Philadelphia]]&nbsp;–
[[History of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania]]&nbsp;–
[[History of slavery in Indiana]]&nbsp;–
[[Indiana in the American Civil War]]&nbsp;–
[[Indiana Territory]]&nbsp;–
[[Lowell Mill Girls]]&nbsp;–
[[McCarthyism]]&nbsp;–
[[Mussel Slough Tragedy]]&nbsp;–
[[National Register of Historic Places]]&nbsp;–
[[New York Draft Riots]]&nbsp;–
[[Newfoundland referendums, 1948]]&nbsp;–
[[Pennsylvania Mutiny of 1783]]&nbsp;–
[[Philadelphia Convention]]&nbsp;–
[[Philadelphia Nativist Riots]]&nbsp;–
[[Rancho San Francisco]]&nbsp;–
[[Reagan assassination attempt]]&nbsp;–
[[Salem witch trials]]&nbsp;–
[[September 11 attacks]]&nbsp;–
[[Sinsinawa Mound raid]]&nbsp;–
[[Spanish Texas]]&nbsp;–
[[Ursuline Convent Riots]]&nbsp;–
<small> (46&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====South American history=====
[[History of Lima]]&nbsp;–
[[Shining Path]]&nbsp;–
<small> (2&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Asian history=====
[[2006 Bangkok bombings]]&nbsp;–
[[2006 Kolkata leather factory fire]]&nbsp;–
[[2008 attacks on North Indians in Maharashtra]]&nbsp;–
[[Architecture of the Song Dynasty]]&nbsp;–
[[Asama-Sansō incident]]&nbsp;–
[[Bicholim conflict]]&nbsp;–
[[Culture of the Song Dynasty]]&nbsp;–
[[Economy of the Song Dynasty]]&nbsp;–
[[History of Colonial Hong Kong (1800s–1930s)]]&nbsp;–
[[History of science and technology in China]]&nbsp;–
[[History of Singapore]]&nbsp;–
[[History of the Song Dynasty]]&nbsp;–
[[Hue Vesak shootings]]&nbsp;–
[[Indian independence movement]]&nbsp;–
[[Indonesian National Revolution]]&nbsp;–
[[Indonesian occupation of East Timor]]&nbsp;–
[[Jaffna kingdom]]&nbsp;–
[[July 2006 Java earthquake]]&nbsp;–
[[Khudai Khidmatgar]]&nbsp;–
[[Mongol invasion of Central Asia]]&nbsp;–
[[Portuguese conquest of the Jaffna kingdom]]&nbsp;–
[[Qinghe Special Steel Corporation disaster]]&nbsp;–
[[Sandugo]]&nbsp;–
[[Shogun]]&nbsp;–
[[Sino-Roman relations]]&nbsp;–
[[Sources of ancient Tamil history]]&nbsp;–
[[SS Gothenburg|SS ''Gothenburg'']]&nbsp;–
<small> (27&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Australian and Oceania history=====
[[History of the Royal Australian Navy]]&nbsp;–
[[Illawarra Steam Navigation Company]]&nbsp;–
<small> (2&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====European history=====
[[1938 Polish ultimatum to Lithuania]]&nbsp;–
[[1939 German ultimatum to Lithuania]]&nbsp;–
[[1973 Mountjoy Prison helicopter escape]]&nbsp;–
[[Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic]]&nbsp;–
[[Bucentaur]]&nbsp;–
[[Bury St. Edmunds witch trials]]&nbsp;–
[[Catherine de' Medici's court festivals]]&nbsp;–
[[Clan MacAulay]]&nbsp;–
[[Clan Maclachlan]]&nbsp;–
[[Constitution of the Roman Republic]]&nbsp;–
[[Copenhagen Fire of 1728|Copenhagen Fire (1728)]]&nbsp;–
[[Council of Lithuania]]&nbsp;–
[[Dál Riata]]&nbsp;–
[[Epikleros]]&nbsp;–
[[First Council of Nicaea]]&nbsp;–
[[Golden Ambrosian Republic]]&nbsp;–
[[Golubac Fortress]]&nbsp;–
[[Göttingen Seven]]&nbsp;–
[[Great French Wine Blight]]&nbsp;–
[[Great Moravia]]&nbsp;–
[[Great Seimas of Vilnius]]&nbsp;–
[[Haraldskær Woman]]&nbsp;–
[[History of Milton Keynes]]&nbsp;–
[[History of Somerset]]&nbsp;–
[[History of the Constitution of the Roman Republic]]&nbsp;–
[[Kristallnacht]]&nbsp;–
[[Legislative Assemblies of the Roman Republic]]&nbsp;–
[[Loch Arkaig treasure]]&nbsp;–
[[Maze Prison escape]]&nbsp;–
[[Medieval household]]&nbsp;–
[[Military history of Gibraltar during World War II]]&nbsp;–
''[[A Moral Reckoning]]''&nbsp;–
[[Nordic race]]&nbsp;–
[[Picts]]&nbsp;–
[[Polish October]]&nbsp;–
[[Poznań 1956 protests]]&nbsp;–
[[Prague Spring]]&nbsp;–
[[Renaissance]]&nbsp;–
[[Roman Republic]]&nbsp;–
[[Rus'–Byzantine War (860)]]&nbsp;–
[[Senate of the Roman Republic]]&nbsp;–
[[Sino-Roman relations]]&nbsp;–
[[Skåneland]]&nbsp;–
[[Theobald of Bec]]&nbsp;–
[[Tiberius]]&nbsp;–
[[Vasil Levsky]] &nbsp;-
[[Viking funeral]]&nbsp;–
[[Vasil Levsky]] &nbsp;-
[[Walls of Constantinople]]&nbsp;–
[[Zaolzie]]&nbsp;–

<small> (48&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Middle Eastern history=====
[[Battle of the Trench]]&nbsp;–
[[Incense Route]]&nbsp;–
[[Iraq and weapons of mass destruction]]&nbsp;–
[[Nabulsi soap]]&nbsp;–
[[Syrian American]]&nbsp;–
<small> (5&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Global history=====
<!--For events that spanned multiple continents. For events confined to a single continent see above.-->
[[Arniston (ship)|''Arniston'' (ship)]]&nbsp;–
[[Byzantium under the Komnenoi]]&nbsp;–
[[History of poison]]&nbsp;–
[[History of private equity and venture capital]]&nbsp;–
[[History of silk]]&nbsp;–
[[Horses in the Middle Ages]]&nbsp;–
[[Iran-Contra affair]]&nbsp;–
[[Medieval household]]&nbsp;–
[[Roman trade with India]]&nbsp;–
[[Trade route]]&nbsp;–
<small> (10&nbsp;articles)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="Royalty, nobility and heraldry"/>
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Azure-Cross-Or-Heraldry.svg|21px|left]]Royalty, nobility and heraldry</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Flags and heraldry=====
[[Attributed arms]]&nbsp;–
[[Banner of Poland]]&nbsp;–
[[Coat of arms of Munich]]&nbsp;–
[[Coat of arms of the Basque Country]]&nbsp;–
[[Flag of Indiana]]&nbsp;–
[[Flag of Italy]]&nbsp;–
[[Flag of Japan]]&nbsp;–
[[Flag of Kosovo]]&nbsp;–
[[Flag of Poland]]&nbsp;–
[[Flag of the Philippines]]&nbsp;–
[[Flag of Tunisia]]&nbsp;–
[[Heraldic visitation]]&nbsp;–
[[Ireland King of Arms]]&nbsp;–
[[Marcela Agoncillo]]&nbsp;–
[[National symbols of Belarus]]&nbsp;–
[[National symbols of Pakistan]]&nbsp;–
[[Rainbow flag]]&nbsp;–
[[Scottish crest badge]]&nbsp;–
[[Seal of Dartmouth College]]&nbsp;–
[[Seal of Indiana]]&nbsp;–
<small> (20&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Monarchs=====
<!--For members of the royal family or the nobility who were not monarchs, see below. For other heads of state, see "Heads of state and heads of government" for living and "Historical figures" for deceased.-->
[[Akhenaten]]&nbsp;–
[[Amenhotep I]]&nbsp;–
[[Amenhotep III]]&nbsp;–
[[Artaxerxes III of Persia]]&nbsp;–
[[Caligula]]&nbsp;–
[[Charles XI of Sweden]]&nbsp;–
[[Edwin of Northumbria]]&nbsp;–
[[Frederick III, German Emperor]]&nbsp;–
[[GDRT]]&nbsp;–
[[Hammurabi]]&nbsp;–
[[Justinian I]]&nbsp;–
[[Macbeth of Scotland]]&nbsp;–
[[Malcolm II of Scotland]]&nbsp;–
[[Malcolm III of Scotland]]&nbsp;–
[[Nerva]]&nbsp;–
[[Oleg of Novgorod]]&nbsp;–
[[Oswald of Northumbria]]&nbsp;–
[[Otto of Greece]]&nbsp;–
[[Romulus Augustus]]&nbsp;–
[[Rudolf Duala Manga Bell]]&nbsp;–
[[Tamar of Georgia]]&nbsp;–
[[Thutmose I]]&nbsp;–
[[Titus]]&nbsp;–
[[Victoria of the United Kingdom]]&nbsp;–
[[Zara Yaqob|Zara, Yaqob]]<!-- Please leave as Zara Yaqob do not change to Yaqob, Zara because Yaqob is not a surname -->&nbsp;–
<small> (25&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Royalty and nobility=====
<!--This section is for non-ruling members of the royal family and other members of the nobility. For monarchs, see above. Where a member of the nobility is elected to political office, see the appropriate Politician category-->
[[Aryacakravarti dynasty]]&nbsp;–
[[Aymer de Valence, 2nd Earl of Pembroke]]&nbsp;–
[[Berenice (daughter of Herod Agrippa I)]]&nbsp;–
[[Anne Boleyn|Boleyn, Anne]]&nbsp;–
[[David III of Tao]]&nbsp;–
[[Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna of Russia (1899–1918)]]&nbsp;–
[[Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna of Russia]]&nbsp;–
[[Harald Maddadsson]]&nbsp;–
[[Henry of Grosmont, 1st Duke of Lancaster]]&nbsp;–
[[House of Hasan-Jalalyan]]&nbsp;–
[[House of Mindaugas]]&nbsp;–
[[Hylton Castle]]&nbsp;–
[[John de Vere, 7th Earl of Oxford]]&nbsp;–
[[Katherine Stanhope, Countess of Chesterfield]]&nbsp;–
[[Nanbu clan]]&nbsp;–
[[Princess Elisabeth of Hesse and by Rhine]]&nbsp;–
[[Princess Victoria Melita of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha]]&nbsp;–
[[Robert Stewart, Viscount Castlereagh]]&nbsp;–
[[Satake clan]]&nbsp;–
[[Yaropolk Izyaslavich]]&nbsp;–
[[Zita of Bourbon-Parma]]&nbsp;–
<small> (21&nbsp;articles)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="War and military" />
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[image:Aero-stub img.svg|20px|left]]War and military</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Armies and military units=====
[[1st Sustainment Brigade (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[2nd Battalion 9th Marines (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[2nd Canadian Infantry Division]]&nbsp;–
[[3rd Sustainment Brigade (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[8th Military Police Brigade (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[11th Airborne Division (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[11th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment]]&nbsp;–
[[13th Airborne Division (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[15th Sustainment Brigade (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[17th Airborne Division (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[18th Engineer Brigade (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[18th Military Police Brigade (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[20th Engineer Brigade (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[36th Engineer Brigade (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[42nd Military Police Brigade (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[52nd (Oxfordshire) Regiment of Foot]]&nbsp;–
[[65th Infantry Regiment (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[89th Military Police Brigade (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[95th Civil Affairs Brigade (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[102nd Intelligence Wing]]&nbsp;–
[[172nd Infantry Brigade (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[174th Infantry Brigade (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[220th Military Police Brigade (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[411th Engineer Brigade (United States)]]&nbsp;–
[[Air Combat Group RAAF]]&nbsp;–
[[Armia Krajowa]]&nbsp;–
[[Black Brunswickers]]&nbsp;–
[[Byzantine navy]]&nbsp;–
[[Carrier Air Wing Six]]&nbsp;–
[[Civil Air Patrol]]&nbsp;–
[[Connecticut Wing Civil Air Patrol]]&nbsp;–
[[Hastati]]&nbsp;–
[[King's Regiment (Liverpool)]]&nbsp;–
[[Principes]]&nbsp;–
[[Real Irish Republican Army]]&nbsp;–
[[Romanian Land Forces]]&nbsp;–
[[Royal Wiltshire Yeomanry]]&nbsp;–
[[Triarii]]&nbsp;–
[[United States Special Operations Command]]&nbsp;–
[[Velites]]&nbsp;–
<small> (41&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Awards and decorations=====
[[Hero of the Russian Federation]]&nbsp;–
[[Polish Righteous among the Nations]]&nbsp;–
[[Victoria Cross for Australia]]&nbsp;–
<small> (3&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Conflicts, battles and military exercises=====
[[1915 Singapore Mutiny]]&nbsp;–
[[1926 Lithuanian coup d'état]]&nbsp;–
[[1993 Bishopsgate bombing]]&nbsp;–
[[2006 Lebanon War]]&nbsp;–
[[2007–2008 Ethiopian crackdown in Ogaden]]&nbsp;–
[[2008 invasion of Anjouan]]&nbsp;–
[[Action of 22 February 1812]]&nbsp;–
[[Action of 29 November 1811]]&nbsp;–
[[Adriatic campaign of 1807–1814]]&nbsp;–
[[American Civil War]]&nbsp;–
[[Anglo–Zanzibar War]]&nbsp;–
[[Atlantic campaign of May 1794]]&nbsp;–
[[Atlantique Incident]]&nbsp;–
[[Attacks at Fort Blue Mounds]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Amiens]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Antietam]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Apple River Fort]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Baia]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Bonchurch]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Boroughbridge]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Evesham]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Gettysburg]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Gettysburg, First Day]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Gythium]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Horseshoe Bend (1832)]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Jilib]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Kelbajar]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Kellogg's Grove]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Kleidion]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Kostiuchnówka]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Kranji]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Lechaeum]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Manzikert]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Marston Moor]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of N'Djamena (2008)]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Ollantaytambo]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Posada]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Quebec (1690)]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Stillman's Run]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of the Kalka River]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of the Olive Grove of Koundouros]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of the Plains of Abraham]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Thermopylae]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Tigranocerta]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Trenton]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Uhud]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Vaslui]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Vimy Ridge]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Waddams Grove]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Waterloo]]&nbsp;–
[[Battle of Wisconsin Heights]]&nbsp;–
[[Battles of macrohistorical importance involving invasions of Europe]]&nbsp;–
[[Boleslaw I's intervention in the Kievan succession crisis, 1018]]&nbsp;–
[[Buffalo Grove ambush]]&nbsp;–
[[Byzantine–Arab Wars]]&nbsp;–
[[Byzantine–Ottoman Wars]]&nbsp;–
[[Byzantine–Seljuk wars]]&nbsp;–
[[Cambodian Campaign]]&nbsp;–
[[Cambodian Civil War]]&nbsp;–
[[Cleomenean War]]&nbsp;–
[[Double Tenth Incident]]&nbsp;–
[[First Macedonian War]]&nbsp;–
[[First Ostend Raid]]&nbsp;–
[[Galatian War]]&nbsp;–
[[Great Raid of 1840]]&nbsp;–
[[Hindu–German Conspiracy]]&nbsp;–
[[Hood event]]&nbsp;–
[[Indian Creek massacre]]&nbsp;–
[[Insurgency in Ogaden]]&nbsp;–
[[Kiev Offensive (1920)]]&nbsp;–
[[Lachine massacre]]&nbsp;–
[[Le Paradis massacre]]&nbsp;–
[[Lithuanian Civil War (1389–1392)]]&nbsp;–
[[Morea expedition]]&nbsp;–
[[The Night Attack]]&nbsp;–
[[North Yemen Civil War]]&nbsp;–
[[Operation Lüttich]]&nbsp;–
[[Operation Ring]]&nbsp;–
[[Operation Shed Light]]&nbsp;–
[[Operation Tonga]]&nbsp;–
[[Operation Totalize]]&nbsp;–
[[Ottoman–Egyptian Invasion of Mani]]&nbsp;–
[[Pickett's Charge]]&nbsp;–
[[Plum River raid]]&nbsp;–
[[Prussian uprisings]]&nbsp;–
[[Puerto Rican Campaign]]&nbsp;–
[[Rebellion of Cao Qin]]&nbsp;–
[[Roman–Parthian War of 58–63]]&nbsp;–
[[St. Vrain massacre]]&nbsp;–
[[Scuttling of the German fleet in Scapa Flow]]&nbsp;–
[[Second Battle of Kharkov]]&nbsp;–
[[Shimabara Rebellion]]&nbsp;–
[[Siege of Boston]]&nbsp;–
[[Siege of Damascus]]&nbsp;–
[[Siege of Eretria]]&nbsp;–
[[Smolensk War]]&nbsp;–
[[South African War Memorial (South Australia)]]&nbsp;–
[[Spafford Farm massacre]]&nbsp;–
[[Swabian War]]&nbsp;–
[[Swiss peasant war of 1653]]&nbsp;–
[[Third Perso-Turkic War]]&nbsp;–
[[Toyota War]]&nbsp;–
[[Vilna offensive]]&nbsp;–
[[Wallachian Revolution of 1848]]&nbsp;–
[[War in Darfur]]&nbsp;–
<small> (105&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Legal issues of warfare=====
[[Omar Khadr]]&nbsp;–
[[Selarang Barracks Incident]]&nbsp;–
[[Stanley Internment Camp]]&nbsp;–
<small> (3&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Military people=====
[[Khalil al-Wazir|al-Wazir, Khalil]]&nbsp;–
[[Edwin Alderson|Alderson, Edwin]]&nbsp;–
[[Tiberius Julius Alexander|Alexander, Tiberius]]&nbsp;–
[[John Babcock|Babcock, John]]&nbsp;–
[[John Balchen|Balchen, John]]&nbsp;–
[[Jonathon Band|Band, Jonathon]]&nbsp;–
[[Stephen V Báthory|Báthory, Stefan]]&nbsp;–
[[John Brunt|Brunt, John]]&nbsp;–
[[Ambrose Burnside|Burnside, Ambrose]]&nbsp;–
[[Smedley Butler|Butler, Smedley]]&nbsp;–
[[Thompson Capper|Capper, Thompson]]&nbsp;–
[[Percy Herbert Cherry|Cherry, Percy Herbert]]&nbsp;–
[[George Rogers Clark|Clark, George Rogers]]&nbsp;–
[[George Thomas Coker|Coker, George Thomas]]&nbsp;–
[[John Cooke (Royal Navy officer)|Cooke, John]]&nbsp;–
[[Jean de Carrouges|de Carrouges, Jean]]&nbsp;–
[[Johnston de Peyster|de Peyster, Johnston]]&nbsp;–
[[Pedro del Valle|del Valle, Pedro]]&nbsp;–
[[Kenneth Dewar|Dewar, Kenneth]]&nbsp;–
[[Basil W. Duke|Duke, Basil W.]]&nbsp;–
[[Hughie Edwards|Edwards, Hughie]]&nbsp;–
[[Hugh Boyle Ewing|Ewing, Hugh Boyle]]&nbsp;–
[[John Emilius Fauquier|Fauquier, John Emilius]]&nbsp;–
[[Elmer Gedeon|Gedeon, Elmer]]&nbsp;–
[[Stanley Goble|Goble, Stanley]]&nbsp;–
[[James Graham (soldier)|Graham, James]]&nbsp;–
[[William S. Hamilton|Hamilton, William S.]]&nbsp;–
[[Moses Hardy|Hardy, Moses]]&nbsp;–
[[Erich Hartmann|Hartmann, Erich]]&nbsp;–
[[Eliab Harvey|Harvey, Eliab]]&nbsp;–
[[Thomas Hines|Hines, Thomas]]&nbsp;–
[[William Johnstone Hope|Hope, William Johnstone]]&nbsp;–
[[Clarence Smith Jeffries|Jeffries, Clarence Smith‎]]&nbsp;–
[[Saprang Kalayanamitr|Kalayanamitr, Saprang]]&nbsp;–
[[William King (Royal Navy officer)|King, William]]&nbsp;–
[[Jacques Le Gris|Le Gris, Jacques]]&nbsp;–
[[Louis Lipsett|Lipsett, Louis]]&nbsp;–
[[James Longstreet|Longstreet, James]]&nbsp;–
[[Yannis Makriyannis|Makriyannis, Yannis]]&nbsp;–
[[Hans-Joachim Marseille|Marseille, Hans-Joachim]]&nbsp;–
[[Lloyd Mathews|Mathews, Lloyd]]&nbsp;–
[[Mark Matthews|Matthews, Mark]]&nbsp;–
[[Joseph Maxwell|Maxwell, Joseph]]&nbsp;–
[[Murray Maxwell|Maxwell, Murray]]&nbsp;–
[[Malcolm Mercer|Mercer, Malcolm]]&nbsp;–
[[Michael the Brave]]&nbsp;–
[[James Morris III|Morris III, James]]&nbsp;–
[[Alexander Novikov|Novikov, Alexander]]&nbsp;–
[[Michael John O'Leary|O'Leary, Michael John]]&nbsp;–
[[Robin Olds|Olds, Robin]]&nbsp;–
[[Phan Dinh Phung]]&nbsp;–
[[Manley Power|Power, Manley]]&nbsp;–
[[Richard of Dover]]&nbsp;–
[[Henry Peel Ritchie|Ritchie, Henry Peel]]&nbsp;–
[[Eric Gascoigne Robinson|Robinson, Eric Gascoigne]]&nbsp;–
[[Edward Rotheram|Rotheram, Edward]]&nbsp;–
[[Lord Hugh Seymour|Semour, Lord Hugh]]&nbsp;–
[[Richard de Southchurch|Southchurch, Richard de]]&nbsp;–
[[William Stacy|Stacy, William]]&nbsp;–
[[James W. Stephenson|Stephenson, James W.]]&nbsp;–
[[Kenneth M. Taylor|Taylor, Kenneth M.]]&nbsp;–
[[Hugh Trenchard, 1st Viscount Trenchard|Trenchard, Hugh]]&nbsp;–
[[Humbert Roque Versace|Versace, Humbert Roque]]&nbsp;–
[[Blair Anderson Wark|Wark, Blair Anderson]]&nbsp;–
[[Minoru Yasui|Yasui, Minoru]]&nbsp;–
<small> (65&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Weapons and military equipment=====
[[152 mm howitzer M1943 (D-1)]]&nbsp;–
[[Beeston Castle]]&nbsp;–
[[British nuclear tests at Maralinga]]&nbsp;–
[[Buckton Castle]]&nbsp;–
[[Cannon in the Middle Ages]]&nbsp;–
[[Castleshaw Roman fort]]&nbsp;–
[[Eagle Cash]]&nbsp;–
[[Early thermal weapons]]&nbsp;–
[[Ellington Field]]&nbsp;–
[[Enfield revolver]]&nbsp;–
[[English cannon]]&nbsp;–
[[F-105 Thunderchief]]&nbsp;–
[[Fort Jackson (Virginia)]]&nbsp;–
[[German pocket battleship Admiral Graf Spee|German pocket battleship ''Admiral Graf Spee'']]&nbsp;–
[[German submarine U-853]]&nbsp;–
[[Heuschrecke 10]]&nbsp;–
[[History of cannon]]&nbsp;–
[[HMAS Sydney (1934)|HMAS ''Sydney'' (1934)]]&nbsp;–
[[HMS Birkenhead (1845)|HMS ''Birkenhead'' (1845)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hobart coastal defences]]&nbsp;–
[[Horses in warfare]]&nbsp;–
[[Huolongjing]]&nbsp;–
[[Katyusha rocket launcher]]&nbsp;–
[[Messerschmitt Bf 109]]&nbsp;–
[[MS West Grama|MS ''West Grama'']]&nbsp;–
[[MS West Honaker|MS ''West Honaker'']]&nbsp;–
[[Raven banner]]&nbsp;–
[[SS George Washington|SS ''George Washington'']]&nbsp;–
[[SS Samuel Huntington|SS ''Samuel Huntington'']]&nbsp;–
[[SS West Cheswald|SS ''West Cheswald'']]&nbsp;–
[[SS West Nohno|SS ''West Nohno'']]&nbsp;–
[[Texan schooner Independence|Texan schooner ''Independence'']]&nbsp;–
[[Texan schooner Invincible|Texan schooner ''Invincible'']]&nbsp;–
[[USAHS Blanche F. Sigman|USAHS ''Blanche F. Sigman'']]&nbsp;–
[[USS Constitution|USS ''Constitution'']]&nbsp;–
[[USS Freedom (ID-3024)|USS ''Freedom'' (ID-3024)]]&nbsp;–
[[USS Henry R. Mallory (ID-1280)|USS ''Henry R. Mallory'' (ID-1280)]]&nbsp;–
[[USS Iowa (BB-61)|USS ''Iowa'' (BB-61)]]&nbsp;–
[[USS Nevada (BB-36)|USS ''Nevada'' (BB-36)]]&nbsp;–
[[USS Texas (BB-35)|USS ''Texas'' (BB-35)]]&nbsp;–
[[USS Triton (SSRN-586)|USS ''Triton'' (SSRN-586)]]&nbsp;–
[[USS West Alsek (ID-3119)|USS ''West Alsek'' (ID-3119)]]&nbsp;–
[[USS West Apaum (ID-3221)|USS ''West Apaum'' (ID-3221)]]&nbsp;–
[[USS West Avenal (ID-3871)|USS ''West Avenal'' (ID-3871)]]&nbsp;–
[[USS West Bridge (ID-2888)|USS ''West Bridge'' (ID-2888)]]&nbsp;–
[[USS West Carnifax (ID-3812)|USS ''West Carnifax'' (ID-3812)]]&nbsp;–
[[USS West Compo (ID-3912)|USS ''West Compo'' (ID-3812)]]&nbsp;–
[[USS West Corum (ID-3982)|USS ''West Corum'' (ID-3982)]]&nbsp;–
[[USS West Gate (ID-3216)|USS ''West Gate'' (ID-3216)]]&nbsp;–
<small> (49&nbsp;articles)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;">
<span id="Engineering and technology" />
<div style="padding:5px 5px 8px 5px; background-color:#CCCCFF; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Nuvola apps kcmsystem.svg|22px|left]]'''Engineering and technology'''</div>
<div style="text-align:left;">
</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="Computing" />
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Nuvola apps display.png|22px|left]]Computing</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Computer-related businesspeople=====
[[Paul Allen|Allen, Paul]]&nbsp;–
[[Bill Gates|Gates, Bill]]&nbsp;–
[[History of Microsoft]]&nbsp;–
[[Gary Kildall|Kildall, Gary]]&nbsp;–
[[Jimmy Wales|Wales, Jimmy]]&nbsp;–
<small> (5&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Cryptography=====
[[Stuart Milner-Barry|Milner-Barry, Stuart]]&nbsp;–
<small> (1&nbsp;article)</small>

=====Hardware and infrastructure=====
[[Apple TV]]&nbsp;–
[[High-Definition Multimedia Interface]]&nbsp;–
[[iPod]]&nbsp;–
[[Itanium]]&nbsp;–
[[MacBook]]&nbsp;–
[[Sinclair ZX Spectrum]]&nbsp;–
<small> (6&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Programming=====
[[Algorithm]]&nbsp;–
[[BASIC]]&nbsp;–
[[BootX (Apple)]]&nbsp;–
[[Comment (computer programming)]]&nbsp;–
[[Delimiter]]&nbsp;–
[[Forth (programming language)|Forth]]&nbsp;–
[[Functional programming]]&nbsp;–
[[Inform]]&nbsp;–
[[Null (SQL)]]&nbsp;–
[[Perl]]&nbsp;–
[[PHP]]&nbsp;–
[[Programming language]]&nbsp;–
[[Python (programming language)]]&nbsp;–
[[Scheme (programming language)]]&nbsp;–
<small> (14&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Software=====
[[BackupHDDVD]]&nbsp;–
[[Common Unix Printing System]]&nbsp;–
[[GNOME]]&nbsp;–
[[Internet Explorer]]&nbsp;–
[[iTunes]]&nbsp;–
[[KDE]]&nbsp;–
[[Kernel (computer science)]]&nbsp;–
[[Linspire]]&nbsp;–
[[Linux]]&nbsp;–
[[Mac OS X]]&nbsp;–
[[MacPaint]]&nbsp;–
[[Microsoft SQL Server]]&nbsp;–
[[System 6]]&nbsp;–
[[Ubuntu]]&nbsp;–
[[Windows Mobile]]&nbsp;–
[[WinFS]]&nbsp;–
<small> (16&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Websites and the internet=====
[[aXXo]]&nbsp;–
[[Conservapedia]]&nbsp;–
[[DeviantArt]]&nbsp;–
[[Facebook]]&nbsp;–
[[History of the Internet]]&nbsp;–
[[Lostpedia]]&nbsp;–
''[[Newshounds]]''&nbsp;–
[[Nofollow]]&nbsp;–
[[Operation Clambake]]&nbsp;–
[[The Pirate Bay]]&nbsp;–
[[ScienTOMogy]]&nbsp;–
[[Stormfront (website)]]&nbsp;–
[[Whedonesque.com]]&nbsp;–
<small> (13&nbsp;articles)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id = "Engineering" />
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Nuvola apps kcmsystem.svg|22px|left]]Engineering</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Engineers and inventors=====
[[Thomas Brassey|Brassey, Thomas]]&nbsp;–
[[Buro Happold|Happold, Buro]]&nbsp;–
[[Liviu Librescu|Librescu, Liviu]]&nbsp;–
[[Otto Julius Zobel|Zobel, Otto Julius]]&nbsp;–
<small> (4&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Engineering technology=====
[[Airborne Real-time Cueing Hyperspectral Enhanced Reconnaissance]]&nbsp;–
[[Bicycle and motorcycle dynamics]]&nbsp;–
[[Blast furnace]]&nbsp;–
[[Centennial Light]]&nbsp;–
[[Continuous distillation]]&nbsp;–
[[Croton Dam (Michigan)]]&nbsp;–
[[Digital radio in the United Kingdom]]&nbsp;–
[[Exelon Pavilions]]&nbsp;–
[[Experimental Assembly of Structures in EVA and Assembly Concept for Construction of Erectable Space Structures]]&nbsp;–
[[Hydro-Québec's electricity transmission system]]&nbsp;–
[[Oil shale extraction]]&nbsp;–
[[Optical fiber]]&nbsp;–
[[Pitot-static system]]&nbsp;–
[[Skerryvore]]&nbsp;–
[[Solar energy]]&nbsp;–
[[Solar power plants in the Mojave Desert]]&nbsp;–
[[Speed Monster]]&nbsp;–
[[Telecommunication]]&nbsp;–
[[Thermal imaging camera]]&nbsp;-
[[Three Gorges Dam]]&nbsp;–
[[Vintage amateur radio]]&nbsp;–
[[Wind power in South Australia]]&nbsp;–
<small> (22&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Engineering failures and disasters=====
[[Betelgeuse incident]]&nbsp;–
[[Grayrigg derailment]]&nbsp;–
[[Hatfield Government Center]]&nbsp;–
<small> (3&nbsp;articles)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="Transport" />
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Nuvola apps ksysv.png|22px|left]]Transport</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Air transport=====
[[1999 South Dakota Learjet crash]]&nbsp;–
[[2001 Avjet Aspen crash]]&nbsp;–
[[2006 New York City plane crash]]&nbsp;–
[[2007 Balad aircraft crash]]&nbsp;–
[[2007 Mogadishu TransAVIAexport Airlines Il-76 crash]]&nbsp;–
[[Adam Air Flight 172]]&nbsp;–
[[Adam Air Flight 574]]&nbsp;–
[[Air New Zealand Flight 901]]&nbsp;–
[[Air transport and the environment (United Kingdom)]]&nbsp;–
[[Airship]]&nbsp;–
[[Alberto Santos-Dumont]]&nbsp;–
[[Arkia Israel Airlines]]&nbsp;–
[[Avrocar]]&nbsp;–
[[Chicago Midway International Airport]]&nbsp;–
[[Comair Flight 191]]&nbsp;–
[[Crossair Flight 498]]&nbsp;–
[[Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport]]&nbsp;–
[[Eilat Airport]]&nbsp;–
[[EVA Air]]&nbsp;–
[[Flight 19]]&nbsp;–
[[Gol Transportes Aéreos Flight 1907]]&nbsp;–
[[Hot air balloon]]&nbsp;–
[[Iloilo International Airport]]&nbsp;–
[[Israir Airlines]]&nbsp;–
[[LANSA Flight 502]]&nbsp;–
[[Melbourne Airport]]&nbsp;–
[[Mohawk Airlines Flight 411]]&nbsp;–
[[Port Columbus International Airport]]&nbsp;–
[[Portland Aerial Tram]]&nbsp;–
[[Portland International Jetport]]&nbsp;–
[[Roanoke Regional Airport]]&nbsp;–
[[San Francisco International Airport]]&nbsp;–
[[Sde Dov Airport]]&nbsp;–
[[Singapore Changi Airport]]&nbsp;–
[[SR-71 Blackbird]]&nbsp;–
[[Swissair Flight 111]]&nbsp;–
[[TAM Airlines Flight 3054]]&nbsp;–
[[Turkish Airlines Flight 1476]]&nbsp;–
[[Wright brothers]]&nbsp;–
<small> (39&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Maritime transport=====
[[American Palestine Line]]&nbsp;–
[[Bristol Harbour]]&nbsp;–
[[Bulk carrier]]&nbsp;–
[[BX (sternwheeler)|''BX'' (sternwheeler)]]&nbsp;–
[[Edward M. Cotter (fireboat)|''Edward M. Cotter'' (fireboat)]]&nbsp;–
[[Gowanus Canal]]&nbsp;–
[[Grand Western Canal]]&nbsp;–
[[Hammerton's Ferry]]&nbsp;–
[[Joseph Hazelwood|Hazelwood, Joseph]]&nbsp;–
[[MV New Flame|MV ''New Flame'']]&nbsp;–
[[Seisho Maru]]&nbsp;–
[[SS Black Osprey|SS ''Black Osprey'']]&nbsp;–
[[SS Dakotan|SS ''Dakotan'']]&nbsp;–
[[SS El Occidente|SS ''El Occidente'']]&nbsp;–
[[SS El Oriente|SS ''El Oriente'']]&nbsp;–
[[SS El Sol|SS ''El Sol'']]&nbsp;–
[[SS Empire Miniver|SS ''Empire Miniver'']]&nbsp;–
[[SS Empire Simba|SS ''Empire Simba'']]&nbsp;–
[[SS Iowan|SS ''Iowan'']]&nbsp;–
[[SS Kentuckian|SS ''Kentuckian'']]&nbsp;–
[[SS Mauna Loa|SS ''Mauna Loa'']]&nbsp;–
[[SS Minnesotan|SS ''Minnesotan'']]&nbsp;–
[[SS Montanan|SS ''Montanan'']]&nbsp;–
[[SS Ohioan (1914)|SS ''Ohioan'' (1914)]]&nbsp;–
[[SS Panaman|SS ''Panaman'']]&nbsp;–
[[SS Suevic|SS ''Suevic'']]&nbsp;–
[[SS Washingtonian|SS ''Washingtonian'']]&nbsp;–
[[SS Winfield Scott|SS ''Winfield Scott'']]&nbsp;–
<small> (28&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Railroad transport=====
[[Anglesey Central Railway]]&nbsp;–
[[Bay Area Rapid Transit]]&nbsp;–
[[Bergen Line]]&nbsp;–
[[Berlin Stadtbahn]]&nbsp;–
[[California Southern Railroad]]&nbsp;–
[[Capitol Limited (B&O)]]&nbsp;–
[[Dakota, Minnesota and Eastern Railroad]]&nbsp;–
[[Docklands Light Railway]]&nbsp;–
[[Everard Calthrop]]&nbsp;–
[[Ffestiniog Railway]]&nbsp;–
[[Flytoget]]&nbsp;–
[[Glasgow, Paisley, Kilmarnock and Ayr Railway]]&nbsp;–
[[Grand Crimean Central Railway]]&nbsp;–
[[Grayrigg derailment]]&nbsp;–
[[High Speed 1]]&nbsp;–
[[Cyrus K. Holliday|Holliday, Cyrus K.]]&nbsp;–
[[InterCityExpress|ICE]]&nbsp;–
[[Inverclyde Line]]&nbsp;–
[[Lynton and Barnstaple Railway]]&nbsp;–
[[Maglev (transport)]]&nbsp;–
[[Maryland and Pennsylvania Railroad]]&nbsp;–
[[Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority]]&nbsp;–
[[New York, Susquehanna and Western Railway]]&nbsp;–
[[Oslo T-bane]]&nbsp;–
[[Philippine National Railways]]&nbsp;–
[[Rail transport in California]]&nbsp;–
[[Rail transport in Puerto Rico]]&nbsp;–
[[Rail transport in Vatican City]]&nbsp;–
[[Rail transport in Victoria]]&nbsp;–
[[Railway post office]]&nbsp;–
[[Rapid transit]]&nbsp;–
[[Refrigerator car]]&nbsp;–
[[RER]]&nbsp;–
[[Ringerike Line]]&nbsp;–
[[Rjukan Line]]&nbsp;–
[[Rugby railway station]]&nbsp;–
[[Streetcars in Washington, D.C.]]&nbsp;–
[[Timothy Blackstone]]&nbsp;–
[[Trams in Adelaide]]&nbsp;–
[[Transportation in New York City]]&nbsp;–
[[Transportation in Omaha]]&nbsp;–
[[Troop sleeper]]&nbsp;–
[[Tyne and Wear Metro]]&nbsp;–
[[Washington Metro]]&nbsp;–
[[Winston Tunnel]]&nbsp;–
<small> (45&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Railway bridges and train stations=====
[[Big Four Bridge]]&nbsp;–
[[Bristol Temple Meads railway station]]&nbsp;–
[[Grand Central Station (Chicago)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hellingly Hospital Railway]]&nbsp;–
[[Hillsboro Central/3rd Avenue Transit Center]]&nbsp;–
[[Jordanhill railway station]]&nbsp;–
[[Kinzua Bridge]]&nbsp;–
[[London Paddington station]]&nbsp;–
[[Lysaker Station]]&nbsp;–
[[Preston railway station]]&nbsp;–
[[Railway stations in Cromer]]&nbsp;–
[[Trondheim Central Station]]&nbsp;–
<small> (12&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Road infrastructure=====
[[A1 road (London)]]&nbsp;–
[[A215 road]]&nbsp;–
[[A500 road]]&nbsp;–
[[A4232 road]]&nbsp;–
[[Adams Avenue Parkway]]&nbsp;–
[[Amsterdammertje]]&nbsp;–
[[Arizona State Route 85]]&nbsp;–
[[Atlantic City Expressway]]&nbsp;–
[[Barlow Road]]&nbsp;–
[[Bayshore Freeway]]&nbsp;–
[[Borman Expressway]]&nbsp;–
[[BP Pedestrian Bridge]]&nbsp;–
[[Brockway Mountain Drive]]&nbsp;–
[[California State Route 3]]&nbsp;–
[[California State Route 16]]&nbsp;–
[[California State Route 20]]&nbsp;–
[[California State Route 37]]&nbsp;–
[[California State Route 47]]&nbsp;–
[[California State Route 133]]&nbsp;–
[[California State Route 160]]&nbsp;–
[[California State Route 174]]&nbsp;–
[[California State Route 190]]&nbsp;–
[[California State Route 275]]&nbsp;–
[[Connecticut Route 190]]&nbsp;–
[[County Route 115 (Tompkins County, New York)]]&nbsp;–
[[County Route 612 (Middlesex County, New Jersey)]]&nbsp;–
[[County Route S18 (California)]]&nbsp;–
[[East 233rd Street (Bronx)]]&nbsp;–
[[Forth Road Bridge]]&nbsp;–
[[George Washington Memorial Bridge]]&nbsp;–
[[Gun Hill Road (Bronx)]]&nbsp;–
[[I-35W Mississippi River bridge]]&nbsp;–
[[Interstate 8 in Arizona]]&nbsp;–
[[Interstate 35E (Minnesota)]]&nbsp;–
[[Interstate 37]]&nbsp;–
[[Interstate 40 in Arizona]]&nbsp;–
[[Interstate 70 in Colorado]]&nbsp;–
[[Interstate 80 Business (West Wendover, NV – Wendover, UT)]]&nbsp;–
[[Interstate 80 in Nevada]]&nbsp;–
[[Interstate 82]]&nbsp;–
[[Interstate 95 in Pennsylvania]]&nbsp;–
[[Interstate 155 (Illinois)]]&nbsp;–
[[Interstate 205 (California)]]&nbsp;–
[[Interstate 215 (Utah)]]&nbsp;–
[[Interstate 295 (Delaware-New Jersey)]]&nbsp;–
[[Interstate 476]]&nbsp;–
[[Interstate 780]]&nbsp;–
[[M-22 (Michigan highway)]]&nbsp;–
[[M-24 (Michigan highway)]]&nbsp;–
[[M-25 (Michigan highway)]]&nbsp;–
[[M-26 (Michigan highway)]]&nbsp;–
[[M-27 (Michigan highway)]]&nbsp;–
[[M-28 Business (Ishpeming–Negaunee, Michigan)]]&nbsp;–
[[M-29 (Michigan highway)]]&nbsp;–
[[M-42 (Michigan highway)]]&nbsp;–
[[M-67 (Michigan highway)]]&nbsp;–
[[M-94 (Michigan highway)]]&nbsp;–
[[M-95 (Michigan highway)]]&nbsp;–
[[M-107 (Michigan highway)]]&nbsp;–
[[M-185 (Michigan highway)]]&nbsp;–
[[M-186 (Michigan highway)]]&nbsp;–
[[M-203 (Michigan highway)]]&nbsp;–
[[M-553 (Michigan highway)]]&nbsp;–
[[M-554 (Michigan highway)]]&nbsp;–
[[M54 motorway]]&nbsp;–
[[Manitoba Provincial Road 280]]&nbsp;–
[[McDonald's Cycle Center]]&nbsp;–
[[Metropolitan Phoenix freeways]]&nbsp;–
[[New Jersey Route 18]]&nbsp;–
[[New Jersey Route 33]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 3]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 8]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 9A]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 9L]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 9N]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 10]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 12D]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 16]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 17A]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 17J]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 18F]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 20N]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 20SY]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 21]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 28N]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 30]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 31B]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 32B]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 38]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 45]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 47]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 59]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 63]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 73]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 86]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 92]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 146]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 149]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 164]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 173]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 192]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 210]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 216]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 254]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 273]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 280]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 284]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 292]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 306]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 309]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 311]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 312]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 317]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 318]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 319]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 321]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 323]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 324]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 344]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 348]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 359]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 361]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 368]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 376]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 380]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 382]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 394]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 402]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 418]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 424]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 428]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 431]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 812]]&nbsp;–
[[New York State Route 990V]]&nbsp;–
[[Ohio State Route 716]]&nbsp;–
[[Oklahoma State Highway 8]]&nbsp;–
[[Oklahoma State Highway 9]]&nbsp;–
[[Oklahoma State Highway 74]]&nbsp;–
[[Palisades Interstate Parkway]]&nbsp;–
[[Pasadena Freeway]]&nbsp;–
[[Pennsylvania Route 21]]&nbsp;–
[[Pennsylvania Route 39]]&nbsp;–
[[Pennsylvania Route 73]]&nbsp;–
[[Pennsylvania Route 145]]&nbsp;–
[[Pennsylvania Route 222]]&nbsp;–
[[Pennsylvania Route 402]]&nbsp;–
[[Pennsylvania Route 434]]&nbsp;–
[[Pennsylvania Route 646]]&nbsp;–
[[Pennsylvania Route 652]]&nbsp;–
[[Pennsylvania Route 663]]&nbsp;–
[[Pennsylvania Route 666]]&nbsp;–
[[Prospect Mountain Veterans Memorial Highway]]&nbsp;–
[[Saskatchewan Highway 1]]&nbsp;–
[[Saskatchewan Highway 16]]&nbsp;–
[[Schuylkill Expressway]]&nbsp;–
[[State Route 74 (New York–Vermont)]]&nbsp;–
[[State Route 346 (New York–Vermont)]]&nbsp;–
[[State Route 1002 (Lehigh County, Pennsylvania)]]&nbsp;–
[[Texas State Highway 151]]&nbsp;–
[[Texas State Highway 211]]&nbsp;–
[[U.S. Route 4 in New York]]&nbsp;–
[[U.S. Route 5 in Connecticut]]&nbsp;–
[[U.S. Route 9 in New York]]&nbsp;–
[[U.S. Route 12 in Washington]]&nbsp;–
[[U.S. Route 40 Alternate (Keyser's Ridge – Cumberland, Maryland)]]&nbsp;–
[[U.S. Route 41 Business (Marquette, Michigan)]]&nbsp;–
[[U.S. Route 41 in Michigan]]&nbsp;–
[[U.S. Route 44 in New York]]&nbsp;–
[[U.S. Route 50]]&nbsp;–
[[U.S. Route 50 in California]]&nbsp;–
[[U.S. Route 50 in Nevada]]&nbsp;–
[[U.S. Route 50 in Utah]]&nbsp;–
[[U.S. Route 62 in Oklahoma]]&nbsp;–
[[U.S. Route 89 in Utah]]&nbsp;–
[[U.S. Route 163]]&nbsp;–
[[U.S. Route 199]]&nbsp;–
[[United States Numbered Highways]]&nbsp;–
[[Utah State Route 68]]&nbsp;–
[[Utah State Route 101]]&nbsp;–
[[Utah State Route 103]]&nbsp;–
[[Utah State Route 161]]&nbsp;–
[[Utah State Route 202]]&nbsp;–
[[Utah State Route 269]]&nbsp;–
[[Utah State Route 279]]&nbsp;–
[[Vermont Route 17]]&nbsp;–
[[Virginia State Route 37]]&nbsp;–
[[Washington State Route 339]]&nbsp;–
[[Washington State Route 527]]&nbsp;–
[[Washington State Route 531]]&nbsp;–
<small> (189&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Road transportation and policy=====
[[AIL Storm]]&nbsp;–
[[Autobianchi Primula]]&nbsp;–
[[Bicycle]]&nbsp;–
[[Brabham BT46]]&nbsp;–
[[Chrysler 180]]&nbsp;–
[[Congestion pricing]]&nbsp;–
[[Diolkos]]&nbsp;–
[[Federal Bridge Gross Weight Formula]]&nbsp;–
[[Ferrari P4/5 by Pininfarina]]&nbsp;–
[[Ford BA Falcon]]&nbsp;–
[[Ford Taurus]]&nbsp;–
[[Harley-Davidson]]&nbsp;–
[[Holden Commodore]]&nbsp;–
[[Lancia Flaminia]]&nbsp;–
[[Lancia LC2]]&nbsp;–
[[Lexus]]&nbsp;–
[[Mitsubishi i]]&nbsp;–
[[Simca Vedette]]&nbsp;–
[[Talbot Samba]]&nbsp;–
[[Toyota Aurion]]&nbsp;–
[[Trucking industry in the United States]]&nbsp;–
<small> (21&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Trains and locomotives=====
[[BR Standard Class 6]]&nbsp;–
[[BR Standard Class 7]]&nbsp;–
[[BR Standard Class 8]]&nbsp;–
[[British Rail Class 47]]&nbsp;–
[[LNER Gresley Classes A1 and A3]]&nbsp;–
[[LSWR M7 class]]&nbsp;–
''[[Scott Special]]''&nbsp;–
[[SR V "Schools" class]]&nbsp;–
[[SR Leader Class]]&nbsp;–
[[SR Lord Nelson class]]&nbsp;–
[[SR N class]]&nbsp;–
[[SR N15X class]]&nbsp;–
[[SR Q class]]&nbsp;–
[[SR Q1 class]]&nbsp;–
[[SR U class]]&nbsp;–
<small> (15&nbsp;articles)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;">
<span id="Mathematics" />
<div style="padding:5px 5px 8px 5px; background-color:#CCCCFF; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Nuvola apps edu mathematics-p.svg|22px|left]]'''Mathematics'''</div>
<div style="text-align:left;">
</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="Mathematics and mathematicians">
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Nuvola apps edu mathematics-p.svg|22px|left]]Mathematics and mathematicians</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Mathematicians=====
[[Henri Brocard|Brocard, Henri]]&nbsp;–
[[Srinivasa Ramanujan|Ramanujan, Srinivasa]]&nbsp;–
[[Alan Turing|Turing, Alan]]&nbsp;–
<small> (3&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Mathematics and mathematical problems=====
[[Ars Conjectandi]]&nbsp;–
[[Commutativity]]&nbsp;–
[[Derivative]]&nbsp;–
[[E (mathematical constant)]]&nbsp;–
[[Evenness of zero]]&nbsp;–
[[Exponentiation]]&nbsp;–
[[Fleiss' kappa]]&nbsp;–
[[Homotopy groups of spheres]]&nbsp;–
[[International Mathematical Olympiad]]&nbsp;–
[[Mathcounts]]&nbsp;–
[[Mathematics]]&nbsp;–
[[Ordinal number]]&nbsp;–
[[Pi]]&nbsp;–
[[Problem of Apollonius]]&nbsp;–
[[Pseudoforest]]&nbsp;–
[[Pythagorean theorem]]&nbsp;–
[[Rubik's Cube]]&nbsp;–
[[Sylvester's sequence]]&nbsp;–
[[Znám's problem]]&nbsp;–
<small> (19&nbsp;articles)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;">
<span id="Natural sciences" />
<div style="padding:5px 5px 8px 5px; background-color:#CCCCFF; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Nuvola apps katomic.svg|22px|left]]'''Natural sciences'''</div>
<div style="text-align:left;">
</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="Biology and medicine" />
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:DNA icon.svg|22px|left]]Biology and medicine</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Biologists and medical scientists=====
[[British Birds Rarities Committee]]&nbsp;–
[[Tawfiq Canaan|Canaan, Tawfiq]]&nbsp;–
[[Richard Dawkins|Dawkins, Richard]]&nbsp;–
[[Stephen Jay Gould|Gould, Stephen Jay]]&nbsp;–
[[Frances Oldham Kelsey|Kelsey, Frances Oldham]]&nbsp;–
[[John Benjamin Murphy|Murphy, John Benjamin]]&nbsp;–
[[Pamela C. Rasmussen|Rasmussen, Pamela C.]]&nbsp;–
[[George Schaller|Schaller, George]]&nbsp;–
[[Mary Seacole|Seacole, Mary]]&nbsp;–
[[Eli Todd|Todd, Eli]]&nbsp;–
<small> (10&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Biology=====
[[Adenosine triphosphate]]&nbsp;–
''[[Aloe vera]]''&nbsp;–
[[Amino acid]]&nbsp;–
[[Anaerobic digestion]]&nbsp;–
[[Animal testing]]&nbsp;–
[[Antibody]]&nbsp;–
[[Arp2/3 complex]]&nbsp;–
[[Bees and toxic chemicals]]&nbsp;–
[[Bird collections]]&nbsp;–
[[Brain]]&nbsp;–
[[Cell (biology)]]&nbsp;–
[[Colony Collapse Disorder]]&nbsp;–
[[Coral]]&nbsp;–
[[Cytosol]]&nbsp;–
[[Decline in amphibian populations]]&nbsp;–
[[Dolphinarium]]&nbsp;–
[[Extraterrestrial life]]&nbsp;–
[[Flora of Scotland]]&nbsp;–
[[Genetic code]]&nbsp;–
[[History of paleontology]]&nbsp;–
[[Human genome]]&nbsp;–
[[Insulin]]&nbsp;–
[[International Association for Plant Taxonomy]]&nbsp;–
[[Invasive species]]&nbsp;–
[[Long-term potentiation]]&nbsp;–
[[Maxillary central incisor]]&nbsp;–
[[Mitochondrion]]&nbsp;–
[[Mitosis]]&nbsp;–
[[Morpholino]]&nbsp;–
[[Multiple sequence alignment]]&nbsp;–
[[Photosynthetic reaction centre]]&nbsp;–
[[Plant defense against herbivory]]&nbsp;–
[[Primate]]&nbsp;–
[[Prion]]&nbsp;–
[[Protein]]&nbsp;–
[[Protocarnivorous plant]]&nbsp;–
[[Receptor antagonist]]&nbsp;–
[[RNA]]&nbsp;–
[[Serpin]]&nbsp;–
[[Snake scales]]&nbsp;–
[[Stem cell]]&nbsp;–
[[Structural alignment]]&nbsp;–
<small> (42&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Evolution and reproduction=====
[[Alternation of generations]]&nbsp;–
[[Archaeoraptor]]&nbsp;–
[[Domestic sheep reproduction]]&nbsp;–
[[Evolution of sexual reproduction]]&nbsp;–
[[G-spot]]&nbsp;–
[[Mitochondrial Eve]]&nbsp;–
[[Natural selection]]&nbsp;–
[[Objections to evolution]]&nbsp;–
[[Punctuated equilibrium]]&nbsp;–
<small> (9&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Health and medicine=====
[[2007 Bernard Matthews H5N1 outbreak]]&nbsp;–
[[Abortion-breast cancer hypothesis]]&nbsp;–
[[Ambulance]]&nbsp;–
[[Ascending cholangitis]]&nbsp;–
[[Aspirin]]&nbsp;–
[[Blood type]]&nbsp;–
[[Cancer]]&nbsp;–
[[Canine parvovirus]]&nbsp;–
[[Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis]]&nbsp;–
[[Chronic granulomatous disease]]&nbsp;–
[[Clindamycin]]&nbsp;–
[[Color blindness]]&nbsp;–
[[Concussion]]&nbsp;–
[[Contact lens]]&nbsp;–
[[Crohn's disease]]&nbsp;–
[[Dental caries]]&nbsp;–
[[Doxorubicin]]&nbsp;–
[[Earwax]]&nbsp;–
[[Emergency psychiatry]]&nbsp;–
[[Endoscopic foreign body retrieval]]&nbsp;–
[[Equine nutrition]]&nbsp;–
[[Ethylene glycol poisoning]]&nbsp;–
[[Familial hypercholesterolemia]]&nbsp;–
[[Female hysteria]]&nbsp;–
[[Fetal alcohol syndrome]]&nbsp;–
[[Forensic facial reconstruction]]&nbsp;–
[[Glasses]]&nbsp;–
[[Henipavirus]]&nbsp;–
[[Henoch-Schönlein purpura]]&nbsp;–
[[Heparin]]&nbsp;–
[[Hepatitis B virus]]&nbsp;–
[[Hepatocellular carcinoma]]&nbsp;–
[[Hepatorenal syndrome]]&nbsp;–
[[Herpes simplex]]&nbsp;–
[[Herpes zoster]]&nbsp;–
[[History of aspirin]]&nbsp;–
[[HIV]]&nbsp;–
[[HIV/AIDS in Brazil]]&nbsp;–
[[Homeopathy]]&nbsp;–
[[Hypopituitarism]]&nbsp;–
[[Influenza A virus subtype H5N1]]&nbsp;–
[[International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement]]&nbsp;–
[[Ketogenic diet]]&nbsp;–
[[Leopard syndrome]]&nbsp;–
[[Malaria]]&nbsp;–
[[Measles]]&nbsp;–
[[Mental status examination]]&nbsp;–
[[Metformin]]&nbsp;–
[[Michael Jackson's health and appearance]]&nbsp;–
[[Neuroblastoma]]&nbsp;–
[[Nutrition]]&nbsp;–
[[Opium]]&nbsp;–
[[Orlistat]]&nbsp;–
[[Osteonecrosis of the jaw]]&nbsp;–
[[Osteopathic medicine in the United States]]&nbsp;–
[[Pathology]]&nbsp;–
[[Polio vaccine]]&nbsp;–
[[Poliovirus]]&nbsp;–
[[Polyclonal B cell response]]&nbsp;–
[[Post-concussion syndrome]]&nbsp;–
[[Post-traumatic epilepsy]]&nbsp;–
[[Psychoactive drug]]&nbsp;–
[[Pyromania]]&nbsp;–
[[Rabies]]&nbsp;–
[[Renal tubular acidosis]]&nbsp;–
[[Resveratrol]]&nbsp;–
[[Rhabdomyolysis]]&nbsp;–
[[Robinow syndrome]]&nbsp;–
[[Schatzki ring]]&nbsp;–
[[Self-injury]]&nbsp;–
[[Spanish flu]]&nbsp;–
[[Subcutaneous emphysema]]&nbsp;–
[[Tooth]]&nbsp;–
[[Tracheobronchial injury]]&nbsp;–
[[Trans fat]]&nbsp;–
[[Vacutainer]]&nbsp;–
[[Vitamin]]&nbsp;–
[[Vitamin C]]&nbsp;–
[[Wilson's disease]]&nbsp;–
[[Yellow fever]]&nbsp;–
<small> (80&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Organisms=====
<!--be sure to add italics to generic and specific names, and do not add them to family-level or higher taxonomic names-->
[[Abelisauridae]]&nbsp;–
''[[Acer rubrum]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Aerodramus]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Agkistrodon piscivorus]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Alioramus]]''&nbsp;–
[[American Crow]]&nbsp;–
[[American Robin]]&nbsp;–
''[[Amphicoelias]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Ankylosaurus]]''&nbsp;–
[[Antbird]]&nbsp;–
[[Appaloosa]]&nbsp;–
[[Arabian horse]]&nbsp;–
''[[Archaeamphora longicervia]]''&nbsp;–
[[Asian arowana]]&nbsp;–
[[Atlantic herring]]&nbsp;–
[[Australian Ringneck]]&nbsp;–
[[Barndoor skate]]&nbsp;–
[[Beaded lizard]]&nbsp;–
''[[Bitis arietans]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Bitis gabonica]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Bottlenose Dolphin]]''&nbsp;–
[[Buckeye (chicken)]]&nbsp;–
[[Bugun Liocichla]]&nbsp;–
[[Cape Fear Shiner]]&nbsp;–
''[[Carcinus maenas]]''&nbsp;–
[[Ceratopsia]]&nbsp;–
[[Cichlid]]&nbsp;–
[[Cloudinid]]&nbsp;–
''[[Coelurus]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Commelina communis]]''&nbsp;–
[[Convict cichlid]]&nbsp;–
[[Crested Shelduck]]&nbsp;–
[[Crustacean]]&nbsp;–
''[[Ctenosaura bakeri]]''&nbsp;–
[[Cubeb]]&nbsp;–
''[[Cyclura nubila]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Cylindropuntia imbricata]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Daboia]]''&nbsp;–
[[Dodo]]&nbsp;–
[[Dromaeosauridae]]&nbsp;–
''[[Drosera anglica]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Drosophila melanogaster]]''&nbsp;–
[[Dusky Woodswallow]]&nbsp;–
''[[Entoloma sinuatum]]''&nbsp;–
''[[European Robin]]''&nbsp;–
[[Fish]]&nbsp;–
[[Flammulated Flycatcher]]&nbsp;–
''[[Galerina]]''&nbsp;–
[[Gila monster]]&nbsp;–
[[Great Spotted Kiwi]]&nbsp;–
[[Greater Yellow-headed Vulture]]&nbsp;–
[[Green Iguana]]&nbsp;–
''[[Gryposaurus]]''&nbsp;–
[[Guarana]]&nbsp;–
[[Haflinger (horse)]]&nbsp;–
[[Halfbeak]]&nbsp;–
[[Herdwick (sheep)]]&nbsp;–
''[[Herrerasaurus]]''&nbsp;–
[[Heterodontosauridae]]&nbsp;–
[[Hickman's potentilla]]&nbsp;–
[[Hooded Crow]]&nbsp;–
[[Horse]]&nbsp;–
''[[Hypacrosaurus]]''&nbsp;–
[[Japanese Spitz]]&nbsp;–
[[Katipo]]&nbsp;–
[[Kererū]]&nbsp;–
''[[Kimberella]]''&nbsp;–
[[Kitti's Hog-nosed Bat]]&nbsp;–
''[[Kritosaurus]]''&nbsp;–
[[Labrador Retriever]]&nbsp;–
[[Lesser Yellow-headed Vulture]]&nbsp;–
[[Malagasy Hippopotamus]]&nbsp;–
[[Marchantiophyta]]&nbsp;–
[[Marsileaceae]]&nbsp;–
[[Megalodon]]&nbsp;–
[[Mimivirus]]&nbsp;–
[[Mountain Gorilla]]&nbsp;–
[[Murray cod]]&nbsp;–
[[Muskrat]]&nbsp;–
[[Myco-heterotrophy]]&nbsp;–
''[[Nepenthes rajah]]''&nbsp;–
[[Nicobar Long-tailed Macaque]]&nbsp;–
[[Northern Cardinal]]&nbsp;–
[[Northern Red-legged Frog]]&nbsp;–
''[[Omphalotus nidiformis]]''&nbsp;–
[[Opabinia]]&nbsp;–
''[[Ornatifilum]]''&nbsp;–
[[Oscar (fish)]]&nbsp;–
[[Osprey]]&nbsp;–
[[Othnielosaurus]]&nbsp;–
[[Pachycephalosaurus]]&nbsp;–
''[[Paxillus involutus]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Pelvicachromis pulcher]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Pentachaeta bellidiflora]]''&nbsp;–
[[Philippine Tarsier]]&nbsp;–
[[Polish cochineal]]&nbsp;–
''[[Postelsia]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Prosaurolophus]]''&nbsp;–
[[Raccoon]]&nbsp;–
[[Red-tailed Hawk]]&nbsp;–
[[Ring-tailed Lemur]]&nbsp;–
[[Rock Pigeon]]&nbsp;–
''[[Salvia divinorum]]''&nbsp;–
[[Sand whiting]]&nbsp;–
''[[Saurolophus]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Sauropelta]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Scelidosaurus]]''&nbsp;–
[[Sea snake]]&nbsp;–
[[Sebright (chicken)]]&nbsp;–
[[Shark]]&nbsp;–
[[Silkie]]&nbsp;–
[[Small shelly fauna]]&nbsp;–
[[Southern black bream]]&nbsp;–
[[Species of Allosaurus|Species of ''Allosaurus'']]&nbsp;–
[[Species of Psittacosaurus|Species of ''Psittacosaurus'']]&nbsp;–
[[Spider]]&nbsp;–
''[[Spinosaurus]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Stevia]]''&nbsp;–
[[Storm-petrel]]&nbsp;–
''[[Stylidium]]''&nbsp;–
[[Sundew]]&nbsp;–
[[Swift Fox]]&nbsp;–
[[Tamaraw]]&nbsp;–
[[Tiger shark]]&nbsp;–
''[[Tiktaalik]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Trillium grandiflorum]]''&nbsp;–
[[Tuatara]]&nbsp;–
[[Tyrannosauroidea]]&nbsp;–
''[[Utricularia inflata]]''&nbsp;–
''[[Vipera berus]]''&nbsp;–
[[Walrus]]&nbsp;–
[[Whale shark]]&nbsp;–
[[White-eyed River Martin]]&nbsp;–
[[Wood Thrush]]&nbsp;–
[[Yeast]]&nbsp;–
<small> (135&nbsp;articles)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="Chemistry and materials science" />
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Nuvola apps edu science.svg|22px|left]]Chemistry and materials science</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Chemicals=====
[[Aluminium chloride]]&nbsp;–
[[Ammonia]]&nbsp;–
[[Argon]]&nbsp;–
[[Benzene]]&nbsp;–
[[Benzylpiperazine]]&nbsp;–
[[Caesium fluoride]]&nbsp;–
[[Calcium chloride]]&nbsp;–
[[Chlorine]]&nbsp;–
[[Copper(I) chloride]]&nbsp;–
[[CS gas]]&nbsp;–
[[Ethanol]]&nbsp;–
[[Iron(III) chloride]]&nbsp;–
[[Krypton]]&nbsp;–
[[Mercury (element)]]&nbsp;–
[[Neon]]&nbsp;–
[[Persistent carbene]]&nbsp;–
[[Phosphoryl chloride]]&nbsp;–
[[Radon]]&nbsp;–
[[Rhodium(III) chloride]]&nbsp;–
[[Sodium hydroxide]]&nbsp;–
[[Taurine]]&nbsp;–
[[Tin(II) chloride]]&nbsp;–
[[Tungsten]]&nbsp;–
[[Zirconium]]&nbsp;–
<small> (24&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Chemistry and atoms=====
[[Atomic theory]]&nbsp;–
[[Period 1 element]]&nbsp;–
[[X-ray crystallography]]&nbsp;–
<small> (3&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Chemists and materials scientists=====
[[Friedrich Accum|Accum, Friedrich]]&nbsp;–
[[Percy Lavon Julian|Julian, Percy Lavon]]&nbsp;–
[[Alexander Shulgin|Shulgin, Alexander]]&nbsp;–
[[Salimuzzaman Siddiqui|Siddiqui, Salimuzzaman]]&nbsp;–
[[World Science Festival]]<!-- I have NO clue where this GA goes! -->&nbsp;–
<small> (5&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Materials science=====
[[Fiberglass]]&nbsp;–
[[Material properties of diamond]]&nbsp;–
[[Steel]]&nbsp;–
<small> (3&nbsp;articles)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="Geology, geophysics and mineralogy" />
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Jordens inre.svg|20px|left]]Geology, geophysics and mineralogy</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Geologists, geophysicists and mineralogists=====
[[Pattillo Higgins]]&nbsp;–
<small> (1&nbsp;article)</small>

=====Geology and geophysics=====
[[2008 Chino Hills earthquake]]&nbsp;–
[[Anahim hotspot]]&nbsp;–
[[Boltysh crater]]&nbsp;–
[[Carancas impact event]]&nbsp;–
[[Chitinozoan]]&nbsp;–
[[Crater Glacier]]&nbsp;–
[[Decade Volcanoes]]&nbsp;–
[[Eruption column]]&nbsp;–
[[Eutrophication]]&nbsp;–
[[Geological history of Earth]]&nbsp;–
[[Geology of Scotland]]&nbsp;–
[[Geology of Somerset]]&nbsp;–
[[Geyser]]&nbsp;–
[[History of Earth]]&nbsp;–
[[Iceland hotspot]]&nbsp;–
[[Kimberella]]&nbsp;–
[[Marcellus Formation]]&nbsp;–
[[Minoan eruption]]&nbsp;–
[[Oil shale geology]]&nbsp;–
[[Tsunami]]&nbsp;–
[[Volcanic ash]]&nbsp;–
<small> (21&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Mineralogy=====
[[Vanadinite]]&nbsp;–
<small> (1&nbsp;article)</small>

</div>
</div>
<div style="clear:both;" class="NavFrame">
<span id="Meteorology and atmospheric sciences" />
<div class="NavHead" style="padding:2px 2px 2px 30px; background-color:#FFFAF0; text-align:left; font-size:larger;">[[Image:Nuvola apps kweather.svg|22px|left]]Meteorology and atmospheric sciences</div>
<div class="NavContent" style="text-align:left;">

==&shy;&nbsp;==

=====Climate=====
[[100,000-year problem]]&nbsp;–
[[Climate]]&nbsp;–
[[Climate of Florida]]&nbsp;–
[[Climate of North Carolina]]&nbsp;–
[[Global dimming]]&nbsp;–
[[Heinrich event]]&nbsp;–
[[History of surface weather analysis]]&nbsp;–
[[Monsoon trough]]&nbsp;–
[[Red rain in Kerala]]&nbsp;–
[[Surface weather observation]]&nbsp;–
[[United States rainfall climatology]]&nbsp;–
<small> (11&nbsp;articles)</small>

===== Observatories =====
<small> (0&nbsp;articles)</small>

===== Storm sciences, hurricane seasons and storm effects =====
[[1851 Atlantic hurricane season]]&nbsp;–
[[1852 Atlantic hurricane season]]&nbsp;–
[[1936 Atlantic hurricane season]]&nbsp;–
[[1939 Pacific typhoon season]]&nbsp;–
[[1970 North Indian Ocean cyclone season]]&nbsp;–
[[1981 Atlantic hurricane season]]&nbsp;–
[[1987 Atlantic hurricane season]]&nbsp;–
[[1988 Pacific hurricane season]]&nbsp;–
[[1996 Pacific hurricane season]]&nbsp;–
[[1997 Pacific hurricane season]]&nbsp;–
[[2001 Atlantic hurricane season]]&nbsp;–
[[2002 Pacific hurricane season]]&nbsp;–
[[Atlantic hurricane reanalysis]]&nbsp;–
[[Bounded weak echo region]]&nbsp;–
[[Cyclogenesis]]&nbsp;–
[[Cyclone]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Hurricane Charley in North Carolina]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Hurricane Charley in South Carolina]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Hurricane Dean in Mexico]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Hurricane Dean in the Greater Antilles]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Hurricane Dean in the Lesser Antilles]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Hurricane Dennis in Alabama]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Hurricane Dennis in Florida]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Hurricane Dennis in Georgia]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Hurricane Dennis in Mississippi]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Hurricane Isabel in Canada]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Hurricane Isabel in New Jersey]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Hurricane Isabel in New York and New England]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Hurricane Isabel in Pennsylvania]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Hurricane Isabel in Virginia]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Hurricane Isabel in West Virginia]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Hurricane Noel in the United States]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Hurricane Wilma in Florida]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Hurricane Wilma in The Bahamas]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of tropical cyclones]]&nbsp;–
[[Effects of Tropical Storm Allison in Texas]]&nbsp;–
[[Maximum sustained wind]]&nbsp;–
[[Meteorological history of Hurricane Kyle (2002)]]&nbsp;–
[[Meteorological history of Hurricane Noel]]&nbsp;–
[[Project Stormfury]]&nbsp;–
[[Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale]]&nbsp;–
[[Storm surge]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical cyclogenesis]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical cyclone forecasting]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical cyclone observation]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical cyclone rainfall climatology]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical cyclone rainfall forecasting]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical cyclone track forecasting]]&nbsp;–
[[Weather forecasting]]&nbsp;–
[[Wind shear]]&nbsp;–
<small> (51&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Tropical cyclones: Atlantic=====
[[1821 Norfolk and Long Island hurricane]]&nbsp;–
[[2006 Nova Scotia tropical storm]]&nbsp;–
[[Atlantic hurricane]]&nbsp;–
[[Great Hurricane of 1780]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Able (1951)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Alberto (1982)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Alberto (2000)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Alex (2004)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Alice (December 1954)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Allison (1995)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Anita]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Audrey]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Beulah]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Bob (1985)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Bonnie (1992)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Bonnie (1998)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Charley]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Charlie (1951)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Cindy (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Cleo]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Cleo (1958)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Danielle (2004)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Danny (2003)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane David]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Easy (1951)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Edouard (1996)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Ekeka (1992)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Emily (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Emmy (1976)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Epsilon (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Erin (2001)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Felix (1995)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Florence (1988)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Florence (2000)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Florence (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Flossy (1956)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Frances]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Georges]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Gerda (1969)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Gracie]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Helene (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Henri (1979)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Humberto (1995)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Humberto (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Ione]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Isidore]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Ivan]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Jeanne (1980)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Joan-Miriam]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Joyce (2000)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Karen (2001)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Karen (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Karl (2004)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Kate (2003)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Keith]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Klaus]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Klaus (1984)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Lili (1984)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Lili|Hurricane Lili (2002)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Maria (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Nate (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Nicole (1998)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Noel (2001)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Ophelia (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Philippe (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Subtropical Storm Andrea (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Subtropical Storm Nicole (2004)]]&nbsp;–
[[Subtropical Storm One (1982)]]&nbsp;–
[[Subtropical Storm One (1992)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Depression Nine (2000)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Depression Nine (2003)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Depression One (1992)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Depression Seven (2003)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Alberto (1988)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Alpha (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Ana (2003)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Arlene (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Arthur (2002)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Bertha (2002)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Beryl (1988)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Beryl (2000)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Beryl (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Bret (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Chantal (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Charley (1998)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Chris (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Cristobal (2002)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Cristobal (2008)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Danielle (1992)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Dean (2001)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Debby (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Delta (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Dolly (2002)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Doria (1971)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Elena (1979)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Erin (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Fabian (1991)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Fay (2002)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Franklin (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Gabrielle (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Gert (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Grace (2003)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Hanna (2002)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Harvey (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Hermine (2004)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Ingrid (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Isabel (1985)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Jerry (1995)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Jerry (2001)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Jerry (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Jose (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Josephine (2002)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Josephine (2008)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Keith (1988)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Larry (2003)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Lee (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Leslie (2000)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Lorenzo (2001)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Marco (1990)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Matthew (2004)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Melissa (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Mindy (2003)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Nicholas (2003)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Odette (2003)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Olga (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Peter (2003)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Tammy (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Zeta (2005)]]&nbsp;–
<small> (128&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Tropical cyclones: Eastern Pacific=====
[[1939 California tropical storm]]&nbsp;–
[[1959 Mexican hurricane]]&nbsp;–
[[1975 Pacific Northwest hurricane]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Ava (1973)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Bud (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Carlotta (2000)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Cosme (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Daniel (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Elida (2002)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Elida (2008)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Emilia (1994)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Fefa]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Fico]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Gilma (1994)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Guillermo (1997)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Henriette (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Hernan (2002)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Hernan (2008)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Ignacio (2003)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Ivo (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Iwa]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Jimena (2003)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Kenneth (2005)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Lester (1998)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Linda (1997)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Liza (1968)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Madeline (1998)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Marty (2003)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Naomi (1968)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Nina (1957)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Patsy (1959)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Paul (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Pauline]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Rick (1997)]]&nbsp;–
[[Hurricane Sergio (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Aletta (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Barbara (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Douglas (2008)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Emilia (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Erick (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Fabio (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Gilma (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Julio (2008)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Karina (2008)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Kiko (2007)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Miriam (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Norman (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Tropical Storm Lester (2004)]]&nbsp;-
<small> (48&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Tropical cyclones: Northwestern Pacific=====
[[Tropical Storm Bilis]]&nbsp;–
[[Typhoon Ewiniar (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Typhoon Isa (1997)]]&nbsp;–
[[Typhoon Matsa]]&nbsp;–
[[Typhoon Neoguri (2008)]]&nbsp;–
[[Typhoon Saomai]]&nbsp;–
[[Typhoon Shanshan (2006)]]&nbsp;–
[[Typhoon Tip]]&nbsp;–
[[Typhoon Xangsane]]&nbsp;–
<small> (9&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Tropical cyclones: Southwestern Pacific, Southwestern and Northern Indian=====
[[2002 Oman cyclone]]&nbsp;–
[[Cyclone Akash]]&nbsp;–
[[Cyclone Bola]]&nbsp;–
[[Cyclone Gamede]]&nbsp;–
[[Cyclone Glenda]]&nbsp;–
[[Cyclone Gonu]]&nbsp;–
[[Cyclone Graham]]&nbsp;–
[[Cyclone Inigo]]&nbsp;–
[[Cyclone Jokwe]]&nbsp;–
[[Cyclone Percy]]&nbsp;–
[[Cyclone Rosita]]&nbsp;–
<small> (11&nbsp;articles)</small>

===== Weather =====
[[1997 Red River Flood in the United States]]&nbsp;–
[[2008 Tanana Valley flood]]&nbsp;–
[[Jet stream]]&nbsp;–
[[Station model]]&nbsp;–
[[Weather]]&nbsp;–
[[Weather front]]&nbsp;–
<small> (6&nbsp;articles)</small>

===== Wind and winter storms =====
[[1947 Sydney hailstorm]]&nbsp;–
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[[1998 Comfrey – St. Peter tornado outbreak]]&nbsp;–
[[2008 Super Tuesday tornado outbreak]]&nbsp;–
[[April 6–8, 2006 Tornado Outbreak]]&nbsp;–
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[[February 2007 North America Winter Storm]]&nbsp;–
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[[Great Storm of 1975]]&nbsp;–
[[June 2008 tornado outbreak sequence]]&nbsp;–
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=====Astronomical observation and space exploration=====
[[Apollo 11]]&nbsp;–
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=====Astronomy and astrophysics=====
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<small> (15&nbsp;articles)</small>

=====Solar system=====
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=====Stars, galaxies and extrasolar objects=====
[[16 Cygni]]&nbsp;–
[[16 Cygni Bb]]&nbsp;–
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[[Pleiades]]&nbsp;–
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Revision as of 23:42, 13 October 2008

Rhetoric has had many definitions; no simple definition can do it justice.[1] In fact, the very act of defining has itself been a central part of rhetoric: It appears among Aristotle's topoi, heuristics for rhetorical invention.[2] For Aristotle, rhetoric is the art of practical wisdom and decision making, a counterpart to logic and a branch of politics. [3] The word is derived from the ancient Greek eiro, which means "I say." In its broadest sense, rhetoric concerns human discourse.[4]

Rhetoric as a Civic Art

In eras of European history, rhetoric concerned itself with persuasion in public and political settings such as assemblies and courts. Because of its associations with democratic institutions, rhetoric is commonly said to flourish in open and democratic societies with rights of free speech, free assembly, and political enfranchisement for some portion of the population. [5]

Rhetoric as a Course of Study

As a course of study, rhetoric trains students to speak and/or write effectively. The rhetorical curriculum is nearly as old as the rhetorical tradition itself. Over its many centuries, the curriculum has been transformed in a number of ways, but, in general, it has emphasized the study of principles and rules of composition as a means for moving audiences. In Greece, rhetoric originated in a school of pre-Socratic philosophers known as Sophists circa 600 BC. It was later taught in the Roman Empire and during the Middle Ages as one of the three original liberal arts or trivium (along with logic and grammar). [6]

Rhetoric as Epistemology

The relationship between rhetoric and knowledge is one of its oldest and most interesting problems. The contemporary stereotype of rhetoric as "empty speech" or "empty words" reflects a radicial division of rhetoric from knowledge, a division that has had influential adherents within the rhetorical tradition, most notably Plato in ancient Athens, and Peter Ramus in 16C Renaissance Europe.[7] It is a division that has been strongly associated with Enlightenment thinking about language.

Most rhetoricians, however, see a closer relationship between rhetoric and knowledge. Researchers in the rhetoric of science, for instance, have shown how the two are difficult to separate, and how discourse helps to create knowledge.[8] This perspective is often called "epistemic rhetoric," where communication among interlocutors is fundamental to the creation of knowledge in communities.

Emphasizing this close relationship between discourse and knowledge, contemporary rhetoricians have been associated with a number of philosophical and social scientific theories that see language and discourse as central to, rather than in conflict with knowledge-making (See Critical Theory, Post-structuralism, Hermeneutics, Reflexivity).

The Scope of Rhetoric

Contemporary studies of rhetoric address a more diverse range of domains than was the case in ancient times. While classical rhetoric trained speakers to be effective persuaders in public forums and institutions like courtrooms and assemblies, contemporary rhetoric investigates human discourse writ large. Rhetoricians have studied the discourses of a wide variety of domains, including the natural and social sciences, fine art, religion, journalism, fiction, history, cartography, and architecture, along with the more traditional domains of politics and the law. [9]

Public relations, lobbying, law, marketing, professional and technical writing, and advertising are modern professions that employ rhetorical practitioners.

The History of Rhetoric in Western Civilization

Ancient Greece

The earliest mention of oratorical skill occurs in Homer's Iliad, where heroes like Achilles, Hektor, and Odysseus were honored for their ability to advise and exhort their peers and followers (the Laos or army) in wise and appropriate action. With the rise of the democratic polis, speaking skill was adapted to the needs of the public and political life of cities in Ancient Greece, much of which revolved around the use of oratory as the medium through which political and judicial decisions were made, and through which philosophical ideas were developed and disseminated. For modern students today, it can be difficult to remember that the wide use and availability of written texts is a phenomenon that was just coming into vogue in Classical Greece. In Classical times, many of the great thinkers and political leaders performed their works before an audience, usually in the context of a competition or contest for fame, political influence, and cultural capital; in fact, many of them are known only through the texts that their students, followers, or detractors wrote down. As has already been noted, rhetor was the Greek term for orator: A rhetor was a citizen who regularly addressed juries and political assemblies and who was thus understood to have gained some knowledge about public speaking in the process, though in general facility with language was often referred to as logôn techne, "skill with arguments" or "verbal artistry." [10]

Rhetoric thus evolved as an important art, one that provided the orator with the forms, means, and strategies for persuading an audience of the correctness of the orator's arguments. Today the term rhetoric can be used at times to refer only to the form of argumentation, often with the pejorative connotation that rhetoric is a means of obscuring the truth. Classical philosophers believed quite the contrary: the skilled use of rhetoric was essential to the discovery of truths, because it provided the means of ordering and clarifying arguments.

The Sophists

Organized thought about public speaking began in Ancient Greece.[11] Possibly, the first study about the power of language may be attributed to the philosopher Empedocles (d. ca. 444 BC), whose theories on human knowledge would provide a basis for many future rhetoricians. The first written manual is attributed to Corax and his pupil Tisias. Their work, as well as that of many of the early rhetoricians, grew out of the courts of law; Tisias, for example, is believed to have written judicial speeches that others delivered in the courts. Teaching in oratory was popularized in the 5th century BC by itinerant teachers known as sophists, the best known of whom were Protagoras (c.481-420 BC), Gorgias (c.483-376 BC), and Isocrates (436-338 BC). The Sophists were a disparate group who travelled from city to city making public displays to attract students who were then charged a fee for their education. Their central focus was on logos or what we might broadly refer to as discourse, its functions and powers. They defined parts of speech, analyzed poetry, parsed close synonyms, invented argumentation strategies, and debated the nature of reality. They claimed to make their students "better," or, in other words, to teach virtue. They thus claimed that human "excellence" was not an accident of fate or a prerogative of noble birth, but an art or "techne" that could be taught and learned. They were thus among the first humanists. Several sophists also questioned received wisdom about the gods and the Greek culture, which they believed was taken for granted by Greeks of their time, making them among the first agnostics. For example, they argued that cultural practices were a function of convention or nomos rather than blood or birth or phusis. They argued even further that morality or immorality of any action could not be judged outside of the cultural context within which it occurred. The well-known phrase, "Man is the measure of all things" arises from this belief. One of their most famous, and infamous, doctrines has to do with probability and counter arguments. They taught that every argument could be countered with an opposing argument, that an argument's effectiveness derived from how "likely" it appeared to the audience (its probability of seeming true), and that any probability argument could be countered with an inverted probability argument. Thus, if it seemed likely that a strong, poor man were guilty of robbing a rich, weak man, the strong poor man could argue, on the contrary, that this very likelihood (that he would be a suspect) makes it unlikely that he committed the crime, since he would most likely be apprehended for the crime. They also taught and were known for their ability to make the weaker (or worse) argument the stronger (or better). Aristophanes famously parodies the clever inversions that sophists were known for in his play The Clouds.

The word "sophistry" developed strong negative connotations in ancient Greece that continue today, but in ancient Greece sophists were nevertheless popular and well-paid professionals, widely respected for their abilities but also widely criticized for their excesses.

See Jacqueline de Romilly, The Great Sophists in Periclean Athens (French orig. 1988; English trans. Clarendon Press/Oxford University Press, 1992).

Isocrates

Isocrates (436-338 BC), (not to be confused with the philosopher Socrates) like the sophists, taught public speaking as a means of human improvement, but he worked to distinguish himself from the Sophists, whom he saw as claiming far more than they could deliver. He suggested that while an art of virtue or excellence did exist, it was only one piece, and the least, in a process of self-improvement that relied much more heavily on native talent and desire, constant practice, and the imitation of good models. Isocrates believed that practice in speaking publicly about noble themes and important questions would function to improve the character of both speaker and audience while also offering the best service to a state. [12] He thus wrote his speeches as "models" for his students to imitate in the same way that poets might imitate Homer or Hesiod. His was the first permanent school in Athens and it is likely that Plato's Academy and Aristotle's Lyceum were founded in part as a response to Isocrates. Though he left no handbooks, his speeches ("Antidosis" and "Against the Sophists" are most relevant to students of rhetoric) became models of oratory (he was one of the canonical "Ten Attic Orators") and he had a marked influence on Cicero and Quintilian, and through them, on the entire educational system of the west.

Plato outlined the difference between true and false rhetoric.

Plato

Plato (427-347 BC) famously outlined the differences between true and false rhetoric in a number of dialogues, but especially the Gorgias and the Phaedrus. Both dialogues are complex and difficult, but in both Plato disputes the Sophistic notion that an art of persuasion, the art of the Sophists which he calls "rhetoric" (after the public speaker or rhêtôr), can exist independent of the art of dialectic. Plato claims that since Sophists appeal only to what seems likely or probable, rather than to what is true, they are not at all making their students and audiences "better," but simply flattering them with what they want to hear. While Plato's condemnation of rhetoric is clear in the Gorgias, in the Phaedrus he seems to suggest the possibility of a true art of rhetoric based upon the knowledge produced by dialectic, and he relies on such a dialectically informed rhetoric to appeal to the main character, Phaedrus, to take up philosophy. It is possible that in developing his own theory of knowledge, Plato coined the term "rhetoric" both to denounce what he saw as the false wisdom of the sophists, and to advance his own views on knowledge and method. Plato's animosity against the Sophists derives not only from their inflated claims to teach virtue and their reliance on appearances, but from the fact that his teacher, Socrates, was accused of being a sophist and ultimately sentenced to death for his teaching.

Aristotle

Plato's student Aristotle (384-322 BC) famously set forth an extended treatise on rhetoric that still repays careful study today.

In the first sentence of The Art of Rhetoric, Aristotle says that "rhetoric is the counterpart [literally, the antistrophe] of dialectic." As the "antistrophe" of a Greek ode responds to and is patterned after the structure of the "strophe" (they form two sections of the whole and are sung by two parts of the chorus), so the art of rhetoric follows and is structurally patterned after the art of dialectic because both are arts of discourse production. Thus, while dialectical methods are necessary to find truth in theoretical matters, rhetorical methods are required in practical matters such as adjudicating somebody's guilt or innocence when charged in a court of law, or adjudicating a prudent course of action to be taken in a deliberative assembly. For Plato and Aristotle, dialectic involves persuasion, so when Aristotle says that rhetoric is the antistrophe of dialectic, he means that rhetoric as he uses the term has a domain or scope of application that is parallel to but different from the domain or scope of application of dialectic. In Nietzsche Humanist (1998: 129), Claude Pavur explains that "[t]he Greek prefix 'anti' does not merely designate opposition, but it can also mean 'in place of.'" When Aristotle characterizes rhetoric as the antistrophe of dialectic, he no doubt means that rhetoric is used in place of dialectic when we are discussing civic issues in a court of law or in a legislative assembly. The domain of rhetoric is civic affairs and practical decision making in civic affairs, not theoretical considerations of operational definitions of terms and clarification of thought -- these, for him, are in the domain of dialectic.

Aristotle's treatise on rhetoric is an attempt to systematically describe civic rhetoric as a human art or skill (techne). His definition of rhetoric as "the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion," essentially a mode of discovery, seems to limit the art to the inventional process, and Aristotle heavily emphasizes the logical aspect of this process. But the treatise in fact also discusses not only elements of style and (briefly) delivery, but also emotional appeals (pathos) and characterological appeals (ethos). He thus identifies three steps or "offices" of rhetoric--invention, arrangement, and style--and three different types of rhetorical proof:

  • ethos: how the character and credibility of a speaker influence an audience to consider him to be believable.
    • This could be any position in which the speaker--from being a college professor of the subject, to being an acquaintance of person who experienced the matter in question--knows about the topic.
    • For instance, when a magazine claims that, A MIT professor predicts that the robotic era is coming in 2050, the use of big name "MIT" (a world-renown college for advanced research in math, science, and technology) establishes the strong credibility.
  • pathos: the use of emotional appeals to alter the audience's judgment.
    • This can be done through metaphor, amplification, storytelling, or presenting the topic in a way that evokes strong emotions in the audience.
  • logos: the use of reasoning, either inductive or deductive, to construct an argument.
    • Logos appeals include appeals to statistics, math, logic, and objectivity. For instance, when advertisements claim that their product is 37% more effective than the competition, they are making a logical appeal.
    • Inductive reasoning uses examples (historical, mythical, or hypothetical) to draw conclusions.
    • Deductive reasoning, or "enthymematic" reasoning, uses generally accepted propositions to derive specific conclusions. The term logic evolved from logos. Aristotle emphasized enthymematic reasoning as central to the process of rhetorical invention, though later rhetorical theorists placed much less emphasis on it.

Aristotle also identifies three different types or genres of civic rhetoric: forensic (also known as judicial, was concerned with determining truth or falsity of events that took place in the past, issues of guilt), deliberative (also known as political, was concerned with determining whether or not particular actions should or should not be taken in the future), and epideictic (also known as ceremonial, was concerned with praise and blame, values, right and wrong, demonstrating beauty and skill in the present).

One of the most fruitful of Aristotelian doctrines was the idea of topics (also referred to as common topics or commonplaces). Though the term had a wide range of application (as a memory technique or compositional exercise, for example) it most often referred to the "seats of argument"--the list of categories of thought or modes of reasoning--that a speaker could use in order to generate arguments or proofs. The topics were thus a heuristic or inventional tool designed to help speakers categorize and thus better retain and apply frequently used types of argument. For example, since we often see effects as "like" their causes, one way to invent an argument (about a future effect) is by discussing the cause (which it will be "like"). This and other rhetorical topics derive from Aristotle's belief that there are certain predictable ways in which humans (particularly non-specialists) draw conclusions from premises. Based upon and adapted from his dialectical Topics, the rhetorical topics became a central feature of later rhetorical theorizing, most famously in Cicero's work of that name.

See Eugene Garver, Aristotle's Rhetoric: An Art of Character (University of Chicago Press,1994).

Roman rhetoricians

The Romans, for whom oration also became an important part of public life, saw much value in Greek rhetoric, hiring Greek rhetoricians to teach in their schools and as private tutors, and imitating and adapting Greek rhetorical works in Latin and with Roman examples. Roman rhetoric thus largely extends upon and develops its Greek roots, though it tends to prefer practical advice to the theoretical speculations of Greek rhetoricians. Cicero (106-43 BC) and Quintilian (35-100 AD) were chief among Roman rhetoricians, and their work is an extension of sophistic, Isocratean, Platonic and Aristotelian rhetorical theory.

Latin rhetoric was developed out of the Rhodian schools of rhetoric. In the second century BC, Rhodes became an important educational center, particularly of rhetoric, and the sons of noble Roman families studied there.

Although not widely read in Roman times, the Rhetorica ad Herennium (sometimes attributed to Cicero, but probably not his work) is a notable early work on Latin rhetoric. Its author was probably a Latin rhetorician in Rhodes, and for the first time we see a systematic treatment of Latin elocutio. The Ad Herennium provides a glimpse into the early development of Latin rhetoric, and in the Middle Ages and Renaissance, it achieved wide publication as one of the basic school texts on rhetoric.

Whether or not he wrote the Rhetorica ad Herennium, Cicero, along with Quintilian (the most influential Roman teacher of rhetoric), is considered one of the most important Roman rhetoricians. His works include the early and very influential De Inventione (On Invention, often read alongside the Ad Herennium as the two basic texts of rhetorical theory throughout the Middle Ages and into the Renaissance), De Oratore (a fuller statement of rhetorical principles in dialogue form), Topics (a rhetorical treatment of common topics, highly influential through the Renaissance), Brutus (a discussion of famous orators) and Orator (a defense of Cicero's style). Cicero also left a large body of speeches and letters which would establish the outlines of Latin eloquence and style for generations to come. It was the rediscovery of Cicero's speeches (such as the defence of Archias) and letters (to Atticus) by Italians like Petrarch that, in part, ignited the cultural innovations that we know as the Renaissance.

Quintilian's career began as a pleader in the courts of law; his reputation grew so great that Vespasian created a chair of rhetoric for him in Rome. The culmination of his life's work was the Institutio oratoria (or Institutes of Oratory), a lengthy treatise on the training of the orator in which he discusses the training of the "perfect" orator from birth to old age and, in the process, reviews the doctrines and opinions of many influential rhetoricians who preceded him.

In the Institutes, Quintilian organizes rhetorical study through the stages of education that an aspiring orator would undergo, beginning with the selection of a nurse. Aspects of elementary education (training in reading and writing, grammar, and literary criticism) are followed by preliminary rhetorical exercises in composition (the progymnasmata) that include maxims and fables, narratives and comparisons, and finally full legal or political speeches. The delivery of speeches within the context of education or for entertainment purposes became widespread and popular under the term "declamation." Rhetorical training proper was categorized under five canons that would persist for centuries in academic circles:

  • Inventio (invention) is the process that leads to the development and refinement of an argument.
  • Once arguments are developed, dispositio (disposition, or arrangement) is used to determine how it should be organized for greatest effect, usually beginning with the exordium.
  • Once the speech content is known and the structure is determined, the next steps involve elocutio (style) and pronuntiatio (presentation).
  • Memoria (memory) comes to play as the speaker recalls each of these elements during the speech.
  • Actio (delivery) is the final step as the speech is presented in a gracious and pleasing way to the audience - the Grand Style.

This work was available only in fragments in medieval times, but the discovery of a complete copy at Abbey of St. Gall in 1416 led to its emergence as one of the most influential works on rhetoric during the Renaissance.

Quintilian's work attempts to describe not just the art of rhetoric, but the formation of the perfect orator as a politically active, virtuous, publicly minded citizen. His emphasis on the real life application of rhetorical training was in part nostalgia for the days when rhetoric was an important political tool, and in part a reaction against the growing tendency in Roman schools toward standardization of themes and techniques and increasing separation between school exercises and actual legal practice, a tendency equally powerful today in public schools and law schools alike. At the same time that rhetoric was becoming divorced from political decision making, rhetoric rose as a culturally vibrant and important mode of entertainment and cultural criticism in a movement known as the "second sophistic," a development which gave rise to the charge (made by Quintilian and others) that teachers were emphasizing ornamentation over substance in rhetoric. Quintilian's masterful work was not enough to curb this movement, but his dismayed response cemented the scholarly opinion that 2nd century C.E. rhetoric fell into decadence and political irrelevance, despite its wide popularity and cultural importance.

A valuable collection of studies can be found in Stanley E. Porter, ed., Handbook of Classical Rhetoric in the Hellenistic Period 330 B.C. - A.D. 400 (Brill, 1997).

Rhetoric from the Medieval period to the Enlightenment

After the breakup of the western Roman Empire, the study of rhetoric continued to be central to the study of the verbal arts; but the study of the verbal arts went into decline for several centuries, followed eventually by a gradual rise in formal education, culminating in the rise of medieval universities. But rhetoric transmuted during this period into the arts of letter writing (ars dictaminis) and sermon writing (ars praedicandi). As part of the trivium, rhetoric was secondary to the study of logic, and its study was highly scholastic: students were given repetitive exercises in the creation of discourses on historical subjects (suasoriae) or on classic legal questions (controversiae).

Augustine of Hippo

Although he is not commonly regarded as a rhetorician, St. Augustine (354-430) was trained in rhetoric and was at one time a professor of Latin rhetoric in Milan. After his conversion to Christianity, he became interested in using these "pagan" arts for spreading his religion. This new use of rhetoric is explored in the Fourth Book of his De Doctrina Christiana, which laid the foundation of what would become homiletics, the rhetoric of the sermon. Augustine begins the book by asking why "the power of eloquence, which is so efficacious in pleading either for the erroneous cause or the right", should not be used for righteous purposes (IV.3).

One early concern of the medieval Christian church was its attitude to classical rhetoric itself. Jerome (d. 420) complained, "What has Horace to do with the Psalms, Virgil with the Gospels, Cicero with the Apostles?" Augustine is also remembered for arguing for the preservation of pagan works and fostering a church tradition which led to conservation of numerous pre-Christian rhetorical writings.

Rhetoric would not regain its classical heights until the renaissance, but new writings did advance rhetorical thought. Boethius (480?-524), in his brief Overview of the Structure of Rhetoric, continues Aristotle's taxonomy by placing rhetoric in subordination to philosophical argument or dialectic.[13] One positive consequence of the Crusades was the introduction of Arab scholarship and renewed interest in Aristotle, leading to what some historians call the twelfth century renaissance. A number of medieval grammars and studies of poetry and rhetoric appeared.

Late medieval rhetorical writings include those of St. Thomas Aquinas (1225?-1294), Matthew of Vendome (Ars Versificatoria, 1175?), and Geoffrey of Vinsauf (Poetria Nova, 1200-1216). Pre-modern female rhetoricians, outside of Socrates' friend Aspasia, are rare; but medieval rhetoric produced by women either in religious orders, such as Julian of Norwich (d. 1415), or the very well-connected Christine de Pizan (1364?-1430?), did occur if not always recorded in writing.

In his 1943 Cambridge University doctoral dissertation in English, Canadian Marshall McLuhan (1911-1980) surveys the verbal arts from approximately the time of Cicero down to the time of Thomas Nashe (1567-1600?).[14] His dissertation is still noteworthy for undertaking to study the history of the verbal arts together as the trivium, even though the developments that he surveys have been studied in greater detail since he undertook his study. As noted below, McLuhan became one of the most widely publicized thinkers in the 20th century, so it is important to note his scholarly roots in the study of the history of rhetoric and dialectic.

Another interesting record of medieval rhetorical thought can be seen in the many animal debate poems popular in England and the continent during the Middle Ages, such as The Owl and the Nightingale (13th century) and Geoffrey Chaucer's Parliament of Fowls (1382?).

Sixteenth century

Walter J. Ong's encyclopedia article "Humanism" in the 1967 New Catholic Encyclopedia provides a well-informed survey of Renaissance humanism, which defined itself broadly as disfavoring medieval scholastic logic and dialectic and as favoring instead the study of classical Latin style and grammar and philology and rhetoric. (Reprinted in Ong's Faith and Contexts (Scholars Press, 1999; 4: 69-91.))

Desiderius Erasmus was an exponent of classical rhetoric

One influential figure in the rebirth of interest in classical rhetoric was Erasmus (c.1466-1536). His 1512 work, De Duplici Copia Verborum et Rerum (also known as Copia: Foundations of the Abundant Style), was widely published (it went through more than 150 editions throughout Europe) and became one of the basic school texts on the subject. Its treatment of rhetoric is less comprehensive than the classic works of antiquity, but provides a traditional treatment of res-verba (matter and form): its first book treats the subject of elocutio, showing the student how to use schemes and tropes; the second book covers inventio. Much of the emphasis is on abundance of variation (copia means "plenty" or "abundance", as in copious or cornucopia), so both books focus on ways to introduce the maximum amount of variety into discourse. For instance, in one section of the De Copia, Erasmus presents two hundred variations of the sentence "Semper, dum vivam, tui meminero". Another of his works, the extremely popular The Praise of Folly, also had considerable influence on the teaching of rhetoric in the later sixteenth century. Its orations in favour of qualities such as madness spawned a type of exercise popular in Elizabethan grammar schools, later called adoxography, which required pupils to compose passages in praise of useless things.

Juan Luis Vives (1492 - 1540) also helped shape the study of rhetoric in England. A Spaniard, he was appointed in 1523 to the Lectureship of Rhetoric at Oxford by Cardinal Wolsey, and was entrusted by Henry VIII to be one of the tutors of Mary. Vives fell into disfavor when Henry VIII divorced Catherine of Aragon and left England in 1528. His best-known work was a book on education, De Disciplinis, published in 1531, and his writings on rhetoric included Rhetoricae, sive De Ratione Dicendi, Libri Tres (1533), De Consultatione (1533), and a rhetoric on letter writing, De Conscribendis Epistolas (1536).

It is likely that many well-known English writers would have been exposed to the works of Erasmus and Vives (as well as those of the Classical rhetoricians) in their schooling, which was conducted in Latin (not English) and often included some study of Greek and placed considerable emphasis on rhetoric. See, for example, T.W. Baldwin's William Shakspere's Small Latine and Lesse Greeke, 2 vols. (University of Illinois Press, 1944).

The mid-1500s saw the rise of vernacular rhetorics — those written in English rather than in the Classical languages; adoption of works in English was slow, however, due to the strong orientation toward Latin and Greek. A successful early text was Thomas Wilson's The Arte of Rhetorique (1553), which presents a traditional treatment of rhetoric. For instance, Wilson presents the five canons of rhetoric (Invention, Disposition, Elocutio, Memoria, and Utterance or Actio). Other notable works included Angel Day's The English Secretorie (1586, 1592), George Puttenham's The Arte of English Poesie (1589), and Richard Rainholde's Foundacion of Rhetorike (1563).

During this same period, a movement began that would change the organization of the school curriculum in Protestant and especially Puritan circles and lead to rhetoric losing its central place. A French scholar, Pierre de la Ramée, in Latin Petrus Ramus (1515-1572), dissatisfied with what he saw as the overly broad and redundant organization of the trivium, proposed a new curriculum. In his scheme of things, the five components of rhetoric no longer lived under the common heading of rhetoric. Instead, invention and disposition were determined to fall exclusively under the heading of dialectic, while style, delivery, and memory were all that remained for rhetoric. See Walter J. Ong, Ramus, Method, and the Decay of Dialogue: From the Art of Discourse to the Art of Reason (Harvard University Press, 1958; reissued by the University of Chicago Press, 2004, with a new foreword by Adrian Johns). Ramus, rightly accused of sodomy and erroneously of atheism, was martyred during the French Wars of Religion. His teachings, seen as inimical to Catholicism, were short-lived in France but found a fertile ground in the Netherlands, Germany and England.[15]

John Milton, English poet and rhetorician

One of Ramus' French followers, Audomarus Talaeus (Omer Talon) published his rhetoric, Institutiones Oratoriae, in 1544. This work provided a simple presentation of rhetoric that emphasized the treatment of style, and became so popular that it was mentioned in John Brinsley's (1612) Ludus literarius; or The Grammar Schoole as being the "most used in the best schooles." Many other Ramist rhetorics followed in the next half-century, and by the 1600s, their approach became the primary method of teaching rhetoric in Protestant and especially Puritan circles. See Walter J. Ong, Ramus and Talon Inventory (Harvard University Press, 1958); Joseph S. Freedman, Philosophy and the Art Europe, 1500-1700: Teaching and Texts at Schools and Universities (Ashgate, 1999). John Milton (1608-1674) wrote a textbook in logic or dialectic in Latin based on Ramus' work, which has now been translated into English by Walter J. Ong and Charles J. Ermatinger in The Complete Prose Works of John Milton (Yale University Press, 1982; 8: 206-407), with a lengthy introduction by Ong (144-205). The introduction is reprinted in Ong's Faith and Contexts (Scholars Press, 1999; 4: 111-41).

Ramism could not exert any influence on the established Catholic schools and universities, which remained by and large stuck in Scholasticism, or on the new Catholic schools and universities founded by members of the religious orders known as the Society of Jesus or the Oratorians, as can be seen in the Jesuit curriculum (in use right up to the 19th century, across the Christian world) known as the Ratio Studiorum (that Claude Pavur, S.J., has recently translated into English, with the Latin text in the parallel column on each page (St. Louis: Institute of Jesuit Sources, 2005). If the influence of Cicero and Quintilian permeates the Ratio Studiorum, it is through the lenses of devotion and the militancy of the Counter-Reformation. The Ratio was indeed imbued with a sense of the divine, of the incarnate logos, that is of rhetoric as an eloquent and humane means to reach further devotion and further action in the Christian city, which was absent from Ramist formalism. The Ratio is, in rhetoric, the answer to St Ignatius Loyola's practice, in devotion, of "spiritual exercizes". This complex oratorical-prayer system is absent from Ramism.

The English Tradition in the Seventeenth Century

In New England and at Harvard College (founded 1636), Ramus and his followers dominated, as Perry Miller shows in The New England Mind: The Seventeenth Century (Harvard University Press, 1939). However, in England, several writers influenced the course of rhetoric during the seventeenth century, many of them carrying forward the dichotomy that had been set forth by Ramus and his followers during the preceding decades. Of greater importance is that this century saw the development of a modern, vernacular style that looked to English, rather than to Greek, Latin, or French models.

Francis Bacon (1561-1626), although not a rhetorician, contributed to the field in his writings. One of the concerns of the age was to find a suitable style for the discussion of scientific topics, which needed above all a clear exposition of facts and arguments, rather than the ornate style favored at the time. Bacon in his The Advancement of Learning criticized those who are preoccupied with style rather than "the weight of matter, worth of subject, soundness of argument, life of invention, or depth of judgment." On matters of style, he proposed that the style conform to the subject matter and to the audience, that simple words be employed whenever possible, and that the style should be agreeable. See Lisa Jardine, Francis Bacon: Discovery and the Art of Discourse (Cambridge University Press, 1975).

Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) also wrote on rhetoric. Along with a shortened translation of Aristotle's Rhetoric, Hobbes also produced a number of other works on the subject. Sharply contrarian on many subjects, Hobbes, like Bacon, also promoted a simpler and more natural style that used figures of speech sparingly.

Perhaps the most influential development in English style came out of the work of the Royal Society (founded in 1660), which in 1664 set up a committee to improve the English language. Among the committee's members were John Evelyn (1620-1706), Thomas Sprat (1635-1713), and John Dryden (1631-1700). Sprat regarded "fine speaking" as a disease, and thought that a proper style should "reject all amplifications, digressions, and swellings of style" and instead "return back to a primitive purity and shortness" (History of the Royal Society, 1667).

While the work of this committee never went beyond planning, John Dryden is often credited with creating and exemplifying a new and modern English style. His central tenet was that the style should be proper "to the occasion, the subject, and the persons." As such, he advocated the use of English words whenever possible instead of foreign ones, as well as vernacular, rather than Latinate, syntax. His own prose (and his poetry) became exemplars of this new style.

Modern Rhetoric

At the turn of the twentieth century, there was a revival of rhetorical study manifested in the establishment of departments of rhetoric and speech at academic institutions, as well as the formation of national and international professional organizations. Theorists generally agree that a significant reason for the revival of the study of rhetoric was the renewed importance of language and persuasion in the increasingly mediated environment of the twentieth century (see Linguistic turn). The rise of advertising and of mass media such as photography, telegraphy, radio, and film brought rhetoric more prominently into people's lives.

Theorists and Theories

Chaim Perelman and Lucie Olbrechts-Tyteca

Chaim Perelman was a philosopher of law, who studied, taught, and lived most of his life in Brussels. He was among the most important argumentation theorists of the twentieth century. His chief work is the Traité de l'argumentation - la nouvelle rhétorique (1958), with Lucie Olbrechts-Tyteca, which was translated into English as The New Rhetoric: A Treatise on Argumentation, by John Wilkinson and Purcell Weaver (1969). Perelman and Olbrechts-Tyteca move rhetoric from the periphery to the center of argumentation theory. Among their most influential concepts are "the universal audience," "quasi-logical argument," and "presence."

Henry Johnstone Jr.

Henry Johnstone Jr. was an American philosopher and rhetorician known especially for his notion of the "rhetorical wedge" and his re-evaluation of the ad hominem fallacy. He was the founder and longtime editor of the journal Philosophy and Rhetoric. [16]

Kenneth Burke

Kenneth Burke was a rhetorical theorist, philosopher, and poet. Many of his works are central to modern rhetorical theory: A Rhetoric of Motives (1969), A Grammar of Motives (1945), Language as Symbolic Action (1966), and Counterstatement (1931). Among his influential concepts are "identification," "consubstantiality," and the "dramatic pentad."

LLoyd Bitzer

LLoyd Bitzer is a rhetorician who is best known for his notion of "the rhetorical situation." [17]

Marshall McLuhan

Marshall McLuhan was a media theorist whose discoveries are important to the study of rhetoric. McLuhan's famous dictum "the medium is the message" highlighted the important role of the mass media in modern communication. [18]

I.A. Richards

I.A. Richards was a literary critic and rhetorician. His Philosophy of Rhetoric is an important text in modern rhetorical theory.

Stephen Toulmin

Stephen Toulmin is a philosopher whose models of argumentation have had great influence on modern rhetorical theory. His Uses of Argument is an important text in modern rhetorical theory and argumentation theory.[19]

Methods of Analysis

Rhetorical Criticism

The process of sytematically investigating and explaining symbolic acts and artifacts for the purpose of understanding rhetorical process

Conversation Analysis

Discourse Analysis

Argument Reconstruction

French Rhetoric in the Modern and Contemporary Periods

Rhetoric was part of the curriculum in Jesuit and, to a lesser extent, Oratorian colleges until the French Revolution. For Jesuits, right from the foundation, in France, of the Society, rhetoric was an integral part of the training of young men toward taking up leadership positions in the Church and in State institutions, as Marc Fumaroli has shown it in his foundational Age de l’éloquence (1980). The Oratorians, by contrast, reserved it a lesser place, in part due to the stress they placed on modern languages acquisition and a more sensualist philosophy (Bernard Lamy’s Rhetoric is an excellent example of their approach).Nonetheless, in the 18th Century, rhetoric was the armature and crowning of college education, with works such as Rollin’s Treatise of Studies achieving a wide and enduring fame across the Continent.[20]

The French Revolution, however, turned this around. Philosophers like Condorcet, who drafted the French revolutionary chart for a people’s education under the rule of reason, dismissed rhetoric as an instrument of oppression in the hands of clerics in particular. The Revolution went as far as suppressing the Bar, arguing that forensic rhetoric did disservice to a rational system of justice, by allowing fallacies and emotions to come into play. Nonetheless, as later historians of the 19th century were keen to explain, the Revolution was a high moment of eloquence and rhetorical prowess, yet, against a background of rejection of rhetoric.

Under the First Empire and its wide ranging educational reforms, imposed on or imitated across the Continent, rhetoric regained little ground. In fact instructions to the newly founded Polytechnic School, tasked with training the scientific and technical elites, made it clear that written reporting was to supersede oral reporting. Rhetoric re-entered the college curriculum in fits and starts, but never regained the prominence it enjoyed under the ancien régime, although the penultimate year of college education was known as the Class of Rhetoric. When manuals were redrafted in the mid-century, in particular after the 1848 Revolution, care was taken by writers in charge of formulating a national curriculum to distance their approach to rhetoric from that of the Church seen as an agent of conservatism and reactionary politics. By the end of the 1870s, a major change had taken place: philosophy, of the rationalist or eclectic kind, by and large Kantian, had taken over rhetoric as the true terminal stage in secondary education, (the so-called Class of Philosophy bridged college and university education). Rhetoric was then relegated to the study of literary figures of speech, a discipline later on taught as Stylistics within the French literature curriculum. More decisively, in 1890 a new standard written exercise superseded the rhetorical exercises of speech writing, letter writing and narration. The new genre, called dissertation, had been invented, in 1866, for the purpose of rational argument in the philosophy class. Typically, in a dissertation, a question is asked, such as: “Is history a sign of humanity’s freedom?” The structure of a dissertation consists in an introduction that elucidates the basic definitions involved in the question as set, followed by an argument or thesis, a counter-argument or antithesis, and a resolving argument or synthesis that is not a compromise between the former but the production of a new argument, ending with a conclusion that does not sum up the points but opens onto a new problem. The dissertation design was influenced by Hegelianism. It remains today the standard of writing in the humanities.

By the beginning of the 20th century rhetoric was fast losing the remains of its former importance, to be taken out of the school curriculum altogether at the time of the Separation of State and Churches (1905) – part of the argument was indeed that rhetoric remained the last element of irrationality, driven by religious arguments, in what was perceived as inimical to Republican education. The move initiated in 1789 found its resolution in 1902 when rhetoric is expunged from all curricula. However, it must be noted that, at the same time, Aristotelian rhetoric, owing to a revival of Thomistic philosophy initiated by Rome, regained ground in what was left of Catholic education in France, in particular at the prestigious Faculty of Theology of Paris, now a private entity. Yet, for all intents and purposes, rhetoric vanished from the French scene, educational or intellectual, for some 60 years.

In the early 1960s a change began to take place, as the word rhetoric, let alone the body of knowledge it covers, started to be used again, in a modest and near confidential way. The new linguistic turn, through the rise of semiotics as well as structural linguistics, brought to the fore a new interest in figures of speech as signs, the metaphor in particular (in the works of Roman Jakobson, Michel Charles, Gérard Genette) while famed Structuralist Roland Barthes, a classicist by training, perceived how some basic elements of rhetoric could be of use in the study of narratives, fashion and ideology. Knowledge of rhetoric was so dim in the early 1970s, that his short memoir on rhetoric was seen as highly innovative. Basic as it was, it did help rhetoric regain some currency in avant-garde circles. Psycho-analyst Jacques Lacan, his contemporary, makes references to rhetoric, in particular to the Pre-Socratics. Philosopher Jacques Derrida wrote on Voice.

However, at the same time, more profound work was taking place that, eventually, gave rise to the French school of rhetoric as it exists today.[21]

This rhetorical revival took place on two fronts.[22] Firstly, in the area of 17th century French studies, the mainstay of French literary education, awareness grew that rhetoric was necessary to push further the limits of knowledge, and also provide an antidote to Structuralism and its denial of historicism in culture. This was the pioneering work of Marc Fumaroli who, building on the work of classicist and Neo-Latinist Alain Michel and French scholars such as Roger Zuber, published his famed Age de l’Eloquence (1980), was one of the founders of the International Society for the History of Rhetoric and was eventually elevated to a chair in rhetoric at the prestigious College de France. He is the editor in chief of a monumental History of Rhetoric in Modern Europe.[23] His disciples form the second generation,[24] with rhetoricians such as Françoise Waquet, Delphine Denis both of the Sorbonne, or Philippe-Joseph Salazar[2] until recently at Derrida's College international de philosophie. Secondly, in the area of Classical studies, Latin scholars, in the wake of Alain Michel, fostered a renewal in Cicero studies, breaking away from a pure literary reading of his orations, in an attempt to embed Cicero in European ethics, while, among Greek scholars literary historian and philologist Jacques Bompaire, philologist and philosopher E. Dupréel and, somewhat later and in a more popular fashion, historian of literature Jacqueline de Romilly pioneered new studies in the Sophists and the Second Sophistic. The second generation of Classicists, often trained in philosophy as well (following Heidegger and Derrida, mainly), built on their work, with authors such as Marcel Detienne(now at Johns Hopkins), Nicole Loraux (d. in 2006), Medievalist and logician Alain De Libera (Geneva), Ciceronian scholar Carlos Lévy (Sorbonne, Paris) and Barbara Cassin (Collége international de philosophie, Paris).[25] Sociologist of science Bruno Latour and economist Romain Laufer may also be considered part of, or close to this group. Links between the two strands, the literary and the philosophical, of the French school of rhetoric are strong and collaborative and bear witness to the revival of rhetoric in France.[26]

Rhetoric Beyond Western Civilization

Indian and Chinese Rhetoric

See also

3

Miscellaneous terms

4

Political speech resources

References

Primary texts

The locus classicus for Greek and Latin primary texts on rhetoric is the Loeb Classical Library of the Harvard University Press, published with an English translation on the facing page. For other translations, see the references in each author's Wikipedia entry.

Available online texts include:

Notes

  1. ^ The definition of rhetoric is a controversial subject within the field and has given rise to philological battles over its meaning in Ancient Greece. See, for instance, Johnstone, Henry W. Jr. (1995). "On Schiappa versus Poulakos." Rhetoric Review. 14:2. (Spring), 438-440.
  2. ^ The rhetorical topic of "genus" motivates definitional arguments: "Another line of proof is secured by defining your terms."(Aristotle Rhetoric, II:23,7)
  3. ^ "...rhetoric is a combination of the science of logic and of the ethical branch of politics..." | Aristotle. Rhetoric. (trans. W. Rhys Roberts). I:4:1359.
  4. ^ Young, R. E., Becker, A. L., & Pike, K. L. (1970). Rhetoric : discovery and change. New York,: Harcourt Brace & World. p. 1
  5. ^ Garsten, B. (2005). Saving Persuasion: A Defense of Rhetoric and Judgment. Harvard UP. pp. 1-2.; Katula, R.A. (1995). Greek Democracy and the Study of Rhetoric. In Murphy, J.J. and Katula, R.A. (eds.) A Synoptic History of Classical Rhetoric. Hermagoras Press. 3-16. pp. 3-4.
  6. ^ cf. Conley, T.M. (1990) Rhetoric in the European Tradition. University of Chicago Press.; Kennedy, G.A. (1994). A New History of Classical Rhetoric. Princeton University Press.
  7. ^ cf. Kennedy, G.A. (1994). A New History of Classical Rhetoric. Princeton University Press., pp. 30-43.; Ong, W.J. (2004). Ramus, Method, and the Decay of Dialogue: From the Art of Discourse to the Art of Reason. University of Chicago Press.
  8. ^ cf. Gross, A.G. (1994). The Rhetoric of Science. Harvard University Press.; McCloskey, D. (1998). The Rhetoric of Economics. University of Wisconsin Press.; Latour, B. & Woolgar, S. (1986). Laboratory Life: The Construction of Scientific Facts. Princeton University Press.; Fahnestock, J. (1999). Rhetorical Figures in Science. Oxford University Press.
  9. ^ John S. Nelson, Allan Megill, and Donald N. McCloskey The Rhetoric of Human Sciences: Language and Argument in Scholarship and Public Affairs, London: University of Wisconsin Press, 1987. ; "In the last ten years, many scholars have investigated exactly how rhetoric works within a particular field." Theodora Polito, Educational Theory as Theory of Culture: A Vichian perspective on the educational theories of John Dewey and Kieran Egan Educational Philosophy and Theory, Vol. 37, No. 4, 2005; Deirdre N. McCloskey (1985) The Rhetoric of Economics [1] (Madison, University of Wisconsin Press).; Nelson, J. S. (1998) Tropes of Politics (Madison, University of Wisconsin Press).; Brown, R. H. (1987) Society as Text (Chicago, University of Chicago Press).
  10. ^ cf. Mogens Herman Hansen The Athenian Democracy in the Age of Demosthenes (Blackwell, 1991); Josiah Ober Mass and Elite in Democratic Athens (Princeton UP, 1989); Jeffrey Walker, Rhetoric and Poetics in Antiquity (Oxford UP, 2000).
  11. ^ cf. Kennedy, G.A. (1994). A New History of Classical Rhetoric. Princeton University Press. p. 3.
  12. ^ Isocrates. "Against the Sophists." In Isocrates with an English Translation in three volumes, by George Norlin, Ph.D., LL.D. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1980.; Isocrates. "Antidosis." In Isocrates with an English Translation in three volumes, by George Norlin, Ph.D., LL.D. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1980.
  13. ^ Patricia Bizzell and Bruce Herzberg The Rhetorical Tradition: Readings from Classical Times to the Present, Boston: Bedford / St. Martins, 2nd ed., 2001, p. 486.
  14. ^ McLuhan's dissertation is scheduled to be published in a critical edition by Gingko Press in April of 2006 with the title The Classical Trivium: The Place of Thomas Nashe in the Learning of His Time.
  15. ^ See Marc Fumaroli, Age de l'Éloquence, 1980, for an extensive presentation of the intricate political and religious debates concerning rhetoric in France and Italy at the time
  16. ^ Enos, R.J. (2000). Always... An Epitaphios to Henry W. Johnstone, Jr. (1920-2000). Rhetoric Review, Vol. 19, nos. 1/2, Fall.
  17. ^ Bitzer. L. (1968). The rhetorical situation. Philosophy and Rhetoric. 1:1. 1-14.
  18. ^ When McLuhan was working on his 1943 Cambridge University doctoral dissertation on the verbal arts and Nashe, mentioned above, he was also preparing the materials that were eventually published as the book The Mechanical Bride: The Folklore of Industrial Man (Vanguard Press, 1951). This book is a compilation of exhibits of ads and other materials from popular culture with short essays about them by McLuhan. The essays involve rhetorical analyses of the ways in which the material in an item aims to persuade and comment on the persuasive strategies in each item. After studying the persuasive strategies involved in such an array of items in popular culture, McLuhan shifted the focus of his rhetorical analysis and began to consider how communication media themselves have an impact on us as persuasive devices. In other words, the communication media as such embody and carry a persuasive dimension. McLuhan uses hyperbole to express this insight when he says "The medium is the message". This shift in focus from his 1951 book led to his two most widely known books, The Gutenberg Galaxy: The Making of Typographic Man (University of Toronto Press, 1962) and Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man (McGraw-Hill, 1964). These two books led McLuhan to become one of the most publicized thinkers in the 20th century. No other scholar of the history and theory of rhetoric was as widely publicized in the 20th century as McLuhan. McLuhan read Lonergan's Insight, mentioned above, in 1957 (see Letters of Marshall McLuhan, 1987: 251). Lonergan's book is an elaborate guidebook to cultivate one's inwardness and on attending to and reflecting on one's inward consciousness. McLuhan's 1962 and 1964 books represent an inward turn to attending to one's consciousness that is far more pronounced than anything found in his 1951 book or in his 1943 dissertation. By contrast, many other thinkers in the study of rhetoric are more outward oriented toward sociological considerations and symbolic interaction.
  19. ^ Toulmin, Stephen (2003). The Uses of Argument. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521534833.
  20. ^ See Thomas M. Conley, Rhetoric in the European Tradition, University of Chicago Press, 1990 for insights on French pre-1789 rhetoricians;for a fuller historical review with excerpts, Philippe-Joseph Salazar, L'art de parler, Paris, Klincksieck, 2003.
  21. ^ See also article on Rhétorique in French wikipedia
  22. ^ See Philippe-Joseph Salazar's overview, "Rhetoric Achieves Nature. A View from Old Europe", Philosophy & Rhetoric 40(1), 2007, 71-88
  23. ^ Histoire de la rhétorique dans l'Europe moderne 1450-1950, Marc Fumaroli ed., Paris, Presses Universitaires de France, 1999. ISBN 2130495265
  24. ^ Refer to celebratory volume, « De l’éloquence à la rhétoricité, trente années fastes », Dix-Septième Siècle 236, LIX (3), 2007, 421-426 ISBN 978-2-13-056096-8
  25. ^ Barbara Cassin,L'effet sophistique, Paris, Gallimard, 1995
  26. ^ At the margins of the French school, the work of Belgians Chaim Perelman and his disciple Michel Meyer is noteworthy although Perelman’s foundational work remained by and large ignored in France until the 1990s, which remains somewhat of a puzzle.

Rhetoric in the visual arts

  • Ralf van Bühren: Die Werke der Barmherzigkeit in der Kunst des 12.–18. Jahrhunderts. Zum Wandel eines Bildmotivs vor dem Hintergrund neuzeitlicher Rhetorikrezeption (Studien zur Kunstgeschichte, vol. 115), Hildesheim / Zürich / New York: Verlag Georg Olms 1998. ISBN 3-487-10319-2

External links