Rhiannon Goad
2 articles-
Abstract
Judges and jurists frequently read police-recorded video as arhetorical. It is not. Footage recorded from the perspective of an officer favors police. Drawing on both Burke’s theory of identification and film studies, I consider how footage filmed from an officer’s perspective functions as a nonverbal constitutive rhetoric. In an analysis of Harris v. Scott (2007), I demonstrate how police-recorded video encourages viewers to dissolve the space between themselves and the police, inviting audiences to characterize both police and themselves as passive, impartial, and objective viewers of an recorded event. When successful as constitutive rhetoric, footage from police-recorded video makes jurors and judges more suspectable to arguments that characterize police as passive observers in an event.
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Dana L. Cloud. <i>Reality Bites: Rhetoric and the Circulation of Truth Claims in U.S. Political Culture</i>. Columbus, OH: The Ohio State University Press, 2018. 216 pages. $29.95 paperback. ↗
Abstract
Recently, I heard a radio ad for The New York Times that shook me. The ad sold the paper via Truth: buy the paper, get the Truth. Facts as raw goods. Sandwiched between ads for Chevrolet trucks and...