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A ccording to Aldan Morris, "The modern civil rights movement fulfilled one of the unfinished tas... more A ccording to Aldan Morris, "The modern civil rights movement fulfilled one of the unfinished tasks of the Civil War. It increased the freedom of the descendants of former slaves by overthrowing legalized Jim Crow and a significant amount of the inequity associated with it." Moreover, ((The most distinctive aspect of the modern civil rights movement was its demonstration that, through the widespread use of social protest, power could be generated by an oppressed group at the bottom of a modern industrialized society." 1 Harvard Sitkoff has labeled the modern civil rights movement "one of the most significant developments in American history" and defined its parameters as "the struggle for racial equality and justice waged between 1954 and 1992." 2 If we use Sitkoff's time period as our measure, we have now entered fully into the "post-civil rights era." The meaning of such a designation is itself open to interpretation, if not debate. Times have changed. In issuing the call for this special issue on "civil rights in the postmodern era," I was simultaneously excited and just a tad wary. After all, whatever the prospects that might lie ahead, I was certain that I was about to enter uncharted territory. Much of my enthusiasm regarding a special issue on civil rights centered on the opportunity to take the contemporary pulse of the transformations in the civil rights movement. Furthermore, President Clinton had announced his initiative on race and I had some hope that a fruitful dialogue on race relations would receive new impetus in the United States. The scandals associated with the administration soon demarcated a misplaced enthusiasm on my part. My wariness also could be traced to the complexity of the call for essays I was about to undertake. In issuing my call for a discussion on "civil rights" at the beginning of the new millennium, I reflected on a daunting truism: we now live in a very different time than that of the mass mobilization efforts begun in Montgomery in the 1950s and perhaps crowned in the early 1960s at the apotheosis of the civil rights movement represented by the March on Washington and Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" address. By employing the term "postmodern era," I was
Congress & the Presidency
Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2004
https://epublications.marquette.edu/marq\_fac-book/1239/thumbnail.jp
The Review of Communication, 2001
Journal of Government Information, 2002
Series Foreword Preface The Ethical Performances of Candidates in American Presidential Campaign ... more Series Foreword Preface The Ethical Performances of Candidates in American Presidential Campaign Dramas by Bruce E. Gronbeck Images, Issues, and Political Structure: A Framework for Judging the Ethics of Campaign Discourse by Ronald Lee Electronic Democracy, Virtual Politics, and Local Communities by Steven R. Goldzwig and Patricia Sullivan Ethical Considerations of Civil Discourse: The Implications of the Rise of "Hate Speech" by Rita Kirk Whillock Dangers of "Teledemocracy": How the Medium of Television Undermines American Democracy by Robert E. Denton, Jr. Narrative Form and the Deceptions of Modern Journalism by Gary C. Woodward Ethics and Political Advertising by Lynda Lee Kaid Soft Money and Hard Choices: The Influence of Campaign Finance Rules on Campaign Communication Strategy by Clifford A. Jones Internet Ethics by Gary W. Selnow Epilogue: Constitutional Authority, Public Morality and Politics by Robert E. Denton, Jr. Bibliography Index
Presidential Studies Quarterly, 1994
... Ordinary people, it is assumed, are not equipped to grasp the demands made on American foreig... more ... Ordinary people, it is assumed, are not equipped to grasp the demands made on American foreign policy, to deliberate ... policy."50 Kennedy's ... Similarly, Kennedy justified the seeming lack of influence the United States had over Cambodia, Thailand, and South Vietnam when he ...
Foreward - Patricia A. Sullivan and Steven R. Goldzwig PART 1: RHETORICS, ETHICS, and VALUES Ch 1... more Foreward - Patricia A. Sullivan and Steven R. Goldzwig PART 1: RHETORICS, ETHICS, and VALUES Ch 1. James Baldwin's Topoi - James Darsey Ch 2. Ingenium--Speaking in Community: The Case of the Prince William County Zoning Hearings on Disney's America - Katheryn M. Olson and G. Thomas Goodnight Ch 3. Arguing about the Place of Values and Ethics in Market-Oriented Discourses of Today - George Cheney Ch 4. Cultural Contracts Theory: Toward a Critical-Rhetorical Identity Negotiation Paradigm - Ronald L. Jackson II PART II. RHETORICS, INSTITUTIONS, and CONTEXTS Introduction Ch 5. Remembrances of Things Past: A Postcolonial Critique of the Human Genome Diversity Project - Marouf Hasian and Emily Plec Ch 6. The Life of the Party: The Keynote Address in Contemporary American Politics - John M. Murphy and Thomas R. Burkholder Ch 7. Memory as Social Action: Cultural Projection and Generic Form in Civil Rights Memorials - Victoria J. Gallagher Ch 8. John Wayne, "The Green Berets", and the Containment Doctrine - George N. Dionisopoulos PART III. RHETORICS, CULTURES and IDEOLOGIES Introduction Ch 9. Fighting Words: Labor and the Limits of Symbolic Intervention at Staley, 1993-1996 - Dana Cloud Ch 10. Demonizing Democracy: The Strange Career of Lani Guinier - Kate Canas and Mark McPhail Ch 11. Racial Apologies - Carrie Crenshaw and Dexter Gordon Ch 12. Autobiography, Rhetoric, and Frank McCourt's "Angela's Ashes" and "Tis: A Memoir" - Patricia A. Sullivan and Steven R. Goldzwig Ch 13. Response: Communities, Identities, and Politics: What Rhetoric is Becoming in the Twenty-First Century - Barry Brummett Notes on Contributors About the Editors Index
Presidential Studies Quarterly, 2016
A ccording to Aldan Morris, "The modern civil rights movement fulfilled one of the unfinished tas... more A ccording to Aldan Morris, "The modern civil rights movement fulfilled one of the unfinished tasks of the Civil War. It increased the freedom of the descendants of former slaves by overthrowing legalized Jim Crow and a significant amount of the inequity associated with it." Moreover, ((The most distinctive aspect of the modern civil rights movement was its demonstration that, through the widespread use of social protest, power could be generated by an oppressed group at the bottom of a modern industrialized society." 1 Harvard Sitkoff has labeled the modern civil rights movement "one of the most significant developments in American history" and defined its parameters as "the struggle for racial equality and justice waged between 1954 and 1992." 2 If we use Sitkoff's time period as our measure, we have now entered fully into the "post-civil rights era." The meaning of such a designation is itself open to interpretation, if not debate. Times have changed. In issuing the call for this special issue on "civil rights in the postmodern era," I was simultaneously excited and just a tad wary. After all, whatever the prospects that might lie ahead, I was certain that I was about to enter uncharted territory. Much of my enthusiasm regarding a special issue on civil rights centered on the opportunity to take the contemporary pulse of the transformations in the civil rights movement. Furthermore, President Clinton had announced his initiative on race and I had some hope that a fruitful dialogue on race relations would receive new impetus in the United States. The scandals associated with the administration soon demarcated a misplaced enthusiasm on my part. My wariness also could be traced to the complexity of the call for essays I was about to undertake. In issuing my call for a discussion on "civil rights" at the beginning of the new millennium, I reflected on a daunting truism: we now live in a very different time than that of the mass mobilization efforts begun in Montgomery in the 1950s and perhaps crowned in the early 1960s at the apotheosis of the civil rights movement represented by the March on Washington and Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" address. By employing the term "postmodern era," I was
Congress & the Presidency
Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2004
https://epublications.marquette.edu/marq\_fac-book/1239/thumbnail.jp
The Review of Communication, 2001
Journal of Government Information, 2002
Series Foreword Preface The Ethical Performances of Candidates in American Presidential Campaign ... more Series Foreword Preface The Ethical Performances of Candidates in American Presidential Campaign Dramas by Bruce E. Gronbeck Images, Issues, and Political Structure: A Framework for Judging the Ethics of Campaign Discourse by Ronald Lee Electronic Democracy, Virtual Politics, and Local Communities by Steven R. Goldzwig and Patricia Sullivan Ethical Considerations of Civil Discourse: The Implications of the Rise of "Hate Speech" by Rita Kirk Whillock Dangers of "Teledemocracy": How the Medium of Television Undermines American Democracy by Robert E. Denton, Jr. Narrative Form and the Deceptions of Modern Journalism by Gary C. Woodward Ethics and Political Advertising by Lynda Lee Kaid Soft Money and Hard Choices: The Influence of Campaign Finance Rules on Campaign Communication Strategy by Clifford A. Jones Internet Ethics by Gary W. Selnow Epilogue: Constitutional Authority, Public Morality and Politics by Robert E. Denton, Jr. Bibliography Index
Presidential Studies Quarterly, 1994
... Ordinary people, it is assumed, are not equipped to grasp the demands made on American foreig... more ... Ordinary people, it is assumed, are not equipped to grasp the demands made on American foreign policy, to deliberate ... policy."50 Kennedy's ... Similarly, Kennedy justified the seeming lack of influence the United States had over Cambodia, Thailand, and South Vietnam when he ...
Foreward - Patricia A. Sullivan and Steven R. Goldzwig PART 1: RHETORICS, ETHICS, and VALUES Ch 1... more Foreward - Patricia A. Sullivan and Steven R. Goldzwig PART 1: RHETORICS, ETHICS, and VALUES Ch 1. James Baldwin's Topoi - James Darsey Ch 2. Ingenium--Speaking in Community: The Case of the Prince William County Zoning Hearings on Disney's America - Katheryn M. Olson and G. Thomas Goodnight Ch 3. Arguing about the Place of Values and Ethics in Market-Oriented Discourses of Today - George Cheney Ch 4. Cultural Contracts Theory: Toward a Critical-Rhetorical Identity Negotiation Paradigm - Ronald L. Jackson II PART II. RHETORICS, INSTITUTIONS, and CONTEXTS Introduction Ch 5. Remembrances of Things Past: A Postcolonial Critique of the Human Genome Diversity Project - Marouf Hasian and Emily Plec Ch 6. The Life of the Party: The Keynote Address in Contemporary American Politics - John M. Murphy and Thomas R. Burkholder Ch 7. Memory as Social Action: Cultural Projection and Generic Form in Civil Rights Memorials - Victoria J. Gallagher Ch 8. John Wayne, "The Green Berets", and the Containment Doctrine - George N. Dionisopoulos PART III. RHETORICS, CULTURES and IDEOLOGIES Introduction Ch 9. Fighting Words: Labor and the Limits of Symbolic Intervention at Staley, 1993-1996 - Dana Cloud Ch 10. Demonizing Democracy: The Strange Career of Lani Guinier - Kate Canas and Mark McPhail Ch 11. Racial Apologies - Carrie Crenshaw and Dexter Gordon Ch 12. Autobiography, Rhetoric, and Frank McCourt's "Angela's Ashes" and "Tis: A Memoir" - Patricia A. Sullivan and Steven R. Goldzwig Ch 13. Response: Communities, Identities, and Politics: What Rhetoric is Becoming in the Twenty-First Century - Barry Brummett Notes on Contributors About the Editors Index
Presidential Studies Quarterly, 2016