Rhetorical Speed ââ is a term derived from the field of Compositional Studies and Rhetoric used to describe how rhetorically may have theorized and anticipated the third-party recomposition of their text. In their 2009 article "Composing for Recomposition: Speed ââand Speed ââof Rhetoric" at Kairos: Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, and Pedagogy , Professors Jim Ridolfo and DÃÆ'nie Nicole DeVoss provide examples of an author giving press releases, in which the author releases rhetorically anticipating positive and negative ways in which text can be rearranged into other texts, including news articles, blog posts, and video content. Not only is training the rhetorical speed enables the speaker/writer to develop closer relationships with his audience but also allows the speaker/writer to theorize of all possible outcomes with time and delivery. Ridolfo and DeVoss argue that this thought is an indication of the modern idea of ââactio, which requires new strategies and theories to think about the transmission, distribution, and recomposition of rhetorical text and objects. Stated in their article that, "... composing in the digital age is different from traditional writing practices." Since the traditional composition consists of a person's original work transformed into writing, the digital composition requires more editing in its own sphere. Ridfolfo and DeVoss refer to their quality as "mix, mass and merge".
In 2010, Professor West Point Michael Edwards and the Virginia Military Institute, Professor D. Alexis Hart interviewed Lieutenant General William B. Caldwell, the current NATO Training Mission Commander in Afghanistan, and questioned him about the rhetorical pace and matters of military documents stamped Only Official Use.
For example, the rhetorical speed of a press counsel includes a publication deadline, the reporter's material conditions (including how local journalists prefer to receive and process text). This consideration is calculated along with the rhetorical objectives of the advisory writer (s). It takes into account the delivery and composition of the work given in relation to the future author's purpose for reproduction. In this sense, the rhetorical velocity regards the time of the future (and at certain moments) and the place (s) of the text as part of the distributive strategy.
Video Rhetorical velocity
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