NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 12 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Wander, Philip C. – Western Journal of Communication, 2011
"Whither ideology?" is an intriguing question, to which the author's immediate response is: Nowhere! Has its moment passed, at least in relation to the way that people ordinarily think of it? Not because the end of ideology has finally come, but because the emergence of the concept in American academic work, as an expression of political…
Descriptors: War, Ideology, World History, Western Civilization
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Tamatea, Laurence – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2008
The intent of this article is to explore how No Child Left Behind (NCLB) emerges from a discursive frame that is also used in relation to neoliberal corporate conquests and, significantly, America's war on terror. The article first demonstrates through reference to online resistance discourses and NCLB, how NCLB is a product of and reproduces the…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Educational Policy, Terrorism, Discourse Analysis
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
McKerrow, Ray E. – Central States Speech Journal, 1977
Examines the symbolic import of Truman's rhetoric of victory in support of U.S. intervention in Korea. (MH)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Persuasive Discourse, Presidents, Rhetoric
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Bytwerk, Randall L. – Central States Speech Journal, 1978
The rhetoric of the final four months of Hitler's Reich is examined, including arguments that Germany could still win the war based on moral and logical grounds, and later appeals based on source credibility, historical analogy, and terror. (JF)
Descriptors: Credibility, Nationalism, Politics, Propaganda
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Rickert, William E. – Central States Speech Journal, 1977
Examines Churchill's use of archetypal metaphors in his speeches from 1930 to 1945. (MH)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Metaphors, Rhetoric
Cherwitz, Richard A. – Western Speech Communication, 1978
Examines President Johnson's speeches of August fourth and fifth in 1964. The effects of the speeches are analyzed to show support for the propositions that Johnson's rhetoric created an international crisis and that it limited the foreign policy alternatives of the United States in Vietnam. (JMF)
Descriptors: Foreign Policy, Persuasive Discourse, Political Power, Rhetoric
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Ivie, Robert L. – Communication Monographs, 1980
Identifies the characteristics of rhetoric in American justification for war and the portrayal of the enemy as a savage aggressor. Discusses the use of contrasts--force and freedom, irrationality and rationality, aggression and defense--to generate values which subordinate the ideal of peace to the necessity of preserving freedom. (JMF)
Descriptors: Imagery, International Relations, Peace, Rhetoric
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Hazel, Harry, Jr. – Communication Quarterly, 1978
This article attributes the impact of Urban II's call to arms to the events and issues of the times, as well as to Urban's unique shaping of a new image of redemption for an audience saddled by guilt. The address also appears to fit a discernible pattern of war rhetoric. (JMF)
Descriptors: Medieval History, Persuasive Discourse, Religion, Religious Conflict
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Bass, Jeff D. – Western Journal of Speech Communication, 1979
Claims that loosely structured, complex rhetorical situations possess a strong internal structure with regard to their development or maturation over a period of time. The implications of this position are developed via an analysis of the discourse surrounding the American Revolution and the Vietnam War. (JMF)
Descriptors: Political Issues, Politics, Public Speaking, Revolutionary War (United States)
Cox, J. Robert – Western Speech, 1974
A study of rhetorical behaviors in mass movements. (CH)
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Dissent, Persuasive Discourse, Political Attitudes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Skow, Lisa M.; Dionisopoulos, George N. – Communication Quarterly, 1997
Contributes to scholarship on the role of discursive rhetoric for providing a context for visual messages. Analyzes how the American print media, in the summer of 1963, contextualized M. Browne's photographs of a Vietnamese Buddhist monk's self-immolation in two competing frames of either religious oppression or a war for freedom against the…
Descriptors: Buddhism, Case Studies, Communication Research, Critical Viewing
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Gustainis, J. Justin; Hahn, Dan F. – Communication Quarterly, 1988
Claims that Vietnam War protestors were not instrumental in bringing it to an end. Contends that their rhetorical strategies may have actually harmed their cause, and that Middle Americans only became disenchanted when the oft-promised victory in Vietnam proved elusive and the casualties began to mount. (MS)
Descriptors: Activism, Audience Analysis, Capitalism, Civil Disobedience