Peitho

418 articles
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September 2020

  1. Troubling the Terms of Engagement: Queer Rhetorical Listening as Carceral Interruption
  2. Bad Listeners
  3. Queering Rhetorical Listening: An Introduction to a Cluster Conversation
  4. The Dove Campaign for Real Beauty: An Embodiment of Postracial Rhetoric
  5. “An American Orphan”: Amelia Simmons, Cookbook Authorship, and the Feminist Ethē
  6. “There’s Just Something About Her”: The Lasting Influence of Anti-Suffrage Rhetoric on American Voter Attitudes

July 2020

  1. Living and Dying as a Gay Trans Man: Lou Sullivan’s Rhetorical Legacy
  2. “There is No Question About This and There Never Has Been for Eight Years”: The Public Reception of Christine Jorgensen
  3. Revisiting Transvestite Sexualities through Anita Bryant in the late 1970s
  4. Navigating Disclosure in a Critical Trans Pedagogy
  5. Out in the Classroom: A Transgender Pedagogical Narrative
  6. Happiness, Biopolitics, and Transmedicine’s Necessary Contradiction: Rhetorics of Normalcy and the Narratives of Gender Transition
  7. “It’s a … [inaudible blood-curdling screams, chaos]!”: Gender Reveal Party Fails as Ideological Rupture
  8. Toward Trans Rhetorical Agency: A Critical Analysis of Trans Topics in Rhetoric and Composition and Communication Scholarship
  9. Shutting Up: Cis Accountability in Trans Writing Studies Research
  10. Toward a Trans Sovereignty: Why We Need Indigenous Rhetorics to Decolonize Gender and Sexuality
  11. How Ya Mama’n’em?: Blackness, Nonbinariness, and Radical Subjectivity
  12. GET THE FRAC IN! Or, The Fractal Many-festo: A (Trans)(Crip)t1
  13. Because Trans People Are Speaking: Notes on Our Field’s First Special Issue on Transgender Rhetorics

April 2020

  1. Feminist Citational Mapping as Recovery and Reconsideration: A Methodology for Analyzing Citational Practices
  2. Writing Groups as Feminist Practice
  3. The Rhetoric of Letter-Keeping
  4. Dr. Battey’s Ovariotomy, 1872-1878
  5. Museum of Modern Art’s “Margaret Scolari Barr Papers”
  6. Early Quaker Women and Civility Rhetorics
  7. Transforming Feminist Narratives and Participation of African Marginalized Women through Ceremonial Beads
  8. Recoveries and Reconsiderations: Introduction
  9. After the Ink Dried but Before History was a Woman’s
  10. I Have Not Always Shown Humility: Reclaiming Anne Boleyn’s Rhetoric
  11. Making Sense of #MeToo: Intersectionality and Contemporary Feminism

November 2019

  1. Re-Examining Intersectionality in Our 30th Year: A Remediation of the 2019 CFSHRC Action Hour
  2. Searching for Unseen Metic Labor in the Pussyhat Project
  3. The Mathmagics of Media Princesses: Informal STEM Learning, STEM Rhetorics, and Animated Children’s Movies
  4. Men Who Love Bukowski: Hegemonic Masculinity, Online Dating, and the Aversion toward the Feminine
  5. Situating Care as Feminist Rhetorical Action in Two Community-Engaged Health Projects
  6. Making Feminist Rhetorical History Five Pages at a Time: A Cross-Institutional Writing Group for Mid-Career Women in the Academy
  7. Food Memoirs: Agency in Public and Private Rhetorical Domains
  8. Women and the Way: The Contradictory Universalism of Protestant Women’s Foreign Missionary Societies in the Early 20th Century
  9. Teaching Critical Analysis in Times of Peril: A Rhetorical Model of Social Change
  10. Autobiography of an Archivist
  11. Remembering Nan Johnson: A Visionary, Mentor, and Friend
  12. The Nan Johnson Collection and Archival Research Award
  13. A Letter from Nan’s Family

July 2019

  1. Response to “Rhetorical Pasts, Rhetorical Futures: Reflecting on the Legacy of Our Bodies, Ourselves and the Future of Feminist Health Literacy”
  2. “Like Regular Underwear, But So Much Better”: How Thinx Can Create Feminist Embodied Subjects through the Enduring Legacy of OBOS
  3. “Like regular underwear, but so much better.”: How Thinx Can Create Feminist Embodied Subjects through the Enduring Legacy of OBOS
  4. Health Information Sharing as Feminist Rhetorical Work: Rethinking Power, Individuality, and Simplicity in Women and Their Bodies1
  5. Tracing the Future Lineage for OBOS: Reproductive Health Applications as a Text for Feminist Rhetorical Inquiry
  6. Clinical Relationships and Feminist Values: How OBOS Benefits Collaborative Relationships in Women’s Health
  7. Rhetorically Framing the “Inside Woman”: Female Healthcare Workers across Editions of Our Bodies, Ourselves