Abstract

This essay identifies and explicates a key rhetorical form—“redemptive exclusion”—underlying former United States Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley’s efforts to defend barring Syrian refugees from American soil. Through a reliance on ethotic prolepsis, the rhetorical form of redemptive exclusion enables the creation of a transcendent perspective that reconciles seemingly opposite contemporary cultural and political rhetorics: xenophobic discourses of exclusion become coarticulated with the mythic promise of an America open to all. We show how Haley’s rhetoric combines antithetical gestures of inclusion and exclusion by interweaving synecdochic narratives of her own immigrant history; hyperbolic narratives of American benevolence toward immigrants; and stereotypical narratives of terrorist identity that preempt the acceptance of Syrian refugees as even potentially American. We argue that Haley converts the rejection of Syrian refugees from American soil into an opportunity for constraining and qualifying the mythic ideal of the United States as an historical beacon for immigrants around the globe. In the conclusion, we suggest that a close study of how redemptive exclusion takes life in Haley’s discourse offers more general lessons about the rhetorical and ideological character of controversies over U.S. immigration policy.

Journal
Rhetoric & Public Affairs
Published
2020-01-01
DOI
10.14321/rhetpublaffa.23.4.0735
Open Access
Closed
Topics

Citation Context

Cited by in this index (1)

  1. Rhetoric & Public Affairs

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Also cites 12 works outside this index ↓
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  8. 62. Josue Cisneros, “Contaminated Communities: The Metaphor of “Immigrant as Pollutant” in Media Representati…
  9. 63. Rens van Munster, “The War on Terrorism: When the Exception Becomes the Rule,” International Journal for …
  10. 84. Galina Cornelisse, Immigration Detention and Human Rights: Rethinking Territorial Sovereignty (The Nether…
  11. 85. Kelly M. Greenhill, “Open Arms Behind Barred Doors: Fear, Hypocrisy and Policy Schizophrenia in the Europ…
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