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Showing 1 to 15 of 173 results Save | Export
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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
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Murphy, John M. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2011
This essay explores Barack Obama's invocation of the Exodus during his 2008 presidential campaign. It argues Obama's turn to Exodus, his rare embodiment of Joshua, and his renewal of the American covenant nicely addressed major rhetorical problems that he faced. Of equal importance, his campaign oratory opens an important line of inquiry into the…
Descriptors: Presidents, Political Campaigns, Rhetoric, Persuasive Discourse
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Olson, Christa J. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2010
The rhetorical history of Ecuador is rife with examples of politicians, intellectuals, and artists promoting visions of national identity through images of Ecuador's indigenous population. Between the late nineteenth and mid-twentieth centuries, such depictions became common and displayed increasing emphasis on the physical characteristics of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Nationalism, Rhetoric, Indigenous Populations
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Stuckey, Mary E. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
Throughout his administration, FDR engaged in a complex set of arguments that worked together to defend democracy in general as a viable form of government; American democracy as the highest expression of democratic government; the primacy of the federal government as the most efficient and effective locus of democratic power; and the executive…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Democracy, Federal Government, Political Power
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Rand, Erin J. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2008
Rhetorical agency is the capacity for words and actions to be intelligible and forceful, and to create effects through their formal and stylistic conventions. The polemical discourses of Larry Kramer, a controversial AIDS activist, demonstrate a concurrence of features that define the polemic as a rhetorical form and therefore enable agency:…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Audiences, Persuasive Discourse, Homosexuality
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Chase, Kenneth R. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2009
Critical, postmodern, and constitutive rhetorics are typically guided by an ethical stance opposing domination and marginalization. However, this stance often functions as an unreflective morality operating outside the constitutive practices of rhetoric itself. To locate an ethical stance within rhetorical practice, we can turn to Isocrates, who…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Ethics, Rhetorical Theory, Moral Values
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Asen, Robert – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2009
As a conceptual term, "counterpublic" serves scholarship best when contributing to a critical-theory project, which means that particular constellations of materiality and ideology may bolster some calls for counterpublicity while gainsaying others. This may be investigated by examining how a text upholds or betrays an advocate's values, seeking…
Descriptors: Ideology, Political Attitudes, Advocacy, Values
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Zagacki, Kenneth S.; Gallagher, Victoria J. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2009
The material rhetoric of physical locations like the Museum Park at the North Carolina Museum of Art creates "spaces of attention" wherein visitors are invited to experience the landscape around them as a series of enactments that identify the inside/outside components of sub/urban existence, as well as the regenerative/transformative…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Museums, Art, Physical Environment
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Foley, Megan – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
The logic of political economy depends on a domestic metaphor, using the "oikos" or household as a model for the "polis." Historically, this metaphor has imagined citizens as the children of a paternal state. However during the 2008 housing crisis, this metaphor was turned upside down, depicting citizens as the parents of infantile state…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Fathers, Comparative Analysis, Citizen Role
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Paroske, Marcus – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2009
International science policy controversies involve disputes over cultural differences in the assessment of knowledge claims and competing visions of the policy-making process between different nations. This essay analyzes these dynamics in the recent controversy surrounding AIDS policy in South Africa. It develops the notion of an epistemological…
Descriptors: Cultural Differences, Foreign Countries, Public Policy, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS)
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Hariman, Robert – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2008
Parody and related forms of political humor are essential resources for sustaining democratic public culture. They do so by exposing the limits of public speech, transforming discursive demands into virtual images, setting those images before a carnivalesque audience, and celebrating social leveling while decentering all discourses within the…
Descriptors: Parody, Public Speaking, Speeches, Literary Criticism
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Terrill, Robert E. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2009
Faced with a racialized political crisis that threatened to derail his campaign to become the first African American president of the United States, Barack Obama delivered a speech on race titled "A More Perfect Union." He begins by portraying himself as an embodiment of double consciousness, but then invites his audience to share his…
Descriptors: African Americans, Political Campaigns, Presidents, Crisis Management
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Gunn, Joshua – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2008
Few contemporary scholars have explicitly discussed the relationship between love and rhetoric. This essay draws on the insights of Lacanian psychoanalysis to argue that rhetoricians have been reluctant to theorize love for two reasons: first, it is already implied in the widely accepted concept of identification; and second, any explicit…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Relationship, Intimacy, Deception
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Bormann, Dennis R. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1971
Challenging Weaver's view that Burke principally argued from circumstance, the author suggests that Weaver's main thesis is of a superior type of argument unrelated to specific realities of the case and that we can no longer argue from such generalizations. (AF)
Descriptors: Language, Persuasive Discourse, Rhetoric
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Speer, Richard – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1971
Burke's rhetoric attacked the mismanagement of British India by Warren Hastings and sought to interpret India to the English by making it an extension of England. In the name of national self interest he appealed for reform. (AF)
Descriptors: Colonialism, Persuasive Discourse, Rhetoric
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