polemic

{{Short description|Contentious rhetoric}}

{{About|the word|the magazine|Polemic (magazine){{!}}Polemic (magazine)}}

{{More citations needed|date=December 2024}}

{{use dmy dates|date=May 2023}}

{{Rhetoric}}

Polemic ({{IPAc-en|p|ə|ˈ|l|ɛ|m|ɪ|k}} {{respell|pə|LEHM|ick}}, {{IPAc-en|USalso|-|ˈ|l|i|m|ɪ|k}} {{respell|-LEEM|ick}}) is contentious rhetoric intended to support a specific position by forthright claims and to undermine the opposing position. The practice of such argumentation is called polemics, which are seen in arguments on controversial topics. A person who writes polemics, or speaks polemically, is called a polemicist.{{cite web|website=Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary|publisher=Merriam-Webster|location=Springfield, MA|date=2005|format=s.v.|url=http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/polemic|title=polemic}} The word derives {{ety|grc|πολεμικός ({{Transliteration|grc|polemikos}})|warlike, hostile}},{{cite book|title=American College Dictionary|publisher=Random House|location=New York}} {{ety||πόλεμος ({{Transliteration|grc|polemos}})|war}}.{{cite web|url=https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3Dpo%2Flemos|title=πόλεμος|author1=Henry George Liddell|author-link=Henry George Liddell|author2=Robert Scott|author2-link=Robert Scott (philologist)|website=A Greek-English Lexicon|publisher=on Perseus}}

Polemics often concern questions in religion or politics. A polemical style of writing was common in Ancient Greece, as in the writings of the historian Polybius. Polemic again became common in medieval and early modern times. Since then, famous polemicists have included satirist Jonathan Swift, Italian physicist and mathematician Galileo, French theologian Jean Calvin, French Enlightenment writer, historian, and philosopher Voltaire, Russian author Leo Tolstoy, socialist philosophers Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, novelist George Orwell, playwright George Bernard Shaw, communist revolutionary Vladimir Lenin, linguist Noam Chomsky, social critics H.L. Mencken, Christopher Hitchens and Peter Hitchens, and existential philosophers Søren Kierkegaard and Friedrich Nietzsche.

Polemical journalism was common in continental Europe when libel laws were not as stringent as they are now.{{cite encyclopedia|url=http://www.britannica.com/eb/topic-467241/polemic |title=polemic, or polemical literature, or polemics (rhetoric) |publisher=britannica.com |access-date=21 February 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080411123116/http://www.britannica.com/eb/topic-467241/polemic |archive-date=11 April 2008 }} To support study of 17th to 19th century controversies, a British research project has placed online thousands of polemical pamphlets from that period.{{cite web| url=https://libguides.st-andrews.ac.uk/specialcollections/rarebooks/hayfleming | title=Rare books collections: Hay Fleming Collection |publisher= St Andrews University Library| access-date=16 March 2022}} Discussions of atheism, humanism, and Christianity have remained open to polemic into the 21st century.

History

In Ancient Greece, writing was characterised by what Geoffrey Lloyd and Nathan Sivin called "strident adversariality" and "rationalistic aggressiveness", summed up by McClinton as polemic.{{cite book |last1=Lloyd |first1= Geoffrey |last2=Sivin |first2=Nathan |title= The Way and the Word: Science and Medicine in Early China and Greece |date= 2002 |publisher=Yale University Press|isbn=978-0-300-10160-7}} For example, the ancient historian Polybius practiced "quite bitter self-righteous polemic" against some twenty philosophers, orators, and historians.{{cite journal |last1= Walbank |first1=F. W. |title=Polemic in Polybius |journal=The Journal of Roman Studies |date=1962 |volume=52 |issue= Parts 1 and 2 |pages=1–12 |doi= 10.2307/297872 |jstor=297872|s2cid= 153936734 }}

Polemical writings were common in medieval and early modern times.{{cite book |last1=Suerbaum |first1=Almut |last2= Southcombe |first2=George |title=Polemic: Language as Violence in Medieval and Early Modern Discourse |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fFWrCwAAQBAJ&pg=PT39 |year=2016 |publisher= Taylor & Francis|isbn= 978-1-317-07929-3}} During the Middle Ages, polemic had a religious dimension, as in Jewish texts written to protect and dissuade Jewish communities from converting to other religions.{{cite book |author=Chazan, Robert |title=Fashioning Jewish identity in medieval western Christendom |page=7 |publisher= Cambridge University Press |date=2004}} Medieval Christian writings were also often polemical; for example in their disagreements on Islam{{cite book |author=Tolan, John Victor |title=Medieval Christian perceptions of Islam |page=420 |publisher=Routledge |date=2000}} or in the vast corpus aimed at converting the Jews.{{cite journal | first = Philippe | last= Bobichon| url= https://www.academia.edu/35266876 | title= Littérature de controverse entre judaïsme et christianisme: Description du corpus et réflexions méthodologiques (IIe-XVIe siècle ») (textes grecs, latins et hébreux)]| journal= Revue d'Histoire ecclésiastique| volume = 107| number= 1 | year= 2012| pages= 5–48| doi= 10.1484/J.RHE.1.102664}}{{cite journal | first = Philippe | last= Bobichon| url= https://www.academia.edu/37551705 | title= Is Violence intrinsic to religious confrontation? The case of Judeo-Christian controversy, second to seventeenth century| editor= S. Chandra | journal= Violence and Non-violence Across Times. History, Religion and Culture| publisher = Routledge| year= 2018| pages= 33–52| doi= 10.4324/9780429466205-3}} Martin Luther's 95 Theses was a polemic launched against the Catholic Church.{{refn|group=note|The story of Luther nailing his Theses to the church door has been doubted. See references in Martin Luther#Start of the Reformation – "the story of the posting on the door ... has little foundation in truth."}} Robert Carliell's 1619 defence of the new Church of England and diatribe against the Roman Catholic Church – {{lang|enm|Britaine's glorie, or An allegoricall dreame with the exposition thereof: containing The Heathens infidelitie in religion ...}} – took the form of a 250-line poem.{{cite ODNB | first = Sidney | last= Lee| title= Carleill, Robert (fl. 1619)|editor= Reavley Gair | place= Oxford| year= 2004| doi= 10.1093/ref:odnb/4680| url= http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/4680| accessdate = 27 May 2017| url-access= subscription}}

Major political polemicists of the 18th century include Jonathan Swift, with pamphlets such as his A Modest Proposal, Alexander Hamilton, with pieces such as A Full Vindication of the Measures of Congress and A Farmer Refuted, and Edmund Burke, with his attack on the Duke of Bedford.{{cite news|last1=Paulin|first1=Tom|title=The Art of Criticism: 12 Polemic|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/the-art-of-criticism-12-polemic-1612930.html|work=The Independent|access-date=6 November 2016|date=26 March 1995}}

In the 19th century, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels's 1848 Communist Manifesto was extremely polemical. Both Marx and Engels would publish further polemical works, with Engels's work Anti-Dühring serving as a polemic against Eugen Dühring, and Marx's Critique of the Gotha Programme against Ferdinand Lasalle.

Vladimir Lenin published polemics against political opponents. The Proletarian Revolution and the Renegade Kautsky was notably directed against Karl Kautsky, and other works such as The State and Revolution attacked figures including Eduard Bernstein.

In the 20th century, George Orwell's Animal Farm was a polemic against totalitarianism, in particular of Stalinism in the Soviet Union. According to McClinton, other prominent polemicists of the same century include such diverse figures as Herbert Marcuse, Noam Chomsky, John Pilger, and Michael Moore.

Conservative Jewish Austrian writer and journalist Karl Kraus (1890-1935) considers the topic of moral collapse in his polemic writings. Karl Kraus produced and published 922 issues of the fifteen-daily magazine called Die Fackel (The Torch) until his death. Ludwig Wittgenstein, Sigmund Freud, Ernest Mach write in a similar manner and style to Kraus;

In 2007 Brian McClinton argued in Humani that anti-religious books such as Richard Dawkins's The God Delusion are part of the polemic tradition.{{cite journal|last1=McClinton|first1=Brian|title=A Defence of Polemics|journal=Humani|date=July 2007|issue= 105|pages=12–13|url=http://humanistni.org/filestore/image/polemics.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160322225304/http://humanistni.org/filestore/image/polemics.pdf |archive-date=22 March 2016}} In 2008 the humanist philosopher A. C. Grayling published a book, Against All Gods: Six Polemics on Religion and an Essay on Kindness.{{cite book|last1=Grayling|first1=A. C.|title=Against All Gods: Six Polemics on Religion and an Essay on Kindness|date=2008|publisher=Oberon Books|isbn=978-1-840-02728-0}}

See also

Notes

{{Reflist|group="note"}}

References

{{Reflist|30em}}

Bibliography

  • {{Cite book| edition = 1| publisher = Routledge| isbn = 0-415-97228-0| last = Gallop| first = Jane| title = Polemic: Critical or Uncritical| location = New York| year = 2004}}
  • {{Cite book| publisher = Hodder Arnold| isbn = 0-7131-6497-2| last = Hawthorn| first = Jeremy| title = Propaganda, Persuasion and Polemic| year = 1987}}
  • {{Cite book| publisher = Cambridge University Press| isbn = 0-521-83854-1| last = Lander| first = Jesse M.| title = Inventing Polemic: Religion, Print, and Literary Culture in Early Modern England| year = 2006}}
  • {{Cite book| publisher = Lisans yayıncılık| isbn = 975-6597-28-5| last = Öztürk| first = Nurettin| title = Türk Edebiyatında Polemik ve "Kavgalarım"| year = 2005}}