Rhetoric, Race, Religion, and the Charleston Shootings
Was Blind but Now I See
Herausgeber: Lehn, Melody; O'Rourke, Sean Patrick
Rhetoric, Race, Religion, and the Charleston Shootings
Was Blind but Now I See
Herausgeber: Lehn, Melody; O'Rourke, Sean Patrick
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This book considers the 2015 Charleston mass shooting from a rhetorical perspective and offers an appraisal of the discourses that cradled and emerged from it. It argues that Charleston was different from other mass shootings in America and that the differences can be heard and seen in that rhetoric.
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This book considers the 2015 Charleston mass shooting from a rhetorical perspective and offers an appraisal of the discourses that cradled and emerged from it. It argues that Charleston was different from other mass shootings in America and that the differences can be heard and seen in that rhetoric.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Rhetoric, Race, and Religion
- Verlag: Globe Pequot Publishing Group Inc/Bloomsbury
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. November 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 598g
- ISBN-13: 9781498550611
- ISBN-10: 1498550614
- Artikelnr.: 57834205
- Rhetoric, Race, and Religion
- Verlag: Globe Pequot Publishing Group Inc/Bloomsbury
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. November 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 598g
- ISBN-13: 9781498550611
- ISBN-10: 1498550614
- Artikelnr.: 57834205
Melody Lehn is assistant professor of rhetoric and women's and gender studies at Sewanee: The University of the South. Sean Patrick O'Rourke is professor of rhetoric and American studies at Sewanee: The University of the South.
Introduction: Was Blind but Now I See: Rhetoric, Race, and Religion in the
Charleston Shootings Sean Patrick O'Rourke Melody Lehn Part I: The Killer's
Manifesto: Rhetorics of the Lost Cause and Race Warfare 1 "The South Shall
Rise Again": Setting the Lost Cause Myth in Future Tense in Dylann Roof's
Manifesto Margaret Franz 2 Charleston and the Postracial Logics of "Race
War" Daniel A. Grano Part II: Gun Control: The Debates That Did Not Happen
and the Language of Lynching 3 The Racial Politics of Gun Violence: A Brief
Rhetorical History Craig Rood 4 The Charleston Church Shooting and the
Public Practice of Forgetting Lynching Samuel P. Perry Part III: Civic
Eulogies and Exhortations: The Responses of Barack and Michelle Obama 5 The
Act of Forgiveness in Barack Obama's Eulogy for the Honorable Reverend
Clementa Pinckney, Charleston, South Carolina, June 26, 2015 David A. Frank
6 Challenging the Myth of Postracialism: Exhortation, Strategic Ambiguity,
and Michelle Obama's Response to the Charleston Killings Melody Lehn Part
IV: Rebels and Flags: The Rhetorics of Heritage, Hate, Continuity, and
Change 7 In the Aftermath: The Rhetoric of Heritage and the Limits of the
Mythical Past Luke D. Christie 8 The Rebel Flag and the Rhetoric of
Protest: A Case Study in Public Will Building Sean Patrick O'Rourke Part V:
Neo-Confederate Monuments: Rhetorics of Contested Public Memory 9 "Remove
Not the Ancient Landmark": Making the Confederate Distortions of Religion
Apparent Camille K. Lewis 10 In the Aftermath: Memorials of the
Neo-Confederacy, Symbols of Oppression, and the Rhetoric of Removal
Patricia G. Davis Conclusion: Zenith and Nadir Donna Hunter
Charleston Shootings Sean Patrick O'Rourke Melody Lehn Part I: The Killer's
Manifesto: Rhetorics of the Lost Cause and Race Warfare 1 "The South Shall
Rise Again": Setting the Lost Cause Myth in Future Tense in Dylann Roof's
Manifesto Margaret Franz 2 Charleston and the Postracial Logics of "Race
War" Daniel A. Grano Part II: Gun Control: The Debates That Did Not Happen
and the Language of Lynching 3 The Racial Politics of Gun Violence: A Brief
Rhetorical History Craig Rood 4 The Charleston Church Shooting and the
Public Practice of Forgetting Lynching Samuel P. Perry Part III: Civic
Eulogies and Exhortations: The Responses of Barack and Michelle Obama 5 The
Act of Forgiveness in Barack Obama's Eulogy for the Honorable Reverend
Clementa Pinckney, Charleston, South Carolina, June 26, 2015 David A. Frank
6 Challenging the Myth of Postracialism: Exhortation, Strategic Ambiguity,
and Michelle Obama's Response to the Charleston Killings Melody Lehn Part
IV: Rebels and Flags: The Rhetorics of Heritage, Hate, Continuity, and
Change 7 In the Aftermath: The Rhetoric of Heritage and the Limits of the
Mythical Past Luke D. Christie 8 The Rebel Flag and the Rhetoric of
Protest: A Case Study in Public Will Building Sean Patrick O'Rourke Part V:
Neo-Confederate Monuments: Rhetorics of Contested Public Memory 9 "Remove
Not the Ancient Landmark": Making the Confederate Distortions of Religion
Apparent Camille K. Lewis 10 In the Aftermath: Memorials of the
Neo-Confederacy, Symbols of Oppression, and the Rhetoric of Removal
Patricia G. Davis Conclusion: Zenith and Nadir Donna Hunter
Introduction: Was Blind but Now I See: Rhetoric, Race, and Religion in the
Charleston Shootings Sean Patrick O'Rourke Melody Lehn Part I: The Killer's
Manifesto: Rhetorics of the Lost Cause and Race Warfare 1 "The South Shall
Rise Again": Setting the Lost Cause Myth in Future Tense in Dylann Roof's
Manifesto Margaret Franz 2 Charleston and the Postracial Logics of "Race
War" Daniel A. Grano Part II: Gun Control: The Debates That Did Not Happen
and the Language of Lynching 3 The Racial Politics of Gun Violence: A Brief
Rhetorical History Craig Rood 4 The Charleston Church Shooting and the
Public Practice of Forgetting Lynching Samuel P. Perry Part III: Civic
Eulogies and Exhortations: The Responses of Barack and Michelle Obama 5 The
Act of Forgiveness in Barack Obama's Eulogy for the Honorable Reverend
Clementa Pinckney, Charleston, South Carolina, June 26, 2015 David A. Frank
6 Challenging the Myth of Postracialism: Exhortation, Strategic Ambiguity,
and Michelle Obama's Response to the Charleston Killings Melody Lehn Part
IV: Rebels and Flags: The Rhetorics of Heritage, Hate, Continuity, and
Change 7 In the Aftermath: The Rhetoric of Heritage and the Limits of the
Mythical Past Luke D. Christie 8 The Rebel Flag and the Rhetoric of
Protest: A Case Study in Public Will Building Sean Patrick O'Rourke Part V:
Neo-Confederate Monuments: Rhetorics of Contested Public Memory 9 "Remove
Not the Ancient Landmark": Making the Confederate Distortions of Religion
Apparent Camille K. Lewis 10 In the Aftermath: Memorials of the
Neo-Confederacy, Symbols of Oppression, and the Rhetoric of Removal
Patricia G. Davis Conclusion: Zenith and Nadir Donna Hunter
Charleston Shootings Sean Patrick O'Rourke Melody Lehn Part I: The Killer's
Manifesto: Rhetorics of the Lost Cause and Race Warfare 1 "The South Shall
Rise Again": Setting the Lost Cause Myth in Future Tense in Dylann Roof's
Manifesto Margaret Franz 2 Charleston and the Postracial Logics of "Race
War" Daniel A. Grano Part II: Gun Control: The Debates That Did Not Happen
and the Language of Lynching 3 The Racial Politics of Gun Violence: A Brief
Rhetorical History Craig Rood 4 The Charleston Church Shooting and the
Public Practice of Forgetting Lynching Samuel P. Perry Part III: Civic
Eulogies and Exhortations: The Responses of Barack and Michelle Obama 5 The
Act of Forgiveness in Barack Obama's Eulogy for the Honorable Reverend
Clementa Pinckney, Charleston, South Carolina, June 26, 2015 David A. Frank
6 Challenging the Myth of Postracialism: Exhortation, Strategic Ambiguity,
and Michelle Obama's Response to the Charleston Killings Melody Lehn Part
IV: Rebels and Flags: The Rhetorics of Heritage, Hate, Continuity, and
Change 7 In the Aftermath: The Rhetoric of Heritage and the Limits of the
Mythical Past Luke D. Christie 8 The Rebel Flag and the Rhetoric of
Protest: A Case Study in Public Will Building Sean Patrick O'Rourke Part V:
Neo-Confederate Monuments: Rhetorics of Contested Public Memory 9 "Remove
Not the Ancient Landmark": Making the Confederate Distortions of Religion
Apparent Camille K. Lewis 10 In the Aftermath: Memorials of the
Neo-Confederacy, Symbols of Oppression, and the Rhetoric of Removal
Patricia G. Davis Conclusion: Zenith and Nadir Donna Hunter