Precarious Rhetorics
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Author | : Wendy S. Hesford |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 315 |
Release | : 2018 |
Genre | : Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | : 9780814213766 |
First work to couple materialist and rhetorical frameworks with interdisciplinary understandings of precarity to study pressing issues of our time.
Author | : Allison L. Rowland |
Publisher | : Rhetoric and Materiality |
Total Pages | : 190 |
Release | : 2020-04-28 |
Genre | : Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | : 9780814255827 |
Examines gut microbes, fetuses, and gym-goers in three case studies to critique the discursive practices of inclusion into humanhood.
Author | : Kellie Sharp-Hoskins |
Publisher | : Penn State Press |
Total Pages | : 237 |
Release | : 2023-05-26 |
Genre | : Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | : 0271096519 |
In recent years, household indebtedness in the United States reached its highest levels in history. From mortgages to student loans, from credit card bills to US deficit spending, debt is widespread and increasing. Drawing on scholarship from economics, accounting, and critical rhetoric and social theory, Kellie Sharp-Hoskins critiques debt not as an economic indicator or a tool of finance but as a cultural system. Through case studies of the student-loan crisis, medical debt, and the abuses of municipal bonds, Sharp-Hoskins reveals that debt is a rhetorical construct entangled in broader systems of wealth, rule, and race. Perhaps more than any other social marker or symbol, the concept of “debt” indicates differences between wealthy and poor, productive and lazy, secure and risky, worthy and unworthy. Tracking the emergence and work of debt across temporal and spatial scales reveals how it exacerbates vulnerabilities and inequities under the rhetorical cover of individual, moral, and volitional calculation and equivalency. A new perspective on a serious problem facing our society, Rhetoric in Debt not only reveals how debt organizes our social and cultural relations but also provides a new conceptual framework for a more equitable world.
Author | : Megan Eatman |
Publisher | : Rhetoric and Materiality |
Total Pages | : 188 |
Release | : 2020-02-14 |
Genre | : Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | : 9780814214343 |
Examines lynching, capital punishment, and torture to investigate how rhetoric and violence work together to sustain inhospitable spaces and create challenges for antiviolence work.
Author | : Lynda Walsh |
Publisher | : Springer |
Total Pages | : 266 |
Release | : 2017-03-16 |
Genre | : Social Science |
ISBN | : 3319512684 |
This book restores the concept of topology to its rhetorical roots to assist scholars who wish not just to criticize power dynamics, but also to invent alternatives. Topology is a spatial rather than a causal method. It works inductively to model discourse without reducing it to the actions of a few or resolving its inherent contradictions. By putting topology back in tension with opportunity, as originally designed, the contributors to this volume open up new possibilities for post-critical practice in “wicked discourses” of medicine, technology, literacy, and the environment. Readers of the volume will discover exactly how the discipline of rhetoric underscores and interacts with current notions of topology in philosophy, design, psychoanalysis, and science studies.
Author | : Louis M. Maraj |
Publisher | : University Press of Colorado |
Total Pages | : 209 |
Release | : 2020-12-01 |
Genre | : Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | : 1646421477 |
Black or Right: Anti/Racist Campus Rhetorics explores notions of Blackness in white institutional—particularly educational—spaces. In it, Louis M. Maraj theorizes how Black identity operates with/against ideas of difference in the age of #BlackLivesMatter. Centering Blackness in frameworks for antiracist agency through interdisciplinary Black feminist lenses, Black or Right asks how those racially signifying “diversity” in US higher education (and beyond) make meaning in the everyday. Offering four Black rhetorics as antiracist means for rhetorical reclamation—autoethnography, hashtagging, inter(con)textual reading, and reconceptualized disruption—the book uses Black feminist relationality via an African indigenous approach. Maraj examines fluid, quotidian ways Black folk engage anti/racism at historically white institutions in the United States in response to violent campus spaces, educational structures, protest movements, and policy practice. Black or Right’s experimental, creative style strives to undiscipline knowledge from academic confinement. Exercising different vantage points in each chapter—autoethnographer, digital media scholar/pedagogue, cultural rhetorician, and critical discourse analyst—Maraj challenges readers to ecologically understand shifting, multiple meanings of Blackness in knowledge-making. Black or Right’s expressive form, organization, narratives, and poetics intimately interweave with its argument that Black folk must continuously invent “otherwise” in reiterative escape from oppressive white spaces. In centering Black experiences, Black theory, and diasporic Blackness, Black or Right mobilizes generative approaches to destabilizing institutional whiteness, as opposed to reparative attempts to “fix racism,” which often paradoxically center whiteness. It will be of interest to both academic and general readers and significant for specialists in cultural rhetorics, Black studies, and critical theory.
Author | : Wendy Hesford |
Publisher | : Duke University Press |
Total Pages | : 293 |
Release | : 2011-08-05 |
Genre | : Political Science |
ISBN | : 0822349515 |
Scrutinizes spectacular rhetoric, the use of visual images and imagery to construct certain bodies, populations, and nations as victims and incorporate them into human rights discourses geared toward Westerners.
Author | : Laura A. Sparks |
Publisher | : Rowman & Littlefield |
Total Pages | : 153 |
Release | : 2023-10-15 |
Genre | : Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | : 1666921815 |
Rhetoric in the Time of Torture offers a renewed attention to the rhetorical and temporal dimensions of torture, in light of the U.S.’s post-9/11 reliance on heavy interrogation techniques. Laura A. Sparks highlights where rhetorical theory fits into a world in which people torture others to make them speak.
Author | : Shui-yin Sharon Yam |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 232 |
Release | : 2019 |
Genre | : Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | : 9780814214091 |
Examines how three transnational groups in Hong Kong use familial narratives to promote critical empathy and decenter the oppressive logics behind dominant citizenship discourses.
Author | : Christa J. Olson |
Publisher | : Penn State Press |
Total Pages | : 305 |
Release | : 2013-11-15 |
Genre | : Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | : 0271063637 |
In Constitutive Visions, Christa Olson presents the rhetorical history of republican Ecuador as punctuated by repeated arguments over national identity. Those arguments—as they advanced theories of citizenship, popular sovereignty, and republican modernity—struggled to reconcile the presence of Ecuador’s large indigenous population with the dominance of a white-mestizo minority. Even as indigenous people were excluded from civic life, images of them proliferated in speeches, periodicals, and artworks during Ecuador’s long process of nation formation. Tracing how that contradiction illuminates the textures of national-identity formation, Constitutive Visions places petitions from indigenous laborers alongside oil paintings, overlays woodblock illustrations with legislative debates, and analyzes Ecuador’s nineteen constitutions in light of landscape painting. Taken together, these juxtapositions make sense of the contradictions that sustained and unsettled the postcolonial nation-state.