Lucie Olbrechts-Tyteca

Lucie Olbrechts-Tyteca (1899 - 1987) was a Belgian academic and longtime co-worker of the philosopher Chaïm Perelman. She volunteered in 1948 to support his work[1] and developed several aspects of the New Rhetoric independently in later years.

Life and Work

Olbrechts-Tyteca was born into an important family of Bruessels in 1899 and studied several humanities and social scientific methods at the university of Brussels without seeking a career.[2] She married the statistician Raymond Olbrechts, eleven years older than herself, and lived an academical and social quiet life until she met Perelman in 1948.

Olbrechts-Tyteca and Perelman worked together between 1948 and 1984. During this time they worked out an influential contribution to argumentation theory. Their opus magnum Traité de l'argumentation : La nouvelle rhétorique. led - together with a book of Toulmin, published in the same year - to the end of argumentative Logicism.[3] The concrete contribution of Olbrechts-Tyteca to this and the other joined works is disputed among scholars but prevailing opinion is that she contributed the vast illustrative part, while Perelman outlined the abstract-theoretical aspects.[4]
The Belgian academic established herself as an independent scholar with a work on rhetoric and comics, Le Comique du Discours, in 1974.[5]

Work

Literature

References

  1. Alan G. Gross, Ray D. Dearin: Chaim Perelman. SUNY Press, 2003, p. 6.
  2. Alan G. Gross, Ray D. Dearin: Chaim Perelman. SUNY Press, 2003, p. 6.
  3. Harald Wohlrapp: Argumentative Geltung in Wohlrapp (Ed.): Wege der Argumentationsforschung, Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt, 1995; p. 282.
  4. David A. Frank; Michelle Bolduc: Lucie Olbrechts-Tyteca's New Rhetoric in Quarterly Journal of Speech, Vol. 96 No. 2, 2010, pp. 141-142.
  5. David A. Frank; Michelle Bolduc: Lucie Olbrechts-Tyteca's New Rhetoric in Quarterly Journal of Speech, Vol. 96 No. 2, 2010, p. 160.
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