Peitho

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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. The New Woman and Visual Resistance: A Feminist Visual Rhetorical Analysis of Hard Labor
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.22
  3. #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
  4. 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
  5. Storiographies of #HealingJourney: Online Feminist Rhetorical Practices of Healing through Content Creation and Care
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.02
  6. “Seeing Red: Subversion, Appropriation, and the Feminist Gaze in Barbara Kruger’s Art”
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.20
  7. 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
  8. Introduction: A Feminist Rhetorical Approach to Visual Culture
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.07
  9. Materiality of Memory: Firelei Báez & A Path Toward Feminist Visual Rhetorics
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.19
  10. Fattie at the Front of the Room: Fat Professors as Embodied Visual Feminist Praxis
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.15
  11. “Those pictures are peaches”: Gender Play in a Feminist Visual Underground
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2026.28.2.09

January 2025

  1. 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
  2. Review of The Sisterhood, How a Network of Black Women Writers Changed American Culture
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.24
  3. 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
  4. Triggering Affirmations: Trans* Adolescents’ Experiences with Menstruation and Gender Identity Construction
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.4.02
  5. 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
  6. Transnational Counterstories: Autoethnographies of Bangladeshi Women in U.S. Higher Education
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.3.04
  7. To Gather Amongst the Olive Trees: Counterstorytelling through Palestinian Feminist Survivance Rhetorics
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.3.06
  8. Forty Years Later: Reconsidering the Cyborg as a Feminist Metaphor
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.06
  9. Response: Transdisciplinary Contiguities and Disjunctures: The Present and Future of Transnational Feminist Rhetorics
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.3.07
  10. Deconstructing The Body Papers: Multimodal Memoir as Feminist Archival Practice
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.18
  11. Reimagining Non-Compliant Bodies as Archives: A Feminist Decolonial Approach
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.23
  12. Speculative Linking in the Network: Rethinking Comparison in Transnational Feminist Rhetoric
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.3.03
  13. Cluster Conversation: (Re)Writing our Histories, (Re)Building Feminist Worlds: Working Toward Hope in the Archives: Introduction
    Abstract

    [Introduction] "Hope is not like a lottery ticket you can sit on the sofa and clutch, feeling lucky. [...] Hope is an ax you break down doors with in an emergency." - Rebecca Solnit In 2018, Cheryl Glenn wrote, "The work of feminist rhetorical historiography is far from done; in fact, it has just begun-and it is anchored in hope." Following Glenn, we explore hope in this cluster as a methodological imperative in the archives. Informed by theorists Paulo Freire, bell hooks, Rebecca Solnit, and Cornel West, the writers in this Cluster Conversation envision hope as a radical orientation toward building new worlds and a willingness to do the work to make those worlds possible. Following the models of Jacqueline Jones Royster, Charles Morris, Terese Guinsatao Monberg, and others, we see archives and archival methods as a particularly valuable part of doing such work. As Linda Tuhiwai Smith argues in Decolonizing Methodologies, "To hold alternative histories is to hold alternative knowledges. The pedagogical implication of this access to alternative knowledges is that they can form the basis of alternative ways of doing things" (36). Archives and archival methods are vital to creating such alternative histories and knowledges.

    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.08
  14. WikiHope: Teaching Feminist Historiography through the (Re)Writing of Queer Narratives from Kentucky on Wikipedia
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.13
  15. It�s Not Just Hormones: Understanding Menopause Anxiety Through a Feminist Rhetorical Framework
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.04

January 2024

  1. Feminist Intersectionality: Two Writing Center Staff Renegotiating Identities in the Early 2020s
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2024.27.1.04
  2. Small and Subtle Feminist Rhetorical Doings: An Introduction
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2024.26.4.01
  3. Cluster Introduction: Why Teach Feminist Rhetorical New Materialisms
    Abstract

    10 for graduate students and $25 for faculty; more information is available at cwshrc.org.Cover Art: a print (etching and aquatint) showing an elf woman in a tree.She is nude and is using a long branch to point downward at a bear who is looking up at her.In the background are other leafy branches and a scenic cove.The

    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2024.26.3.05
  4. Ghosts and Groceries: The Subtly Feminist Act of Claiming My Inheritance
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2024.26.4.04
  5. The Dilemma of Embodied Insecurity: A Subtle Feminist Approach for Embracing Moments of Good and Bad Advocacy
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2024.26.4.06
  6. Talking Back Through Rhetorical Surveillance Studies: Intersectional Feminist and Queer Approaches: Introduction
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2024.27.1.05
  7. (Re)Turning to the Seams of Composing as a Feminist Orientation
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2024.26.4.05
  8. Defining the Rhetoric in Feminist Rhetorical New Materialisms
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2024.26.3.07
  9. A Disability Theory of Anti-Surveillance Tactics
    Abstract

    This article sketches how disabled people resist surveillance in the liberal democracies of the Global North. Since there is a dearth of scholarship on disability and surveillance, this article first overviews the surveil- lance state’s primary mechanisms of capture inflicted on disabled people. Building on insights from queer, trans, and feminist surveillance studies, I gesture toward the need for disability surveillance studies. Second, I outline tactics used by disabled people to resist surveillance as well as tactics of my creation inspired by activist practic- es and recent events in social organizing. Highlighting the radicality of these tactics validates disabled people as critical knowers and makers in the efforts of anti-surveillance. Lastly, I use crip theory to contend that examining how disabled people experience and fight surveillance is insufficient to account for the ways that the disabili- ty-ability binary—as a structural set of relations—shapes the discursive and material production and execution of surveillance.

    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2024.27.1.12
  10. The Collectors: �Quiet� Acts of Feminist Praxis
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2024.26.4.03
  11. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez�s Vogue �Beauty Secrets� as Civic Education: A Tutorial in Subtle Feminist Rhetoric
    Abstract

    10 for graduate students and $25 for faculty; more information is available at cwshrc.org.Cover Art: a fractal in shades of black, dark blue, light blue, orange, yellow, and white.The lower left corner is a right triangle in solid black with the words "Peitho 26.4 Summer 2024 Special issue: Small and Subtle Feminist Rhetorical Doings" in a slightly slanted font, all caps, in yellow.It is inspired by adrienne maree brown's idea about fractals and patterns: "what we practice on a small scale can reverberate to the largest scale.

    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2024.26.4.08
  12. Tara Reade and the Case for a Feminist-Rhetoric Propaganda Studies
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2024.27.1.02

September 2023

  1. Radically Revising the Writing Classroom: Wendy Bishop as Feminist Mentor
  2. Reclaiming the Work of Wendy Bishop as Rhetorical Feminist Mentoring: A Cluster Conversation
  3. Because We Already Are Legitimate: Feminist Coalition Building among Graduate and Undergraduate Students to Counter Patriarchal, White, Heteronormative ‘Expertise’
  4. Coalition Building against Anti-Asian Racism: Interweaving Stories of Transnational Asian/American Feminist Survivance
  5. Your Good Deed Could Save the World: Fighting Austerity is a Feminist Must
  6. Hillary Rodham Clinton’s Rhetorical Shifts in What Happened: Pluralist Feminist Credibility Post-2016

July 2023

  1. Feminist Resilience at the Heart of Coalition Work
  2. Solidarity in Feminist Iconography: Gloria Steinem, Dorothy Pitman Hughes, and the Power Fist
  3. More Than Empathy: Transnational Feminist Mentoring Practices for Solidarity Building
  4. Building Feminist Dwellings in Academic Spaces
  5. Coalitional Accountability for Feminist Rhetoricians in a Post-Roe World
  6. Feminist Editing: Learning to Engage through Coalitional Accountability