Reimagining Public Address

Abstract

AbstractAs a subfield of rhetorical studies, public address has been conservative and defensive from the start in its method, theory, politics, and even subject. Even as there has been an expansion of the subject (i.e., the “text” to be studied), the field has, on the whole, remained skeptical of new methods, all critical theories, and alternative political motives. Because of this, the subfield of public address has remained incredibly white and largely male. If the subfield is to continue to exist and, perhaps, thrive, it is time for a clear change in tack. Public address must open its gates widely to the critical methods and theories that can allow for more diverse knowledge production and reorient the field’s political goals. And in a reversal, public address should define itself solely around the study of speeches directed at publics.

Journal
Rhetoric & Public Affairs
Published
2021-03-01
DOI
10.14321/rhetpublaffa.24.1-2.0397
Open Access
Closed
Topics

Citation Context

Cited by in this index (0)

No articles in this index cite this work.

Cites in this index (1)

  1. Rhetoric & Public Affairs
Also cites 18 works outside this index ↓
  1. 1. For a brief history of the summer 2019 in COMS, see Darrel Wanzer-Serrano et al., “Rhetoric’s ‘Distinguish…
  2. 4. Lisa M. Corrigan and Anjali Vats, “The Structural Whiteness of Academic Patronage,” Communication and Crit…
  3. 8. Kirt H. Wilson, “Theory/Criticism: A Functionalist Approach to the ‘Specific Intellectual’ Work of Rhetori…
  4. 12. Shawn J. Parry-Giles and J. Michael Hogan, “Introduction: The Study of Rhetoric and Public Address,” in T…
  5. 16. Karlyn Kohrs Campbell, “Rhetorical Criticism 2009: A Study in Method,” in The Handbook of Rhetoric and Pu…
  6. 17. Charles E. Morris III, “Archival Queer,” Rhetoric & Public Affairs 9 (2006): 147.
  7. 18. Pamela VanHaitsma, “Between Archival Absence and Information Abundance: Reconstructing Sallie Holley’s Ab…
  8. 20. Michael Lechuga, “A Minuteman in the White House: Performing Spectacle, Mobilizing Political Affect, and …
  9. 22. Lisa M. Corrigan, Black Feelings: Race and Affect in the Long Sixties (Jackson: University Press of Missi…
  10. 23. Anjali Vats, “Affecting White Accountability: What Mr. Rogers Can Tell Us about the (Racial) Futures of C…
  11. 24. Raka Shome, “Postcolonial Interventions in the Rhetorical Canon: An ‘Other’ View,” Communication Theory 6…
  12. 26. Tiara R. Na’puti, “Speaking of Indigeneity: Navigating Genealogies against Erasure and #RhetoricSoWhite,”…
  13. 27. Karma R. Chávez, “Beyond Inclusion: Rethinking Rhetoric’s Historical Narrative,” Quarterly Journal of Spe…
  14. 29. See Ashley Noel Mack and Bryan J. McCann, "Critiquing State and Gendered Violence in the Age of #MeToo," …
  15. E. Cram, "Queer Geographies and the Rhetoric of Orientation," Quarterly Journal of Speech 105 (2019): 98-115.
  16. 32. Godfried Agyeman Asante, “#RhetoricSoWhite and US Centered: Reflections on Challenges and Opportunities,”…
  17. 33. Stacey K. Sowards, “#RhetoricSoEnglishOnly: Decolonizing Rhetorical Studies through Multilingualism,” Qua…
  18. 34. José Ángel Maldonado, “Manifestx: Toward a Rhetoric Loaded with Future,” Communication and Critical/Cultu…
CrossRef global citation count: 0 View in citation network →