“What Is the Point of Parliamentary Debate?” Deliberation, Oratory, Opposition and Spectacle in the British House of Commons

This article seeks to open up debate about Parliamentary debate by exploring the history of ideas about Parliamentary debate and rhetoric through the lens of four core concepts: deliberation, oratory, opposition and spectacle. These are not the names of singular ideas let alone schools of thought; t...

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Main Author: Alan Finlayson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Helsinki University Press 2017-04-01
Series:Redescriptions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal-redescriptions.org/articles/49
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spelling doaj-8c173265e3a84eeb8148a5935cdb76682020-11-25T03:31:22ZengHelsinki University PressRedescriptions 2308-09142017-04-01201113110.7227/R.20.1.250“What Is the Point of Parliamentary Debate?” Deliberation, Oratory, Opposition and Spectacle in the British House of CommonsAlan Finlayson0University of East AngliaThis article seeks to open up debate about Parliamentary debate by exploring the history of ideas about Parliamentary debate and rhetoric through the lens of four core concepts: deliberation, oratory, opposition and spectacle. These are not the names of singular ideas let alone schools of thought; they are conceptual fields each of which gives a particular shape to ways of conceiving, criticizing and defending Commons debate. In mapping this topos – identifying historical debates and practices alongside contemporary arguments found in political theory, political science and Rhetoric – I show that our thinking and arguing about the Commons is part of a contested and ongoing history more complex than we acknowledge. I argue that Parliamentary Debate has a number of purposes and that our thinking about it, and evaluation of it, should not be contained within the frame of “deliberation” but should also take account of the political value and importance of oratory, opposition and spectacle.https://journal-redescriptions.org/articles/49parliamentswestminsterrhetoricoratoryloyal oppositiondeliberationpolitical spectacle
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alan Finlayson
spellingShingle Alan Finlayson
“What Is the Point of Parliamentary Debate?” Deliberation, Oratory, Opposition and Spectacle in the British House of Commons
Redescriptions
parliaments
westminster
rhetoric
oratory
loyal opposition
deliberation
political spectacle
author_facet Alan Finlayson
author_sort Alan Finlayson
title “What Is the Point of Parliamentary Debate?” Deliberation, Oratory, Opposition and Spectacle in the British House of Commons
title_short “What Is the Point of Parliamentary Debate?” Deliberation, Oratory, Opposition and Spectacle in the British House of Commons
title_full “What Is the Point of Parliamentary Debate?” Deliberation, Oratory, Opposition and Spectacle in the British House of Commons
title_fullStr “What Is the Point of Parliamentary Debate?” Deliberation, Oratory, Opposition and Spectacle in the British House of Commons
title_full_unstemmed “What Is the Point of Parliamentary Debate?” Deliberation, Oratory, Opposition and Spectacle in the British House of Commons
title_sort “what is the point of parliamentary debate?” deliberation, oratory, opposition and spectacle in the british house of commons
publisher Helsinki University Press
series Redescriptions
issn 2308-0914
publishDate 2017-04-01
description This article seeks to open up debate about Parliamentary debate by exploring the history of ideas about Parliamentary debate and rhetoric through the lens of four core concepts: deliberation, oratory, opposition and spectacle. These are not the names of singular ideas let alone schools of thought; they are conceptual fields each of which gives a particular shape to ways of conceiving, criticizing and defending Commons debate. In mapping this topos – identifying historical debates and practices alongside contemporary arguments found in political theory, political science and Rhetoric – I show that our thinking and arguing about the Commons is part of a contested and ongoing history more complex than we acknowledge. I argue that Parliamentary Debate has a number of purposes and that our thinking about it, and evaluation of it, should not be contained within the frame of “deliberation” but should also take account of the political value and importance of oratory, opposition and spectacle.
topic parliaments
westminster
rhetoric
oratory
loyal opposition
deliberation
political spectacle
url https://journal-redescriptions.org/articles/49
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