Forms of repetition have been acknowledged rhetorical devices used in speeches intended to persuade since the days of the Ancient Greeks. Simplistically, the value of repetition in persuasion is simple: the more a person hears a convincing phrase or point, the more likely they are to accept it and be convinced by it.
The example you cite, a refrain, plays into a wider rhetorical technique called “climax.” Where some repetition uses the “power of three” or anaphora across a paragraph to create intensity within a short space or on a particular point, prolonged use of a refrain can build climax over the course of an entire speech. Between each refrain, techniques such as enumeratio lend credence and power to the refrain: each time the listener hears it, there is more nuance connected to it and more power behind it.
No comments:
Post a Comment