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Showing 1 to 15 of 53 results Save | Export
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Majdik, Zoltan P.; Platt, Carrie Anne; Meister, Mark – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2011
This paper explores the rhetorical basis of a major paradigm change in meteorology, from a focus on inductive observation to deductive, mathematical reasoning. Analysis of Cleveland Abbe's "The Physical Basis of Long-Range Weather Forecasts" demonstrates how in his advocacy for a new paradigm, Abbe navigates the tension between piety to tradition…
Descriptors: Meteorology, Rhetoric, Logical Thinking, Change
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Keremidchieva, Zornitsa – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2013
Through its analysis of the rhetorical means by which the US Congress overcame jurisdictional objections to federal action on the issue of woman suffrage, this essay argues that the stasis of jurisdiction operates as a mode of assemblage of discourses, institutions, and populations. In Congress, the woman suffrage issue helped re-organize federal…
Descriptors: Federal Government, Legislators, Federal Legislation, Constitutional Law
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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
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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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Engels, Jeremy – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2011
The term "democracy" is ambivalent--in the history of the United States, it has played both god term and devil term, and inspired both sacrifice and trembling. Robert L. Ivie has mapped the discourse by which American policy elites have said "no" to democracy--the rhetoric of "demophobia." This essay complements his…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Democracy, Politics of Education, Democratic Values
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Stob, Paul – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
On May 31, 1897, William James, one of America's most influential philosophers and psychologists, delivered the first civic oration of his career. The principal orator at the dedication of the Robert Gould Shaw memorial in Boston, James did what commemorative speakers are not supposed to do. He chose to be confrontational and divisive in a…
Descriptors: Civics, Rhetoric, Discourse Modes, Public Speaking
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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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Crick, Nathan; Engels, Jeremy – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
We are still coming to terms with the legacy of Randolph Bourne. Although he died at the age of 32 just as the United States was cheerfully entering the First World War under the banner of "democracy," the words he penned in an unfinished essay still resonate in the American social conscience: "War is the Health of the State." This maxim, once…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Democracy, War, Politics of Education
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Engels, Jeremy – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2009
Robert Owen's "Declaration of Mental Independence," declaimed on the Fourth of July, 1826, was one of the most ill-received speeches in the early Republic. The attendant controversy provides an opportunity to theorize invective's role in democratic culture. Invective was useful in the early Republic, and continues to be useful today, because it is…
Descriptors: Democracy, Speeches, United States History, Rhetoric
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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
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May, Matthew S. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2011
From 1909 to 1910, the public performance of soap-box oratory began to effect dramatic changes in the composition of migrant workers throughout the Pacific Northwest. Municipal authorities in Spokane attempted to curb the formation of a union of hobo orators by outlawing public speech-making within the city fire limits. The ensuing confrontation…
Descriptors: Historiography, Freedom of Speech, Migrants, Migrant Workers
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Hoerl, Kristen – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
The mainstream press frequently characterized the election of President Barack Obama, the first African American US President, as the realization of Martin Luther King's dream, thus crafting a postracial narrative of national transcendence. I argue that this routine characterization of Obama's election functions as a site for the production of…
Descriptors: News Reporting, News Media, Presidents, Mass Media Effects
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Black, Jason Edward – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2009
This essay examines nineteenth-century Native resistance to the American Indian removal policy as a strategy of decolonization. Attention focuses in particular on the tactics of decolonization employed in the rhetoric of the Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, and Seminole nations as it functioned to expose the dilemmas and hypocrisies of U.S. government…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, American Indians, American Indian History, Public Policy
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O'Gorman, Ned – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2008
This essay presents Dwight D. Eisenhower's presidential rhetoric as an iteration of an American synecdochal sublime. Eisenhower's rhetoric sought to re-aim civic sight beyond corporeal objects to the nation's transcendental essence. This rhetoric is intimately connected to prevailing political anxieties and exigencies, especially the problem of…
Descriptors: United States History, Weapons, Rhetoric, War
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Tell, Dave – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2008
In 1955, journalist William Bradford Huie interviewed Emmett Till's killers and published their confession in "Look" magazine. Titled "The Shocking Story of Approved Murder in Mississippi," Huie's tale dominated the remembrance of Emmett Till for nearly fifty years. This essay argues that the power of the "Shocking…
Descriptors: Racial Discrimination, Interviews, Homicide, Self Disclosure (Individuals)
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