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Recovering Argument

Editat de Randall Lake
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 21 aug 2018
This volume presents the best scholarship from the 19th National Communication Association/American Forensic Association Conference on Argumentation, which took place July 30-August 2, 2015, at Cliff Lodge, Snowbird Resort, in Alta, Utah. The Alta Conference, first held in 1979, is the oldest conference in argumentation studies in the world and biennially brings together a lively group of scholars, representing a variety of countries, with diverse perspectives on the theory and practice of argument. The essays in Recovering Argument invite reflection upon and reconsideration of argumentation’s legacy, present status, and potential roles in social, cultural, and political life. Readers will encounter essays that treat the relationship between argumentation and memory, historical approaches to argumentation, the vitality of public and interpersonal argument, argument’s role in leadership, discursive and presentational forms of argument, and the challenges of difference. Readers also will find these topics addressed from a variety of historical, social-scientific, and critical-interpretive perspectives.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781138294899
ISBN-10: 1138294896
Pagini: 436
Ilustrații: 5 Tables, black and white
Dimensiuni: 174 x 246 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Postgraduate and Undergraduate

Cuprins

Recovering Argument: An Introduction  Keynote Address  "Lafayette, we are here!": Why Did the US Commemorate Its World War I Dead in Europe?  Spotlight Panel  Introduction: In Celebration of Bruce Gronbeck (1941-2014)  1 Recovering Bruce Gronbeck: Reflecting on Argument’s Role in Rhetorical History  2 Recovering Bruce Gronbeck: Reflecting on Argument’s Role in Political Rhetoric  3 Recovering Bruce Gronbeck at Alta: Theory and the Critic of Argumentation  Part I: Recovering Argument in History  Argument in Service of Memory  4 Stories of Origin: Recovering Atomic Histories in the "Noisy" Nuclear Culture of Richland, Washington  5 Temporary Holocaust Tattoos: Recovering Signs for Collective Prosthetic Memory  6 Gorbachev’s Argument for Perestroika: Forgotten or Remembered?  7 "The Blind Remembrance!": Rhetorical Tensions in the 1962 Emancipation Proclamation Centennial  8 Recovering Nature: Memory and Scientific Argument at the American Museum of Natural History  9 The Agency of the Archive and the Challenges of Classification  Memory in Service of Argument  10 Conspiracy as Legal Doctrine and Historiographical Framework: From the Nuremberg Trials to Contemporary Holocaust Denial Discourse  11 Recovering Patton’s Speech: Materializing Persistent Arguments  12 The Irony of Originalist Arguments in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission  13 Argument Constellations in Voting Rights Debates  Recovering Legacies of Argumentation  14 Me and Michael McGee: Recovering an Isocratean Tradition in the Art of Argumentation  15 Recovering Argumentation’s Figurative Domain  PART II: Recovering Argument in Public/Politics  Argument and the Public Sphere  16 Recovering Rational Argument: A Case Study of Vaccine Skeptics  17 Carbon Sink: Higher Education and the Liberal Public Sphere  18 Challenges to Recovering Arguments Once Challenged in the Public Sphere  19 Fact-Checking and the Liberal Public Sphere: Can Argument be Recovered?  20 Recovering the Potential of Argument in the Public Sphere: Moms Demand Action and Threats of Gendered Violence in the Gun Control Debate  Health and/of Argument  21 Recovering Trust: Mothers’ Anti-Vax to Pro-Vax Conversions  22 Recovering From Autism: A Rhetorical Perspective  23 The Logic(s) of Diagnosis: An Argumentative Analysis of Controversy Over the Inclusion of PTSD in Official Psychiatric Nomenclature (1975-1978)  24 Healthy Disagreement: Exploring Medical Controversies Through Structured Public Debates  25 Recovering From Pathological Argumentation: A Theory of Argument Systems and Intersubjective Psychosis  Health(y) Argument About Ebola  26 When Things Argue  27 Ebola, Reason, and Fear  28 Recovering Productive Pity to Motivate Americans to Corrective Action on Africa’s Ebola Crisis: Lessons From Kenneth Burke and Senator Christopher Coons  29 Ebola and the Liberal Public Sphere  30 The Ebola Crisis as an Interfield Dispute  Argument and Terror  31 The Case of Shura City: Rhetorical Cartography, Argument Mapping, and the Global War on Terror  32 Discovering and Recovering Arguments About Terror: Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama in Comparative Perspective  33 Recovering Argument by Dissociation: ISIL, Hyatt Boumeddiene, and the Networked Security State  Recovering Leadership Through Argument  34 Recovering Cross-Cultural Audience(s) in Presidential Public Argument  35 Sisi, Anticatēgoria, and Recovering Egypt  36 Problematic Constraints on the Successful Exercise of Leadership, Their Negative Impact, Palliative Measures, and Argument as a More Effective Remedy  37 Recovering Responsibility: The Rhetoric of Responsibility in Presidential Policy Debates  38 Prime Minister Abe’s Critical Turn: From the Ideology of A Beautiful Country to the Metaphor of  Three Arrows  Public Argument on Social Media  39 Twitter: How Terministic Screens Polarize Presidential Debates  40 Perspective by Incongruity in Internet Memes: The Case of the Japanese Hostage Crisis (2015)  41 Digital Conspiracy Argument and the Recovery of Nonverbal Communication as Signs of Complicity  42 Arguments for Everybody: Social Media, Context Collapse, and the Universal Audience  Part III: Recovering Argument in Theory and Criticism  The Challenge of Gender  43 The Subversive Sister: An Analysis of Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz’s Appropriation of Masculine Classical  Form  44 Recovery as Discovery: Finding Lucy  45 Argumentation in the Identity Politics of the Trans Selfie: Recovering Greek Mythology to Analyze  Contemporary Gender Arguments  46 The Restrained Tongue: Recovering Bathsua Makin’s Weapon in 17th-Century England  47 Recovering Bodies of Argument: Refuting Rape Rationalizations in Public Discourse  48 Virtual Violations: Shaming Rape Victims via Social Media Memes  49 Recovering Rape: Sexual Violence in Women’s Public Address in the United States, 1848-1915  The Challenge of Presentational Arguments  50 Genre, Modality, and Written Rap Battles: A Preliminary Investigation  51 A Critical Recovery of Images as Arguments: Manipulation, Distortion, and Debating Abortion  52 Evental Images and the Generation of Argument  53 Corporeal Anxiety: The Visual Argumentation of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Tips From Former Smokers Advertisements  54 Recovering Tragedy: Tragic Argument and Nonviolent Protest  55 Examining Presentational Devices: Strategic Maneuvering in Lipitor’s Direct-to-Consumer Drug Advertising  The Challenge of Interpersonal Arguments  56 Emotions, Perceived Resolvability, and Conflict Strategy Usage in K-12 Parent-Teacher Serial Arguments  57 Clarifying the Idea of Argument Stakes  58 A New Measurement for Argument Topic Interdependence in Serial Arguments  59 Lines of Argument in Regulative Messages: Comparisons Across Three Decades  The Challenges of/to Academic Debate  60 Recovering Debate Coaches as Civic Figures: Highly Active Debate Coaches, Their Participation in  Civic Outreach Activities, and Reward Perceptions  61 Pathos in Intercollegiate Debate: Emotion as an Argumentative Warrant  62 Recovering and Celebrating Controversy: Justifications for Intercollegiate Policy Debate for the 21st Century  63 Debate as Oral Activity  Recovering Genres of Discursive Argument  64 Recovering the Scientific Polemic: Alfred Kinsey’s Rhetoric  65 Recovering That Which Never was Truly Lost: Richard McKeon, the United Nations, and the Importance of Democracy in a World of Tensions  66 Dissenting to Dispassion: Recovering Pathos in Judicial Rhetoric Through Harry Blackmun’s Opinion in Callins v. Collins  67 Recovering the Argumentative Limits of the Open Letter: Jackie Robinson’s Open Letters

Notă biografică

Randall A. Lake is Associate Professor of Communication in the Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism at the University of Southern California, USA, where he also was Director of Debate from 1981-1990, and Director of Forensics from 1990-1994. Among other positions, he served on the NCA Committee on International Discussion and Debate from 1998-2002, organizing exchanges with teams from the United Kingdom, Japan, the Soviet Union, and Eastern European countries. He was editor-in-chief of Argumentation and Advocacy from 2004-2008 and associate editor of three previous Alta Conference volumes. His research has appeared in Argumentation and Advocacy, Argumentation, Quarterly Journal of Speech, Communication Monographs, Rhetoric & Public Affairs, Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, and numerous edited collections. He also created and maintains asduniway.org, a website devoted to woman suffrage rhetoric, particularly that of Abigail Scott Duniway, of Oregon. He has received the NCA Gerald R. Miller Outstanding Dissertation Award (1982), the NCA Golden Anniversary Monograph Award for article of the year (1998), and the AFA Daniel Rohrer Research Award for article of the year (1998, 2016). His scholarship explores argumentation’s cultural and civic functions and emphasizes difference in the context of social change, focusing particularly on Native American, feminist, and conservative rhetorics.

Descriere

The essays in Recovering Argument examine argumentation’s legacy, present status, and potential roles in social, cultural, and political life.