NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Showing 1,636 to 1,650 of 1,842 results Save | Export
Foss, Karen A. – 1989
An updated version of a 1984 publication, this 49-item annotated bibliography focuses on rhetorical analysis of American feminist rhetoric published in communication journals. The selections date from 1962 to 1988. (NKA)
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Discourse Analysis, Discourse Communities, Females
Lagergren, Paul – 1990
The recent success of the United States antismoking movement has produced a marked decline in the U.S. smoking population. A study employed Jurgen Habermas' communicative competency theory to examine United States smoking controversy discourse and identify the most successful appeals of the antismoking movement. Analysis revealed that primary…
Descriptors: Advertising, Communication Research, Consumer Education, Developing Nations
Prentice, Diana B. – 1983
The appellate argument of Paul Wilson, who represented the Topeka, Kansas, school board in the 1952 Supreme Court case, "Brown v. Board of Education," presents an excellent example of the influence of personal and legal ethics on rhetorical choices. A reluctant advocate of racially segregated education, a policy the Topeka Board of…
Descriptors: Advocacy, Discriminatory Legislation, Ethics, Lawyers
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Jordan, William J.; And Others – Central States Speech Journal, 1975
Explores the effects of metaphorical language on receiver attention and memory. (MH)
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Behavioral Science Research, Communication (Thought Transfer), Discourse Analysis
German, Kathleen M. – 1989
The use of figurative language permeates American Indian discourse, across differences in time, geography, and tribal culture. Traditionally, the presence of figurative language has been attributed to a compulsion for decoration and to a need for mnemonic devices. However, neither of these explanations accounts for changes in the rich tapestry of…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Literature, American Indians, Discourse Analysis
Allen, Julia M. – 1989
Helen Forbes, in her short story "The Hunky Woman," written in 1916 for "The Masses," an eclectic Socialist magazine, undermines particular categorical propositions. By using narration with a shifting of narrative voice, Forbes calls into question the validity of the traditional teaching of argumentation. Forbes demonstrates…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Discourse Analysis, Females, Feminism
Hellweg, Susan A.; Verhoye, Anna M. – 1989
This study examined the verbal message strategies employed in the two 1988 presidential debates by Vice-President George Bush and Governor Michael Dukakis, independently and comparatively. A number of broad verbal categories were developed to code the messages of each candidate from videotapes and transcripts. Verbal characteristics under…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Communication Research, Comparative Analysis, Debate
Salwen, Michael B. – 1987
To discover the components of a trustworthy source, a study evaluated the credibility of health-related news stories. Subjects, 192 college undergraduates, read one of four random versions of a one-page newspaper story about aspirin's ability to ward off heart attacks. They were told that the sources for the articles were: a medical journal (high…
Descriptors: Credibility, Health Materials, Higher Education, Information Sources
Hagaman, John – 1987
Recent criticism of rhetorical invention faults the discipline for not promoting "advanced literacy," defined as the use of critical reading and writing abilities to serve social ends. Aristotle's vision of rhetoric has contributed significantly to a cognitive view of invention, but Aristotle also acknowledged the importance of social…
Descriptors: Audiences, Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Literacy
Hamilton-Wieler, Sharon – 1986
Composing written text in an educational context engages both students and teachers in struggles between convention and choice, resulting frequently in the negotiation of compromises with which neither teachers nor students feel comfortable. The linguistic traditions of a discipline are powerful determinants of the nature of the language in which…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Content Area Writing, Foreign Countries, Intellectual Disciplines
Proshan, Chester J. – 1986
Historically, Americans have employed the rhetorical motif "reaffirmation of principle" to cope with the social evils in their midst. This concept refers to the tendency of groups to respond to outside hostility by regrouping and reaffirming their ethos through a form of self-address. Reaffirmation of principle, like managerial rhetoric,…
Descriptors: Conflict Resolution, Persuasive Discourse, Revolutionary War (United States), Rhetorical Criticism
Tilley, James Garland – 1983
To determine the extent to which current theories of persuasion are used or advocated by homileticians (i.e., preachers), this study examines 21 frequently used homiletics textbooks for their treatment of persuasion. After describing the characteristics of classical, premodern, humanistic, and rhetorical models, the study suggests that these…
Descriptors: Clergy, Communication Skills, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education
Haas, Adelaide – 1979
Based upon research conducted during the past decade that identifies speech features of form, topic, content, and use of language as male- or female-associated, this paper examines the rhetoric of Sojourner Truth in reference to these features. It classifies her directness, originality, and action as male-associated and her modesty, emotionalism,…
Descriptors: Black History, Black Leadership, Females, Language Styles
Foss, Sonja K. – 1979
The purposes of black feminist Pauli Murray in her feminist discourse are to help individuals gain self-awareness about their personal and social histories and about their potential for action, and to direct the energies of all oppressed people toward working together against oppression. Murray's discourse is addressed to successful professional…
Descriptors: Activism, Audiences, Black Achievement, Black Power
Glaser, Susan R. – 1979
The study described in this paper illustrates how key features of rhetorical analysis can be operationalized to apply to the study of therapeutic transactions. After a discussion of psychotherapy as an influence process, the paper describes the methodology used in an analysis of tape-recorded discourse between three therapist/client dyads in an…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Counselor Client Relationship, Discourse Analysis, Helping Relationship
Pages: 1  |  ...  |  106  |  107  |  108  |  109  |  110  |  111  |  112  |  113  |  114  |  ...  |  123