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Original Articles

Bryan's “a cross of gold:” The rhetoric of polarization at the 1896 democratic convention

Pages 291-304 | Received 08 Aug 1999, Accepted 09 Jun 2000, Published online: 06 Jun 2009

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Read on this site (5)

Mark LaVoie. (2021) Ronald Reagan’s “To Restore America”: Political Lifeline in the 1976 Primary. Southern Communication Journal 86:4, pages 362-374.
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Christopher J. Oldenburg & Adam E. Enz. (2017) The Rhetorical Education of William Jennings Bryan: Isocrates, Character, and Imitation. Advances in the History of Rhetoric 20:3, pages 302-319.
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WilliamD. Harpine. (2004) “We want yer, McKinley”: Epbdeictic rhetoric in songs from the 1896 presidential campaign. Rhetoric Society Quarterly 34:1, pages 73-88.
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Articles from other publishers (4)

Robin E Jensen. (2021) Theorizing Chemical Rhetoric: Toward an Articulation of Chemistry as a Public Vocabulary. Journal of Communication 71:3, pages 431-453.
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Christopher J. Oldenburg & Adam E. Enz. (2017) The Rhetorical Education of William Jennings Bryan: Isocrates, Character, and Imitation. Journal for the History of Rhetoric 20:3, pages 302-319.
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Kristy Maddux. (2013) Fundamentalist Fool or Populist Paragon? William Jennings Bryan and the Campaign against Evolutionary Theory. Rhetoric and Public Affairs 16:3, pages 489-520.
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. (2002) Recent Scholarship. Journal of American History 88:4, pages 1633-1682.
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