Peitho

418 articles
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January 2026

  1. Take it Seriously: Bimbo Feminism and the Racialized Production of Erotic Capital on #BimboTok
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.12
  2. Reproductive Chronic Illnesses Social Media as a Guide for Care
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.18
  3. Swallowing Voices: Mêtis and Its Enactment
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.03
  4. Why We Blush: Metaphors Bound up in Cosmetic Packaging
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.10
  5. The New Woman and Visual Resistance: A Feminist Visual Rhetorical Analysis of Hard Labor
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.22
  6. In Order to ‘Say What We Say:’ Archival Protocol that Attends to Indigenous Data Sovereignty
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.05
  7. #WhatIEatInADay *As A Fat Person Not on A Diet: Eating Online as Feminist Performative Symbolic Resistance
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.04
  8. Contemporary Mural Art, Personhood, and Utopic Visions of Reproductive Justice
    Abstract

    This essay argued that, in the post-Dobbs era, reproductive justice-themed mural art serves a memorializing function as well as a site of utopic imagining in a time of declining access to reproductive healthcare. The author has used personal experience as a clinic escort to ground a visual rhetorical analysis of three reproductive justice-themed murals across the United States. The essay has identified recurring aesthetic elements in the murals’ compositions, including the female gaze, flowers in bloom, haloes, bold directional symbols, and affirming text. Drawing on reproductive justice scholarship and feminist rhetorical theories of place, the author argued that these aesthetic elements counter fetal personhood rhetoric and assert reproductive justice principles.

    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.17
  9. Storiographies of #HealingJourney: Online Feminist Rhetorical Practices of Healing through Content Creation and Care
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.02
  10. Claws, Paws, and Menopause: Feline Metaphors and the Performance of Aging
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.16
  11. “Seeing Red: Subversion, Appropriation, and the Feminist Gaze in Barbara Kruger’s Art”
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.20
  12. Patchworked Selves: Tattoos as Permanently Becoming
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.13
  13. Queerlesque: Anticolonial and Anti-Heteropatriarchal Love and Abjection in (Rural) Queer Performance
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.11
  14. Envisioning Rhetoric: Sensation, Orientation, Imagination
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.08
  15. “The Modern Girl Wants to Have it All”?: Shifting Megarhetorics of Empowerment in An African City
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.21
  16. The Diasporic Cookbook as Chronotope, a Review of Kitchens of Hope: Immigrants Share Stories of Resilience and Recipes from Home
    Abstract

    [Introduction] Edited by Linda S. Svitak and Christin Jaye Eaton, with Lee Svitak Dean, and published by the University of Minnesota Press, Kitchens of Hope: Immigrants Share Stories of Resilience and Recipes from Home (2025) fits neatly into the popular genre network of cookbooks that blend essay with recipe, mixing memoir with meals perfected over generations. But this book doesn't simply share the legacy of Liberian rice bread or summer beat soup. It explores the migration of these dishes and their cooks, contextualizing stories of displacement and development. Because of the breadth of this book, Mikhail Bakhtin might describe this collection as a chronotope of sorts, a configuration of time and space that "takes on flesh, becomes artistically visible" (qtd. in Bemong & Borghart, 2010, p. 4). Through Omedi Ochieng's lens of chronotopian humanitarianism, this book is a rhetorical tool for feminist scholarship seeking to counter a Eurocentric understanding of how and why people and stories move around and through the world.

    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.06
  17. Introduction: A Feminist Rhetorical Approach to Visual Culture
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.07
  18. Celebrating and Promoting Peitho-Level Generosity in Academe and Beyond
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.01
  19. Materiality of Memory: Firelei Báez & A Path Toward Feminist Visual Rhetorics
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.19
  20. Fattie at the Front of the Room: Fat Professors as Embodied Visual Feminist Praxis
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.15
  21. It’s a Femininomenon: Chappell Roan, Queer Visual Culture, and Participatory
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.14
  22. “Those pictures are peaches”: Gender Play in a Feminist Visual Underground
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.09

January 2025

  1. Syrian Refugee Women Producing Counter-stories: Countering Female Fragility
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.3.05
  2. “Becoming a woman, a complete woman, takes time.”: Menstruation Manuals for Girls as Material-Discursive Apparatuses
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.4.04
  3. Unlearning the Archive: Delinking, Positionality, and Hope
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.16
  4. Toward a Peitho Citizenry: A Welcome and Introduction
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.28.1.01
  5. Nevertheless, She Resisted: Feminist Ethos and Agency in The Epic of Gilgamesh
    Abstract

    a watercolor painting in shades of gray showing the head and shoulders of the Statue of Liberty.Lady Liberty is covering her face with both hands in despair.Her nails are a muted red color.The painting was created by Jody Shipka and is titled "After Dobbs." At the bottom of the image are the words "Peitho 27.2 Winter 2025" in red, all capital letters, in a futuristic, glitchy font called Paralelismo ML, downloaded from justseeds.org."

    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.07
  6. Recoveries and Reconsiderations: Linguistic Justice and Storying Resistance to Generative AI
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.05
  7. Review of The Sisterhood, How a Network of Black Women Writers Changed American Culture
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.24
  8. Review of Storying Writing Center Labor for Anti-Capitalist Futures
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.21.25
  9. Review of The Erotic as Rhetorical Power: Archives of Romantic Friendship between Women Teachers.
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.27
  10. Hope through Archive: Refugee Youths� Counterstories in the Ritsona Kingdom Journal
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.15
  11. Pauli Murray Hopes To �Supply Insights� In Her Archive
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.21
  12. We Will Continue to Update This Page as We Collect More�: Archiving as Hopeful Pedagogy
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.12
  13. Caribbean Healers in the Botanical Archives
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.20
  14. Review of Difficult Empathy and Rhetorical Encounters
    Abstract

    At a time in history when we are faced with an authoritarian, misogynist, racist, imperial regime that has actively dismantled higher education in the USA, what does it mean to stand as an academic witness against the consolidation of white supremacy, of imperial regimes, of the normalization of gender, race, caste and class violence, of religious fundamentalisms and climate disasters, economic dispossession and the carceral state within and beyond the walls of the academy?In this special issue devoted to Transnational Feminist Rhetorical Studies, contributors mobilize critical race theory and transnational feminism to bear witness to the deeply violent, neoliberal, eurocentric narratives of the US academy that objectify, erase, and colonize minoritized international communities from the Global South.Using feminist autoethnography and counter-storytelling, these courageous authors develop complex, theoretically provocative analyses of a variety of rhetorical landscapes in the academy mapping the academic journey of a queer South Asian educator (Saurabh Anand); speculative linking and corporeal rhetorics--the body as the site, producer and consumer of labor in transnational feminist rhetorics (Florianne Jimenez); transnational counterstories and autoethnographies of Bangladeshi women (Abantika Dhar and Ridita Mizan); challenging female fragility and objectification of hegemonic narratives of refugees using counter-storytelling by Syrian Muslim women refugees to develop genealogies of agency and resistance (Nabila Hijazi); and finally, Sarah Cathryn Majed Dweik and Bernadita Yunis Varas' compelling autoethnographic, theoretically and historically grounded analysis of Palestinian feminist survivance rhetorics bearing witness to the profound impact of the occupation, colonization and genocide of Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza.In speaking back to racist, colonial, objectified hegemonic knowledges normalized by the US academy these young scholars illustrate the profound significance of bearing witness to injustice, just as James Baldwin and many others stood witness to racism and white supremacy.

    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.3.10
  15. From Gen X to Gen Alpha: Girls’ Perspectives on Periods in Popular Media
    Abstract

    Summer 2025, " "Peitho, " and "Vol. 27.4. " Underneath that are the words "Menstrual Rhetorics" in a large handwriting font (white with light turquoise offset), and under that, "and Girlhood Culture" in a light orange font.On the right side of the image is an assemblage of red flowers on a menstrual pad.On the left side, a circle with two dark coral drops in the middle and a # sign at the top of the circle.Toward the bottom of the image is a calendar with drops on specific dates indicating a menstrual period.At the bottom of the image are the words "PERIOD power, " and "Talking periods for and with all bodies that menstruate.

    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.4.09
  16. Red Monsters and Mythic Villains: Redefining Menstruation and Girlhood in Carrie and Turning Red
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.4.07
  17. 6- Review of Transnational Assemblages: Social Justice and Crisis Communication during Disaster
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.28.1.06
  18. Loud Mistakes: Fandom as Rhetorical Situation, Transcendent Apologia, and Taylor Swift�s Red
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.02
  19. The Response-ability and Responsibility of Archiving
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.14
  20. Sex in Education and the Rhetoric of Meta-Reception
    Abstract

    A photo of an orange and black Monarch butterfly.The butterfly is in flight against a light blue sky and field of yellow wildflowers.The butterfly is situated toward the upper left hand corner of the image.The background of the field is out of focus, while the butterfly heads toward a foreground of yellow flowers in focus.

    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.28.1.02
  21. 21 to 35
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.4.03
  22. Triggering Affirmations: Trans* Adolescents’ Experiences with Menstruation and Gender Identity Construction
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.4.02
  23. Review of Enduring Shame: A Recent History of Unwed Pregnancy and Righteous Reproduction
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.3.09
  24. Unveiling Perspectives: A Personal Journey Navigating the Archives for a Thesis Research as a Chicana Scholar
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.22
  25. Relaxing in the Margins: Using Black Feminist Pedagogy with Black Student‑Athletes to Challenge AI Compliance and Protect Black Voices in First-Year Writing
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.28.1.03
  26. Transnational Counterstories: Autoethnographies of Bangladeshi Women in U.S. Higher Education
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.3.04
  27. “Everyone in Gaza is disabled:” Childhood, Menstrual Justice, and Disablement in Palestine
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.4.06
  28. My Queer (Writing) Heart
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.3.02