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Endres, Danielle; Senda-Cook, Samantha – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2011
Social movements often deploy place rhetorically in their protests. The rhetorical performance and (re)construction of places in protest can function in line with the goals of a social movement. Our essay offers a heuristic framework--place in protest--for theorizing the rhetorical force of place and its relationship to social movements. Through…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Activism, Geographic Location, Social Action
Enck-Wanzer, Darrel – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
This essay is an attempt to come to terms with the Young Lords' popular liberation rhetoric in the church offensive. Building from Michael Calvin McGee's observation that ""the people" are more process than phenomenon," I explore the ways in which the Young Lords' craft "the people's repertory of convictions" from…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Churches, Puerto Ricans, Hispanic Americans
Emmer, Pascal – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
The transmission of ACT UP's movement histories is indispensable to the potential for what Jose Esteban Munoz calls "queer futurity," or "a temporal arrangement in which the past is a field of possibility in which subjects can act in the present in the service of a new futurity." Roger Hallas argues that ACT UP's material and visual archive alone…
Descriptors: Social History, Activism, Advocacy, Social Change
Cisneros, Josue David – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2011
Though the drive to limit US citizenship often takes shape through the symbolic and material exclusion of "aliens," immigrants also engage in rhetorical struggles over the limits of the US civic imaginary. This essay examines one such challenge to the bordering logics of US citizenship--"La Gran Marcha", one of the largest…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Rhetoric, Citizenship, Democracy
Juhasz, Alexandra – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
When ACT UP is remembered as the pinnacle of postmodern activism, other forms and forums of activism that were taking place during that time--practices that were linked, related, just modern, in dialogue or even opposition to ACT UP's "confrontational activism"--are forgotten. In its time, ACT UP was embedded in New York City, and a…
Descriptors: Homosexuality, Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Activism
Morris, Charles E., III – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
AIDS, from the beginning, has been a mnemonic pandemic. Remembering and forgetting have reflected and constituted the vicissitudes of HIV/AIDS, its inventions, significations, and transformations in and across time, then and now and into the welter, promise and pitfall, of future and futurity. The 25th anniversary of AIDS Coalition to Unleash…
Descriptors: Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Mnemonics, Activism
Gingrich-Philbrook, Craig – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
Revisiting AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP) restarts the "panic of loss" characterizing the author's youth. The author argues that the 25th anniversary of ACT UP marks the failure to consider Raymond Williams's "structure of feeling". Williams counterposes this structure against falsely viewing the past as formalized into something…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Activism, Consciousness Raising
West, Isaac – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
As people commemorate ACT UP and examine its memory in public cultures, the 2011 revival of "The Normal Heart" (TNH) and the rhetorical labor undertaken to evoke political emotionalities inside and outside of the theater provides one site for analyzing how direct action politics, both past and present, are imagined as a kairotic response to…
Descriptors: Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Cultural Influences, Social Influences, Homosexuality
Nakayama, Thomas K. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
The francophone world has always been at the center of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. From the mythical (French Canadian) "patient zero," Gaetan Dugas, to Rock Hudson's flight to Paris for medical treatment and the blaming of Haiti for AIDS, as well as the close relationships between Belgian and French and their former African colonies,…
Descriptors: Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Medical Services, Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Foreign Countries
Rand, Erin J. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
The 25th anniversary of the founding of ACT UP provides a moment to reflect on the group's unquestionably profound effects on the management of HIV/AIDS, the queer community, the history of social movements in this country, and even the development of queer theory in the academy. But it should also encourage individuals to consider the ways in…
Descriptors: Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Figurative Language, Homosexuality, Activism
Young, Anna M.; Battaglia, Adria; Cloud, Dana L. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2010
Activists understand "engagement" to entail working toward positive social change in a sometimes uncivil, aggressive manner. However, scholars' enthusiasm for engagement is often policed by their affiliate institutions via various forms of depoliticization and/or apoliticization inside the academy. In this article, the authors argue that policing…
Descriptors: Conferences (Gatherings), Rhetoric, Social Change, Scholarship
Chavez, Karma R. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
The slogans, the effigy, and the disruption of public space reflect tactics for which AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP) is commonly remembered, but the occasion is somewhat unique. These protests and actions challenged the Bush and Clinton administrations' policy on HIV-positive Haitian migrants fleeing political repression in Haiti after…
Descriptors: Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Foreign Countries, Homosexuality, Refugees
Gunn, Joshua; Lucaites, John Louis – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2010
In this article, the authors discuss the contest of faculties on discerning the politics of social engagement in the academy. They begin by noting that the relationship between scholarship and social engagement is by no means obvious or unproblematic. They know, for example, that there are less conspicuous forms of scholarly engaged activities…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Social Action, Activism, Citizen Participation
Yang, Michelle Murray – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2011
Examining Malcolm Browne's photograph of the burning monk as well as appropriations of it by the Ministers' Vietnam Committee, I argue that self-immolation is a powerful rhetorical act that utilizes self-inflicted violence as a means of performing a visual embodiment of violence done by an "other." I assert that the power and resonance…
Descriptors: Photography, Visual Aids, Rhetoric, Self Destructive Behavior
Gorsevski, Ellen W.; Butterworth, Michael L. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2011
While Muhammad Ali has been the subject of countless articles and books written by sports historians and journalists, rhetorical scholars have largely ignored him. This oversight is surprising given both the tradition of social movement scholarship within rhetorical studies and Ali's influential eloquence as a world renowned celebrity espousing…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Civil Disobedience, Rhetoric, War