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Lee, Ronald – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1989
Discusses the post-presidential writings of Richard Nixon. Finds an overarching concern for the "will," which permitted Nixon to transform the standards of higher moral principle into the politics of expediency. Views Nixon's writings as a symptom of the ailing health of public morality in liberal society. (SR)
Descriptors: Communication Research, Foreign Policy, Liberalism, Moral Values

Logue, Cal M. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1981
Discusses the coercive controls imposed upon Blacks during slavery, including regimenting their lives, restricting their learning experiences, limiting their opportunities to communicate, and prescribing demeaning role behavior. Rhetorical strategies employed by Blacks included a defensive posture of accommodation and a more aggressive behavior of…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Black History, Communication (Thought Transfer), Communication Research

Clark, E. Culpepper; McKerrow, Raymie E. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1987
Reexamines Gunnar Myrdal's "An American Dilemma" (1944), which argued race relations in America would improve because the American Creed of democratic liberalism created a dilemma between existing racial prejudice and the national ideology. Describes how Myrdal's deterministic perspective robbed civil rights historiography of its drama…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Communication Research, Democratic Values, Historiography

Branham, Robert J.; Pearce, W. Barnett – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1987
Discusses Senator Kennedy's address on "Tolerance and Truth in America," given at Liberty Baptist College in 1983, to propose a "contract" for the public relationship between himself and Jerry Falwell in which each could be more civil toward the other without betraying his constituencies or threatening the other's supporters.…
Descriptors: Audiences, Communication Research, Contracts, Discourse Analysis

Procter, David E. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1990
Examines rhetorical processes which convert experience into social forms of community. Compares Robert Scott's notion of rhetoric as dynamic with the rhetorical concept of "spectacle." Explores "the dynamic spectacle" as a rhetorical document of community building. Examines Black America's reaction to the spectacle of Liberty…
Descriptors: Behavior, Black Community, Blacks, Case Studies

Birdsell, David S. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1987
Analyzes President Reagan's foreign policy address of October 27, 1983, on events in Lebanon and Grenada, by taking a flexible approach to Kenneth Burke's "pentad"--preserving the inherent ambiguity of act, agent, agency, scene, and purpose. Concludes that the speech reveals a formulation of American character incompatible with a…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Discourse Analysis, Foreign Policy, International Relations

Lewis, William F. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1987
Discusses the dominance of the narrative form in President Reagan's rhetoric and how his use of narrative form--characterized by a story-based truth, an emphasis on morality, and a grounding in common sense--affects political judgment, differentiating the perspective of his supporters and his opponents. Considers the power and limitations of…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Language Styles, Language Usage, Narration

Morris, Barry Alan – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1987
Discusses the failure of Joe Bob Briggs' parody of "We Are the World" in terms of the development of the communal sense that creates a set of group norms, which in turn create "phantom constraints" of which the parody's author may not be aware.(NKA)
Descriptors: Behavior Standards, Community Attitudes, Community Support, Cultural Context