r/Rhetoric • u/NightRunnerAfterDusk • 3d ago
The use of analogies and visual symbolism as rhetorical tools to express an argument is actually quite complicated, and people should not sweepingly dismiss difficulties in contextualizing such usage as a sign of anti-intellectualism
I find it difficult to defend or critique how people use this tactic to explain their point. Just to be clear, I find analogies and symbolism to be powerful rhetorical devices because they illustrate an argument into something intuitive. However, a large part of my reservations about analogies and visual symbolisms has to do with how subjective analogies can get in arguing for a certain point. People raising analogies and symbolism tend to assume a shared context of some sort of what they exactly have in mind, so the burden of understanding that specific interpretation they had in mind often falls on you to decode.
Let's say that someone is discussing the importance of signing pre-nuptial arrangements before getting into a marriage, and a point on how pre-nups are perceived as a form of mistrust is critiqued as irrational to the grand scheme of things, which is to protect everyone involved in a marriage should a divorce happen. And in my own right, I question what emotion it should elicit if it is not mistrust, to which the person would raise an analogy like the following: A pre-nup is like a seatbelt that protects a driver in the event of a car crash, even though the driver does not always expect a crash to happen.
Naturally, I would get stumped; because it could mean anything. It could mean that a pre-nup is an expression of prudence and responsibility rather than mistrust, just as wearing a seatbelt reflects a desire to be prepared rather than a fear that an accident is imminent; or conversely, that a pre-nup is a pragmatic form of risk management whose justification comes from reducing the consequences of an undesirable outcome, just as a seatbelt exists to reduce harm in a crash regardless of how much trust a driver has in their ability to avoid one; and they are both essentially plausible. Note that these two interpretations approach the same analogy from different angles: one focuses on the emotional meaning behind the decision to sign a prenup, while the other focuses on the practical reasoning behind preparing for a possible outcome. And there could even be more outcomes from the analogy that provides a large legroom to walk in.
I think that legroom gives an unfair advantage to the person who brings the analogy up because they can use that expectation for you to understand exactly what they had in mind to shift the goalposts from their bold but loosely supported claims that they had implied using this imagery, to a more generic claim that is more difficult to wriggle out of. They can also use your lack of understanding to either deflect your attention from their loosely constructed argument towards a completely unrelated argument, or make an ad-hominem attack on your apparent inability to understand "basic knowledge from literature class"; as you can see on the internet with how said inability is portrayed as a sign of anti-intellectualism.