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Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Email (Address never made public). You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Twitter account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Facebook account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Google account. ( Log Out. Notify me of new comments via email. Visual rhetorics exam; historiography. Response to Evocative Objects: Things we Think With.
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Campbell, Karlyn Kohrs — Man Cannot Speak for Her | thoughtjam
https://thoughtjam.wordpress.com/2009/01/02/campbell-karlyn-kohrs-man-cannot-speak-for-her
DeCerteau’s The Historiographical Operation. Glenn, Cheryl — Rhetoric Retold: Regendering the Tradition from Antiquity through the Renaissance →. January 2, 2009 · 10:23 pm. Campbell, Karlyn Kohrs — Man Cannot Speak for Her. Man Cannot Speak for Her. In this seminal text in feminist historiography, Campbell attempts to write the early women’s feminist movement that primary focused on suffrage from the 1830s through the the mid-1920s into rhetorical history. While Volume I of. Man Cannot Speak for Her.
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DeCerteau’s “The Historiographical Operation” | thoughtjam
https://thoughtjam.wordpress.com/2009/01/02/decerteau’s-“the-historiographical-operation”
AFRICAN AMERICAN RHETORIC(S) Edited by Elaine Richardson and Ronald Jackson. Campbell, Karlyn Kohrs — Man Cannot Speak for Her →. January 2, 2009 · 10:21 pm. DeCerteau’s The Historiographical Operation. DeCerteau’s The Historiographical Operation. Came out of French school in 1920s. What historians fabricate when they make history is the central focus of DeCerteau’s The Historiographical Operation. Thus the historical operation refers to a social place, scientific practices, and writing -57. The historic...
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Lunsford, Andrea, ed. — Rhetorica Reclaimed, | thoughtjam
https://thoughtjam.wordpress.com/2009/01/02/lunsford-andrea-ed-rhetorica-reclaimed
Glenn, Cheryl — Rhetoric Retold: Regendering the Tradition from Antiquity through the Renaissance. Response to Evocative Objects: Things we Think With →. January 2, 2009 · 10:26 pm. Lunsford, Andrea, ed. — Rhetorica Reclaimed,. Andrea Lunsford, editor (1995). Aimed to disrupt the seamless narrative of the rhetorical tradition and create space for other rhetorics,. The wide range of sites include:. Speeches, autobiographies, letters, fragments of classical texts, syllabi and other teaching materials, arti...
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Glenn, Cheryl — Rhetoric Retold: Regendering the Tradition from Antiquity through the Renaissance | thoughtjam
https://thoughtjam.wordpress.com/2009/01/02/glenn-cheryl-rhetoric-retold-regendering-the-tradition-from-antiquity-through-the-renaissance
Campbell, Karlyn Kohrs — Man Cannot Speak for Her. Lunsford, Andrea, ed. — Rhetorica Reclaimed, →. January 2, 2009 · 10:25 pm. Glenn, Cheryl — Rhetoric Retold: Regendering the Tradition from Antiquity through the Renaissance. In this important text, Cherly Glenn studies the ways in which women from antiquity through the Renaissance contributed to rhetorical history and theory and performed gender through rhetorical practices. To do so, Glenn models a performative historiography that both looks back to an...
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AFRICAN AMERICAN RHETORIC(S) Edited by Elaine Richardson and Ronald Jackson | thoughtjam
https://thoughtjam.wordpress.com/2009/01/02/african-american-rhetorics-edited-by-elaine-richardson-and-ronald-jackson
American Indian Rhetorics of Survivance: Word Medicine, Word Magic Edited by Ernest Stromberg. DeCerteau’s The Historiographical Operation →. January 2, 2009 · 10:16 pm. AFRICAN AMERICAN RHETORIC(S) Edited by Elaine Richardson and Ronald Jackson. African American Rhetorics study of culturally and discursively developed knowledge-forms, communicative practices, and persuasive strategies rooted in freedom struggles by people of African ancestory in America. Essays in this book attempt to:. Religious orator...
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Response to Evocative Objects: Things we Think With | thoughtjam
https://thoughtjam.wordpress.com/2013/01/11/response-to-evocative-objects-things-we-think-with
Lunsford, Andrea, ed. — Rhetorica Reclaimed,. January 11, 2013 · 4:03 pm. Response to Evocative Objects: Things we Think With. In Evocative Objects,. Sherry Turkle edits a delightful, moving anthology that puts objects and their human relations front and center. In this book, 34 authors (scientists, scholars, artists, architects) describe their relations to evocative objects. I like this book because from a rhetorical perspective, the chapters resonate. The stories authors tell, the epigraphs Turkle ...
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thoughtjam | A site of congestion, improvisation, and the impossibility of resolution | Page 2
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Newer posts →. January 2, 2009 · 10:13 pm. Cintron, Ralph — Angel’s Town. Ethnographers situate their studies differently. History is contextualized and politicized. Field sites are frozen in time in ethnographies. In Cintron, however, site is not frozen. The site is constructed through his eyes. The site is created through his ethos. Historicizes his work, his site, the everyday rhetorics. We write what we see, which is influenced by our own histories. Our ethos influences logos as logos influence ethos.