Robert Tarbell Oliver (July 7, 1909 – May 29, 2000) was an American writer, lecturer, and an authority on public speaking, argumentation and debate, and Asian rhetorical traditions.
Biography
Oliver was born in Sweet Home, Oregon. He graduated from Pacific University. He received his M.A. from the University of Oregon in 1933 and earned his Ph.D. in speech from the University of Wisconsin in 1936. He served as assistant director of the Victory Speakers Bureau in the Office of Civilian Defense in Washington, D.C., during World War II. He was also chief of the National Food Conservation Office in the War Foods Department.
Oliver was a pioneering scholar[2] in the study of Asian rhetorics and communication. He authored more than 50 books on international rhetoric, intercultural communication, and Asian history.
The East is not the West. Cultures differ, and minds, feelings, and intentions in differing societies intermesh in differing ways. Discourse occurs, or is constrained, under different circumstances and has different styles for different reasons. . . . Any attempt to discover in Asia prototypes of the Western rhetorical canons would be unavailing. It would resemble trying to measure the salinity of water with a ruler.[3]
According to Robert Shuter, "For over sixty years, Dr. Oliver wrote prolifically about the impact of culture on rhetoric and communication. Although Dr. Oliver rarely used the words intercultural communication in his writings, which were voluminous, he contributed greatly to the development of the field." He stated that "Dr. Oliver’s landmark Asian research, which began around 1942, influenced a generation of communication researchers in many specialties including intercultural communication."[5]
Bibliography
Oliver, R. T. (1939). Training for effective speech. New York: Cordon.
Oliver, R. T. (1942). Psychology of persuasive speech. New York: Longmans, Green & Co.
Oliver, R. T. (1944). Korea: Forgotten nation. Washington, DC: Public Affairs Press.
Oliver, R. T. (1951). The truth about Korea. London: Putman.
Oliver, R. T. (1952). Verdict in Korea. State College, PA: Bald Eagle Press.
Oliver, R. T. (Ed.). (1953). Korea, my country by Yung Tai Pyun. Washington, DC: Library of International Speech, Korean Pacific Press.
Oliver, R. T. (1954). Syngman Rhee: The man behind the myth. New York: Dodd Mead.[6]
Oliver, R. T. (1962). Culture and communication: The problem of penetrating national and cultural boundaries. Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas.
Oliver, R. T. (1971). Communication and culture in ancient India and China. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press.
Oliver, R. T. (1989). Leadership in Asia: Persuasive communication in the making of nations, 1850-1950. Newark, NJ: University of Delaware Press.
Oliver, R. T. (1993). A history of the Korean people in modern times: 1800 to the present. Newark, DE: University of Delaware Press.
Oliver, R. T. (1997). The way it was–All the way: A documentary accounting. Washington, DC: National Communication Association (originally published in Communication Quarterly, Vol. 45, No. 2, pp. 1–130).
Oliver, R. T., & Cortright, R. L. (1946/1952). The new training for effective speech. New York: Dryden Press.
Oliver, R. T., & Robbins, H. L. (1943). "Developing ideas into essays and speeches. New York: Longman.
Oliver, R. T., Zelko, H. P., & Hickey, D. C. (1949). Essentials of communicative speech. New York: Holt, Rhinehart & Winston.
Fritz, J. M. H. (Ed.). (2010). The Pennsylvania Scholars Series: Vol. 5 Robert T. Oliver—Standard bearer of the discipline. Pittsburgh, PA: Pennsylvania Communication Association.
^Berquist, Goodwin (1990). "The Rhetorical Travels of Robert T. Oliver". Rhetoric Review. JSTOR465429.
^Robert T. Oliver, Communication and Culture in Ancient India and China, Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1971, p. 3.
^Far East Interest detail taken from the rear of the dustwrapper of a copy of a hardback published by Robert Hale London edition - First published in 1955
^Robert Shuter, "Robert T. Oliver: Trailblazer in Intercultural Communication," China Media Research, Vol. 7, No. 2, pp. 121 & 124.
^Bibliographic detail taken from a hardback copy of Syngman Rhee which is illustrated and first published by Robert Hale London in 1955