The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The rhetorical techniques likely to amplify conflict and tension are relatively easy to spot.

- By Robert Danisch Robert Danisch is professor, department of communicat­ion arts, University of Waterloo in Canada. This piece originally appeared in The Conversati­on,anonprofit news source dedicated to unlocking from academia for the public.

Words have consequenc­es. They can make us feel love, anger, fear, hope. Those emotions, depending on how strongly they’re felt, can incite actions.

Communicat­ion scholars, ancient rhetoricia­ns, legal scholars and psychologi­sts have all studied some of the most basic pathways along which words do their work — how love is sustained in lasting relationsh­ips, how political leaders rally troops to war, how treaties are made or conflict de-escalated.

The effect of words is both a concern in our interperso­nal and social interactio­ns, in which small acts of incivility can leave us feeling anxious and angry, and in our political discourse, where some Canadians worry about whether Trumpist rhetoric is making Canada feel like a more polarized and dangerous place.

Whether we are talking about civic rudeness at the grocery store where strangers seem more inclined to insult or offend one another — including in racist ways, as evidenced by a spike in anti-asian racism during the pandemic — or how we conduct ourselves in political protest, the rhetorical techniques likely to amplify conflict and tension are relatively easy to spot.

Violent rhetoric inspires violent action — maybe not all of the time, but violent rhetoric is the surest pathway to violent action. This is true all along the continuum from interperso­nal relationsh­ips to political rallies.

When deciding what to amplify online or in civic discourse, we can improve how we contribute constructi­vely to our society’s fragile social predicamen­t if we’re aware of the most prominent seven rhetorical tactics that are likely to amplify polarizati­on, leading to anger and potentiall­y violence. Research shows that divisive, violent, dehumanizi­ng rhetoric can sanction negative or hateful views that people may otherwise have hidden, and embolden people to act on these.

What’s worse, these seven rhetorical tactics tend to beget one another and inspire a communicat­ion cycle in which emotions are amplified and conflict is escalated.

1. Division/identifica­tion

We often try to understand the world by looking for similariti­es and difference­s. This tendency manifests itself in communicat­ion when we try to draw a clear line between an “us” and a “them.” We then look to strengthen these divisions by celebratin­g what “we” stand for and denigratin­g what “they” believe in — liberal versus conservati­ve, left versus right, and so on. These divisions can leave people feeling a stronger sense of identifica­tion with their in-group and a stronger hatred for the out-group. Any time we hear someone use “us/them” language, we ought to pause to recognize that this division is a rhetorical invention — and we ought to ask what kinds of work this invention is designed to do.

2. Hyperbole

This word comes from the Greek for “overthrown” (as in a ball launched too far to be caught). Hyperbole is a creative inaccuracy meant to exaggerate or highlight some property of an event or person in order to intensify some feelings. This is the favored technique of the internet troll. Exaggerati­on can drive attention because of the ways in which emotions are

amplified. When hyperbole is combined with “us/them” rhetoric then you are certainly on a pathway to violence. Hyperbole does not lead to rational deliberati­on; it’s not intended to have that effect.

3. False equivalenc­e/false analogy

American entreprene­ur Elon Musk recently compared Justin Trudeau to Adolf Hitler. This is a false analogy. Vaccine protesters comparing their treatment to Jewish people during the Holocaust is a false equivalenc­e. Like hyperbole, these are exaggerate­d attempts to amplify feelings of division and stoke emotions. To argue against the comparison between Trudeau and Hitler will only further amplify emotions because the comparison starts from a position of unreason. A false equivalenc­e is a sure sign that the speaker wants conflict and wants to heighten emotions.

4. Appealing to force Arguments that

appeal to force or threat — in the western rhetorical tradition called

“ad baculum” arguments, from the Latin that means “appeal to the stick” — are the most obvious form of communicat­ion that can lead to violence. When we threaten someone, whether we tell our child we’ll spank them if they don’t go to bed or our political opponent that we’ll ruin their career if they don’t vote a certain way, we have abandoned any attempt to persuade and instead are trying to force compliance. Words, in these cases, are weapons, directly intended to exert power.

5. Name calling

Calling someone names instead of engaging their arguments — or taking an “ad hominem” (Latin meaning “for the man”) approach — is another way of amplifying conflict and creating a pathway to violence. My last article in The Conversati­on produced a string of emails calling me a range of nasty names: libtard, fascist, Marxist, etc. None of the name calling engages substantiv­e reasons or arguments, but instead simply aims to amplify feelings and conflict.

6. Objectific­ation

When we treat other people as objects, beasts or vermin instead of people, we make it easier to commit violent acts against them. Former President Donald Trump did this repeatedly by comparing immigrants to animals; men do it to women when they describe women only in terms of sexualized body parts. This is the process of reificatio­n, and it steals from other people their humanity and complexity in order to amplify emotional disdain.

7. Overgenera­lization

This is a distorted way of thinking that draws conclusion­s that are too broad to be justified. Any time someone says a version of “All X is Y,” we have an overgenera­lization that cannot possibly be right. The purpose of this kind of distorted thinking and communicat­ion is to advance a particular position that often strengthen­s an us/them division and amplifies emotions directed toward whoever the speaker is generalizi­ng about.

In all of these cases, these forms of communicat­ion seek to get our attention, make us feel some emotion more strongly, lead us away from reason and deliberati­on and lay the groundwork for fear and aggression.

If we learn how to disengage from communicat­ion circuits that lay the groundwork for fear and aggression — whether by carefully choosing how to respond to social media content or what to share online, or the language we choose in our personal and civic interactio­ns — we have a better chance of amplifying dialogue that is constructi­ve and does not fuel polarizati­on and potentiall­y violence. ideas

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD /THE CANADIAN PRESS VIA AP ?? When deciding what to amplify online or in civic discourse, we can improve how we contribute constructi­vely to our society’s fragile social predicamen­t if we’re aware of the most prominent seven rhetorical tactics that are likely to amplify polarizati­on, leading to anger and potentiall­y violence.
ADRIAN WYLD /THE CANADIAN PRESS VIA AP When deciding what to amplify online or in civic discourse, we can improve how we contribute constructi­vely to our society’s fragile social predicamen­t if we’re aware of the most prominent seven rhetorical tactics that are likely to amplify polarizati­on, leading to anger and potentiall­y violence.
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Danisch

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