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Showing 1 to 15 of 429 results Save | Export
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Walton, Justin D. – Education, 2014
This essay presents a critical commentary on McCroskey et al.'s (2004) general model of instructional communication. In particular, five points are examined which make explicit and problematize the meta-theoretical assumptions of the model. Comments call attention to the limitations of the model and argue for a broader approach to…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Models, Communication Research, Interpersonal Communication
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Kreuter, Nate – Composition Forum, 2013
The essay examines the ethical tensions surrounding the common cultural and disciplinary demand that writers write "clearly." The essay seeks to advance the discipline's engagement with Linda Kintz's and Sharon Crowley's separate critiques of the "ideology of clarity," arguing that clarity potentially manipulates audiences primarily through either…
Descriptors: Ethics, Audiences, Reflection, Rhetorical Theory
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Eagleton, Terry – Academic Questions, 2012
Poetry is about the experience of meaning as well as the meaning of experience. To read a poem is to feel one's way into the inner workings of its language, rather than to peer through that speech to an extractable truth. Most students of literature today have difficulty in grasping the performative or rhetorical dimensions of the texts with which…
Descriptors: Poetry, Literature Appreciation, Rhetoric, Criticism
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Sanchez, Raul – College English, 2012
Recent theoretical and technological developments, including concepts of networking elaborated by Bruno Latour, enable composition studies to take an empiricist turn toward issues of identity. More specifically, these developments help the field more strongly connect the figure of the writing-subject to the experiences of actual writers. In this…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Academic Discourse, College English, Higher Education
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Stroud, Scott R. – Western Journal of Communication, 2010
This article considers how rhetorical scholarship might proceed if it were to take the charge of pragmatic meliorism seriously. After discussing the notion of meliorism as employed by John Dewey, I argue that it would involve a radical reshaping of method in rhetorical theory, criticism, and pedagogy. Not all research must be meliorative, but…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Rhetorical Theory, Pragmatics, Scholarship
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Reddick, Richard J.; Griffin, Kimberly A.; Cherwitz, Richard A. – Planning for Higher Education, 2011
President Obama and the first lady declared January 2010 as National Mentoring Month, highlighting the power of mentoring and its impact on youth. While the benefits of being someone's protege are well documented, the authors were especially excited to hear the president speak about the benefits of serving as a mentor. Discussions of mentoring…
Descriptors: Mentors, Entrepreneurship, Rhetorical Theory, Presidents
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Middleton, Joyce Irene – English Journal, 2011
A recent book that appeared a few years ago, "How Early America Sounded" by historian Richard Cullen Rath, connects well with much of the new, exciting, interdisciplinary and rhetorical research that the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) and the Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC) have supported, promoted, and…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Listening, Social Change, Rhetorical Theory
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Fredal, James – College English, 2011
The study of bullshit, what the author calls "taurascatics", has been making a splash of late. It was Harry Frankfurt who tossed the stone: his essay "On Bullshit" came out in "Raritan" in 1986, hit the "New York Times" best-seller list as a book in 1995, and has been adopted, adapted, and criticized across the academy since. The ripples spread…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Credibility, Rhetorical Theory, Rhetoric
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Newcomb, Matthew J. – College Composition and Communication, 2009
This article argues that the ideas of "play" and "abduction" in Charles Peirce's work represent an inventive theory of argument that opens up the kinds of activities that can be called "arguments" and avoids some of the struggles over imposed beliefs with which recent argument theory has grappled. (Contains 12 notes.)
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Rhetorical Theory, Play, Religious Factors
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Taifeng, Shu – Chinese Education and Society, 2011
If one puts together "China Is Unhappy" and the book "China Can Say No" of 13 years ago, one is quite likely to get the impression that "China's nationalism is heating up." "China does not wish to lead anyone, and should only think of leading itself"--those are the words printed on the back cover of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Patriotism, Nationalism, Foreign Policy
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Jiaxiang, Wu – Chinese Education and Society, 2011
The book "China Is Unhappy" that made the list of best sellers not so long ago is blowing like an icy wind in spring and is poisoning the nation's mental state as though laden with a virus of unhappiness. Those who are most susceptible to it are groups of underage persons with mentalities that are still fragile and young people who have…
Descriptors: Nationalism, Foreign Countries, Ideology, Political Attitudes
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Doxtader, Erik – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2010
Does rhetoric have a place in the discourse of human rights? Without certain reply, as the dilemmas of defining, claiming, and promoting human rights appear both to include and exclude the rhetorical gesture, this question invites inquiry into the preface of the contemporary human rights regime, the moment of the aftermath that provokes a struggle…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Conflict Resolution, Rhetoric, Rhetorical Criticism
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Holiday, Judy – Composition Forum, 2010
In this interview Susan Jarratt reviews the trajectory of her scholarship and revisits some of the lessons learned from a variety of her projects while simultaneously drawing out historical and narrative continuities of seemingly disparate time periods and contexts. In doing so, she elucidates the value of scholarship as a political and…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Interviews, College Faculty, Biographies
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Bazerman, Charles – College Composition and Communication, 2010
This article presents a written version of the address the author gave at the Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC) meeting in San Francisco on March 12, 2009. In this address, the author talks about the wonder of writing and discusses how writing has been considered sacred. Reading and writing are associated with inwardness…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Conference Papers, Writing Skills, Writing Achievement
Welch, Kathleen Ethel – Online Submission, 2009
The purpose of this workshop paper is to understand the ways that women and men who work in the field of composition-rhetoric studies can more fully understand and articulate ways to enable women writing students to use more fully the new kinds of technology that proliferate in the digital realm. The material is based on the author's twenty-six…
Descriptors: Feminism, Writing (Composition), Females, Rhetorical Theory
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