Of course, there are times when our interactions have all the rhythm of a marching band falling down the stairs...
SearchTag
Deriving from the Greek tropos, "to turn," a trope is a schema or script for turning attention. Tropes are particular configurations of language, and as these figures repeat, they become recognizable heuristics for amplifying and compressing one rhetorical choice over all other probabilities. When musicians add to or subtract notes from a particular melisma or otherwise draw attention to the development of a particular tone, they're troping, right there. Used as a verb again: when you "trope" something, you tune that something to a pattern by entraining it to that particular and available pattern. Troping, turning, tuning, wyrding--these are the very same. They at once require and install a second order of attention. We can call this "attention to attention" a form of rhetoric.
Since the telegraph, electronic media emerge as increasingly configurable (programmable, rhythmizable) surfaces and conditions for inscription, response, and movement, and, as Marshall McLuhan recognized long ago , once "sequence yields to the simultaneous, one is in the world of structure and configuration" (Understanding Media 28). Configuring arguments in a networked medium requires some listening, some facility with detachment, and lots of practice. Just as musicians rehearse the gestures of melodic development and rhythmic entrainment, we, as composers in far-from-equalibrium, rich, synaesthetic media can figure our writing-selves as "search engines" for the tropes that help us make rhetorical choices as we narrate patterns, listen for available patterns, turn narrative sequences into definitions, and so much more.
Tropes
Find tropes and cite them here. A great list of classical tropes, with examples, can be found here. Here on this page, we can make an archive of examples from our own research and writing. Heck, we'll invent some, I bet.
synecdoche-understanding/substituting one thing with another; the use of a part for the whole, or the whole for the part. (A form of metonymy). place an example, here:
metaphor
metonymy
Comments (0)
You don't have permission to comment on this page.