Front cover image for The SAGE Handbook of Rhetorical Studies

The SAGE Handbook of Rhetorical Studies

The SAGE Handbook of Rhetorical Studies surveys the latest advances in rhetorical scholarship, synthesizing theories and practices across major areas of study in the field and pointing the way for future studies. Edited by Andrea A. Lunsford and Associate Editors Kirt H. Wilson and Rosa A. Eberly, the Handbook aims to introduce a new generation of students to rhetorical study and provide a deeply informed and ready resource for scholars currently working in the field
eBook, English, 2008
SAGE Publications, Thousand Oaks, 2008
1 online resource (713 pages)
9781452212036, 9781483343433, 1452212031, 148334343X
809772009
Print version:
PART I. HISTORICAL STUDIES IN RHETORIC<br />Introduction: Historical and Comparative Rhetorical Studies: Revisionist Methods and Directions
C. Jan Swearingen and Edward Schiappa<br />1. Historiography and the Study of Rhetoric
Arthur E. Walzer and David Beard<br />2. Rhetorical Archaeology: Established Resources, Methodological Tools, and Basic Research Methods
Richard Leo Enos<br />3. Medieval and Renaissance Rhetorical Studies of Women
Christine Mason Sutherland<br />4. Recovering, Revisioning, and Regendering the History of 18th- and 19th-Century Rhetorical Theory and Practice
Lynee Lewis Gaillet and Elizabeth Tasker<br />5. Coping With Modernity: Strategies of 20th-Century Rhetorical Theory
James Arnt Aune<br />6. The Study of Argumentation
Frans H. van Eemeren<br />7. Rhetoric of Religion: A Map of the Territory
Margaret D. Zulick<br />8. Feminist Perspectives on the History of Rhetoric
Kate Ronald<br />9. Recent Advances in Comparative Rhetoric
Sue Hum and Arabella Lyon<br />PART II. RHETORIC ACROSS THE DISCIPLINES<br />Introduction: Rhetoric, Disciplinarity, and Fields of Knowledge
John Lyne and Carolyn R. Miller<br />10. The Rhetoric of the Natural Sciences
Jeanne Fahnestock<br />11. The Rhetoric of Economics
Edward M. Clift<br />12. Rhetoric in Literary Criticism and Theory
Don Bialostosky<br />13. Rhetoric of Health and Medicine
Judy Z. Segal<br />14. Rhetoric and International Relations: More Than 'Cheap Talk'
Gordon R. Mitchell<br />15. The Rhetoric of Interdisciplinarity: Boundary Work in the Construction of New Knowledge
Julie Thompson Klein<br />PART III. RHETORIC AND PEDAGOGY<br />Introduction: Rhetoric as Pedagogy
Cheryl Glenn and Martin Carcasson<br />16. Rhetoric and (?) Composition
Bruce Horner and Min-Zhan Lu<br />17. Intercollegiate Debate and Speech Communication: Historical Developments and Issues for the Future
Jarrod Atchison and Ed Panetta<br />18. The Consequences of Rhetoric and Literacy: Power, Persuasion, and Pedagogical Implications
Morris Young and Connie Kendall<br />19. Echoes frmo the Past: Learning How to Listen, Again
Joyce Irene Middleton<br />20. Civic Participation and the Undergraduate Curriculum
Wendy B. Sharer<br />21. Visual Rhetoric and/as Critical Pedagogy
Brian L. Ott and Greg Dickinson<br />22. A Century After the Divorce: Challenges To a Rapprochement Between Speech Communication and English
Roxanne Mountford<br />PART IV. RHETORIC AND PUBLIC DISCOURSE<br />Introduction: The Common Goods of Public Discourse
Kirt Wilson and Rosa A. Eberly<br />23. History of Public Discourse Studies
David Zarefsky<br />24. Race, Sex, and Class in Rhetorical Criticism
Karlyn Kohrs Campbell and Zornitsa D. Keremidchieva<br />25. Rhetoric and Critical Theory: Possibillities for Rapprochement in Public Deliberation
Gerard A. Hauser and Maria T. Hegbloom<br />26. Digital Rhetoric and Public Discourse
Laura J. Gurak and Smiljana Antonijevic<br />27. Arts of Address in Revolutionary America
Stephen Howard Browne<br />28. Explosive Words and Glimmers of Hope: U.S. Public Discourse, 1860-1900
Angela G. Ray<br />29. For the Common Good: Rhetoric and Discourse Practices in the United States, 1900-1950
Thomas W. Benson<br />30. Religious Voices in American Public Discourse
James Darsey and Josh Ritter<br />31. Between Touchstones and Touch Screens: What Counts as Contemporary Political Rhetoric?
Vanessa B. Beasley<br />32. Social Movement Rhetoric
Robert Cox and Christina R. Foust<br />