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Permanence and Change: An Anatomy of Purpose

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Permanence and An Anatomy of Change, written by American literary theorist Kenneth Burke, was first published in 1935, at the height of the Great Depression. Burke followed this with Attitudes Toward History followed just two years later. His texts proved to be revolutionary in the theory of communication, and, as classics, retain their surcharge of energy.Permanence and An Anatomy of Change treats human communication in terms of ideal cooperation, and in this book, Burke establishes, in ground-breaking fashion, that form permeates society, just as it does poetry and the arts.This present volume is the Second Edition, first published in 1954, and includes an Introduction by Hugh Dalziel Duncan.“Unquestionably the most brilliant and suggestive critic now writing in America.”—W. H. Auden“One of the truly speculative American thinkers of his era.”—Malcolm Cowley“The foremost critic of our time and perhaps the greatest critic since Coleridge.”—Stanley Edgar Hyman“What Burke has done better than anyone else is to find a way of connecting literature to life without reducing either. He’s had far less attention than he deserves because he’d been so far ahead of his time. But he’s one of the major minds of the twentieth century, and he’s sure to be read in the future.”—Wayne Booth

352 pages, Kindle Edition

First published October 28, 1965

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About the author

Kenneth Burke

135 books84 followers
Kenneth Duva Burke was a major American literary theorist and philosopher. Burke's primary interests were in rhetoric and aesthetics.

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Quiver.
1,134 reviews1,352 followers
November 2, 2019

For in this world, communication is never an absolute (only angels communicate absolutely);
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In its simplest manifestation, style is ingratiation.
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Santayana has somewhere defined piety as loyalty to the sources of our being.


Burke is known for his aphoristic, highly-quotable style, but the context itself is needed to understand his point. That said, as highly enthusiastic as I was with his sheer display of erudition, other texts manages to eclipse my memory of this book. The long-winded discursive style didn't help. Still, I intend to return to Burke some other time.
Profile Image for Margaret.
151 reviews2 followers
September 7, 2011
Read for a course in American literature of the Great Depression. Mostly a treatise on communication and the relationships between language and action and language and morality, this text is useful in theorizing the way that crisis (such as economic upheaval) causes communication breakdowns that create major shifts in the culturally agreed-upon meanings of words.
Profile Image for Zachary.
706 reviews8 followers
May 25, 2020
I'd read parts of this book before, but had never actually gone through it from cover to cover. Burke's major contribution here is a vocabulary for understanding the orientations/starting points that we have, the way that these are troubled, and how we then transition from moments and times of instability into new areas of stability as societies and as individuals. What I was surprised by as I went through the actual book was how much psychology was involved, or how engaged Burke was with discussing psychological ideas and their relations to philosophies. As such it seemed to me that some of the linkages that he was drawing were a bit more obscure based on my lack of reading in some of those theories; this isn't to say that the book isn't great, or that those parts held little value to me, but merely that they were a bit more obscure and difficult than the earlier parts of the book, which are more directly linked to charting a systematic perspective on how orientations and predispositions are changed and affected by change. Definitely not a simple read, but a good one.
Profile Image for Aziza.
19 reviews
July 22, 2025
Always relevant. Some parts are outdated but if you know they are, you’re good to go on reading
49 reviews
December 19, 2011
Too much clever buried in this on the anatomy of language and its role in social change and orientation, disorientation, reorientation. No great pleasure to read but a great pleasure to think with. My first fully completed from this master
Profile Image for Holly Raymond.
321 reviews39 followers
May 5, 2012
Burke is my guy, and this is fascinating as a looser, more free-wheeling articulation of what he'd get back to in Rhetoric of Motive.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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