Showing 11-20 of 26 items.
Kenneth Burke and Contemporary European Thought
Rhetoric in Transition
Edited by Bernard L. Brock
University of Alabama Press
Insights into the problem of our relation to language
Argumentation Theory and the Rhetoric of Assent
Edited by David Williams and Michael David Hazen
University of Alabama Press
Essays strive to parse out the nature of assent
The Cultural Prison
Discourse, Prisoners, and Punishment
University of Alabama Press
The Cultural Prison brings a new dimension to the study of prisoners and punishment by focusing on how the punishment of American offenders is represented and shaped in the mass media through public arguments.
President Johnson's War On Poverty
Rhetoric and History
University of Alabama Press
Illustrates the interweaving of rhetorical and historical forces in shaping public policy
See It Now Confronts McCarthyism
Television Documentary and the Politics of Representation
University of Alabama Press
Seeks evidence from media artifacts to reveal aesthetic, cultural, ideological, generic, and historical dimensions from classic television broadcasts
A Voice Of Their Own
The Woman Suffrage Press, 1840-1910
Edited by Martha Solomon
University of Alabama Press
A Voice of Their Own explores the consciousness-raising role of the American Suffrage press of the latter half of the 19th century
Rhetorical Dimensions Of Popular Culture
University of Alabama Press
Supports the argument that rhetoric needs to be conceptualized as the social function that influences and manages meaning
A Pragmatic Theory of Fallacy
University of Alabama Press
Takes a new analytical look at the concept of fallacy and presents an up-to-date analysis of its usefulness for argumentation studies
Doing Rhetorical History
Concepts and Cases
Edited by Kathleen J. Turner
University of Alabama Press
This collection argues that rhetorical history, both as a methodology
and as a perspective, offers insights that are central to the study of
communication and unavailable through other approaches.
A Theory of Argumentation
University of Alabama Press
Establishes a theoretical context for, and to elaborate the implications of, the claim that argument is a form of interaction in which two or more people maintain what they construe to be incompatible positions
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