Title: Lincoln/Douglas%20Debate
1Lincoln/Douglas Debate
- History and Structure
- "A man never tells you anything until you
contradict him." - -George Bernard Shaw
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4Lincoln/Douglas Debates of 1858
- The 1858 election campaign for U.S. Senate for
state of Illinois - Stephen A. Douglas against a then unknown Abraham
Lincoln - Lincoln accepted the nomination with the famous
lines A house divided against itself cannot
stand.' I believe this Government cannot endure
permanently half-slave and half-free."
5Lincoln/Douglas Debates of 1858 contd
- They participated in 7 debates, 3 hours apiece,
in 7 different cities in Illinois - People came from all over the state to watch them
debate in crowds of nearly 15,000 - Lincoln and Douglas presented sharply opposing
viewpoints on the issue of slavery and the legal
rights of blacks - This issue addressed a problem that was dividing
the nation and threatening the continued
existence of the Union - Douglas won the Senate position, but Lincoln went
on to win the presidency in 1860.
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8Lincoln/Douglas Debate Structure
- This style of debate has two sides. The side
which favors the proposition is called the
Affirmative position, and the side that opposes
the proposition is called the Negative position. - This style is very reliant on time and good
behavior/manners.
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10Lincoln/Douglas Debate
- Affirmative position debater presents
- constructive debate points. (6
minutes) - Negative position debater cross-examines
- affirmative points. (3 minutes)
- Negative position presents constructive debate
- points. (7 minutes)
- Affirmative position cross-examines negative
- points. (3 minutes)
- Affirmative position offers first rebuttal (4
- minutes)
- Negative position offers first rebuttal (6
- minutes)
- Affirmative position offers second rebuttal (3
- minutes)
11Congressional Debate Structure Introduction
(15-30 sec.) Attention Getter
Purpose ("I rise to the affirmative/stand
negative on the bill or resolution...")
Preview ("for the following reasons") Body (2
Minutes) Clash! o State issues
on the floor o State points in
conflict o Prove your point with
evidence including the source and date of
publication, add the credentials of
the source o logic- explain why this
evidence reinforces your point and your side
o Tell the assembly the impact of your point
and how it should affect their vote Present
a Challenge to the Opposition. Conclusion (30
sec.) Summarize key points of clash.
Summarize key points. Come full circle.
Open yourself for cross-examination and
clarification. ("I am now open for
cross-examination and points of further
clarification.")