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Original Articles

The rhetoric of women's liberation: An oxymoron

Pages 74-86 | Published online: 05 Jun 2009

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Jacqueline Gaybor. (2022) Everyday (online) body politics of menstruation. Feminist Media Studies 22:4, pages 898-913.
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Robert E. Terrill. (2022) “It’s Promethean, Man!”: The Frankenstein Myth and Rhetorical Invention. Rhetoric Society Quarterly 52:2, pages 122-136.
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Carly S. Woods. (2021) Keeping TABS: Feminist Publishing and Pedagogy in the Wake of Title IX. Rhetoric Review 40:4, pages 363-377.
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S. Marek Muller. (2021) Archival Mocking As Feminist Praxis: A Rhetorical Repurposing of A Vindication of the Rights of Brutes. Women's Studies in Communication 44:1, pages 23-43.
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E. Johanna Hartelius & Jason Micheli. (2020) ‘The Living Word Has Its Way with You’: The Apocalyptic Homiletics of Rev. Fleming Rutledge. Journal for the History of Rhetoric 23:3, pages 227-252.
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Robin Kanak Zwier. (2020) Taking Back Birth: De/Medicalization and the Rhetoric of the Santa Cruz Birth Center. Western Journal of Communication 84:1, pages 1-18.
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Stephanie R. Larson. (2019) “Just let this sink in”: Feminist Megethos and the Role of Lists in #MeToo. Rhetoric Review 38:4, pages 432-444.
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Cindy Koenig Richards & Paul McKean. (2017) “Government Is an Instrument in Their Hands”: Jeanette Rankin on Progressive Technologies of Democracy. Advances in the History of Rhetoric 20:1, pages 75-85.
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Stephanie L. Young & D’Arcy J. Reynolds$suffix/text()$suffix/text(). (2017) “You Can Be an Agent of Change”: The Rhetoric of New Age Self-Help in Enlightened. Western Journal of Communication 81:1, pages 1-20.
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Molly M. Greenwood & Calvin R. Coker. (2016) The Political is Personal: Analyzing the Presidential Primary Debate Performances of Hillary Clinton and Michele Bachmann. Argumentation and Advocacy 52:3, pages 165-180.
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Wendy K.Z. Anderson & Kittie E. Grace. (2015) “Taking Mama Steps” Toward Authority, Alternatives, and Advocacy. Feminist Media Studies 15:6, pages 942-959.
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Kyungsub Stephen Choi. (2015) A comparative analysis of different gender pair combinations in pair programming. Behaviour & Information Technology 34:8, pages 825-837.
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Christina R. Foust & Jenni Marie Simon. (2015) Memories of Movement in a Postfeminist Context: Conservative Fusion in the Rhetoric of Tammy Bruce and “Dr. Laura” Schlessinger. Western Journal of Communication 79:1, pages 1-21.
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Belinda A. Stillion Southard. (2014) A Rhetoric of Epistemic Privilege: Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Harriot Stanton Blatch, and the Educated Vote. Advances in the History of Rhetoric 17:2, pages 157-178.
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Lillian Campbell. (2014) “MacGyver-Meets-Dr. Ruth”: Science Journalism and the Material Positioning of Dr. Carla Pugh. Women's Studies in Communication 37:1, pages 44-65.
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DavidG. Levasseur, J. Kanan Sawyer & MariaA. Kopacz. (2011) The Intersection Between Deep Moral Frames and Rhetorical Style in the Struggle over U.S. Immigration Reform. Communication Quarterly 59:5, pages 547-568.
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Kate Zittlow Rogness & ChristinaR. Foust. (2011) Beyond Rights and Virtues as Foundation for Women's Agency: Emma Goldman's Rhetoric of Free Love. Western Journal of Communication 75:2, pages 148-167.
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SaraL. McKinnon. (2010) Excavating Gender in Women's Early Claims to Political Asylum in the United States. Women's Studies in Communication 33:2, pages 79-95.
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RaymieE. McKerrow. (2010) Research in Rhetoric: A Glance at our Recent Past, Present, and Potential Future. Review of Communication 10:3, pages 197-210.
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JamesF. Klumpp. (2009) The Rise and Fall of Political Coalitions: A Subject for Rhetorical Inquiry. Review of Communication 9:4, pages 310-316.
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Casey Ryan Kelly. (2009) Women's Rhetorical Agency in the American West: The New Penelope . Women's Studies in Communication 32:2, pages 203-231.
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Valerie Palmer-Mehta. (2009) Aung San Suu Kyi and the Rhetoric of Social Protest in Burma. Women's Studies in Communication 32:2, pages 151-179.
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HeatherL. Hundley & J. Scott Rodriguez. (2009) Transactivism and Postmodernity: An Agonistic Analysis of Transliterature. Communication Quarterly 57:1, pages 35-50.
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BelindaA. Stillion Southard. (2008) Beyond the Backlash: Sex and the City and Three Feminist Struggles. Communication Quarterly 56:2, pages 149-167.
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Marilyn Bordwell DeLaure. (2008) Planting Seeds of Change: Ella Baker's Radical Rhetoric. Women's Studies in Communication 31:1, pages 1-28.
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Mary M. Carver. (2008) Everyday Women Find Their Voice in the Public Sphere. Journalism History 34:1, pages 15-22.
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Shinobu Suzuki. (2006) Gender-Linked Differences in Informal Argument: Analyzing Arguments in an Online Newspaper. Women's Studies in Communication 29:2, pages 193-219.
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JenniferA. Peeples & KevinM. DeLuca. (2006) The Truth of the Matter: Motherhood, Community and Environmental Justice. Women's Studies in Communication 29:1, pages 59-87.
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StaceyK. Sowards & ValerieR. Renegar. (2006) Reconceptualizing Rhetorical Activism in Contemporary Feminist Contexts. Howard Journal of Communications 17:1, pages 57-74.
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Natalie Fixmer & JuliaT. Wood. (2005) The Personal is Still Political: Embodied Politics in Third Wave Feminism. Women's Studies in Communication 28:2, pages 235-257.
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JenniferL. Borda. (2005) Feminist Critique and Cinematic Counterhistory in the Documentary With Babies and Banners . Women's Studies in Communication 28:2, pages 157-182.
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Ashli Quesinberry Stokes. (2005) Constituting Southern feminists: Women's liberation newsletters in the South. Southern Communication Journal 70:2, pages 91-108.
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Danette Ifert Johnson. (2005) Feminine style in presidential debate discourse, 1960–2000. Communication Quarterly 53:1, pages 3-20.
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StaceyK. Sowards & ValerieR. Renegar. (2004) The rhetorical functions of consciousness‐raising in third wave feminism. Communication Studies 55:4, pages 535-552.
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Kristan Poirot. (2004) Mediating a Movement, Authorizing Discourse: Kate Millett, Sexual Politics, and Feminism's Second Wave. Women's Studies in Communication 27:2, pages 204-235.
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Gordon R. Mitchell. (2004) Public Argument Action Research and the Learning Curve of New Social Movements. Argumentation and Advocacy 40:4, pages 209-225.
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JenniferJ. McGee. (2003) A Pilgrim's Progress: Metaphor in the Rhetoric of Mary Fisher, AIDS Activist. Women's Studies in Communication 26:2, pages 191-213.
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Kenneth Rufo. (2003) Rhetoric and Power: Rethinking and Relinking. Argumentation and Advocacy 40:2, pages 65-84.
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Barbara A. Pickering. (2003) Women's Voices as Evidence: Personal Testimony is Pro-Choice Films. Argumentation and Advocacy 40:1, pages 1-22.
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Susan Zaeske. (2002) Signatures of citizenship: The rhetoric of women's antislavery petitions. Quarterly Journal of Speech 88:2, pages 147-168.
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Karlyn Kohrs Campbell. (2002) Consciousness‐raising: Linking theory, criticism, and practice. Rhetoric Society Quarterly 32:1, pages 45-64.
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Allison Lea Howry & JuliaT. Wood. (2001) Something old, something new, something borrowed: Themes in the voices of a new generation of feminists. Southern Communication Journal 66:4, pages 323-336.
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MaryE. Triece. (2000) Rhetoric and Social Change: Women's Struggles for Economic and Political Equality, 1900–1917. Women's Studies in Communication 23:2, pages 238-260.
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CaryR. W. Voss & RobertC. Rowland. (2000) Pre‐inception rhetoric in the creation of a social movement: The case of Frances Wright. Communication Studies 51:1, pages 1-14.
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Kathleen M. Torrens. (1999) Fashion as Argument: Nineteenth-Century Dress Reform. Argumentation and Advocacy 36:2, pages 77-87.
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Paul Mongeau. (1999) Editor's note. Communication Studies 50:2, pages 5-6.
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Robert Asen. (1999) Toward a Normative Conception of Difference in Public Deliberation. Argumentation and Advocacy 35:3, pages 115-129.
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JuliaT. Wood. (1998) Celebrating diversity in the communication field. Communication Studies 49:2, pages 172-178.
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LisaM. Gring‐Pemble. (1998) Writing themselves into consciousness: Creating a rhetorical bridge between the public and private spheres. Quarterly Journal of Speech 84:1, pages 41-61.
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Celeste Michelle Condit. (1997) In Praise of Eloquent Diversity: Gender and Rhetoric as Public Persuasion. Women's Studies in Communication 20:2, pages 91-116.
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LesterC. Olson. (1997) On the margins of rhetoric: Audre lorde transforming silence into language and action. Quarterly Journal of Speech 83:1, pages 49-70.
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DianeH. Miller, CalM. Logue & Cindy Jenefsky. (1996) Civil liberties: The expansion of white women's communicative activities from the antebellum south through the civil war. Southern Communication Journal 61:4, pages 289-301.
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JuliaT. Wood. (1996) Review essay: Dominant and muted discourses in popular representations of feminism. Quarterly Journal of Speech 82:2, pages 171-185.
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M. Lane Bruner. (1996) Producing Identities: Gender Problematization and Feminist Argumentation. Argumentation and Advocacy 32:4, pages 185-198.
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Mari Boor Tonn. (1996) Militant motherhood: Labor's Mary Harris “mother” Jones. Quarterly Journal of Speech 82:1, pages 1-21.
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Janice Norton. (1995) Rhetorical criticism as ethical action: Cherchez la Femme. Southern Communication Journal 61:1, pages 29-45.
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PatriciaA. Sullivan & StevenR. Goldzwig. (1995) A relational approach to moral decision‐making: The majority opinion in planned parenthood V. Casey . Quarterly Journal of Speech 81:2, pages 167-190.
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Suzanne M. Daughton. (1995) The Fine Texture of Enactment: Iconicity as Empowerment in Angelina Grimké's Pennsylvania Hall Address. Women's Studies in Communication 18:1, pages 19-43.
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BonnieJ. Dow. (1995) Feminism, difference(s), and rhetorical studies. Communication Studies 46:1-2, pages 106-117.
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Mary Rose Williams. (1994) A Reconceptualization of Protest Rhetoric: Women's Quilts as Rhetorical Forms. Women's Studies in Communication 17:2, pages 20-44.
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AnneF. Mattina. (1994) “Rights as well as duties”: The rhetoric of Leonora O'Reilly. Communication Quarterly 42:2, pages 196-205.
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SuzanneM. Daughton. (1994) Women's issues, women's place: Gender‐related problems in presidential campaigns. Communication Quarterly 42:2, pages 106-119.
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BonnieJ. Dow & Mari Boor Tonn. (1993) “Feminine style” and political judgment in the rhetoric of Ann Richards. Quarterly Journal of Speech 79:3, pages 286-302.
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CindyL. Griffin. (1993) Women as communicators: Mary Daly's hagiography as rhetoric. Communication Monographs 60:2, pages 158-177.
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J.F. Walsh$suffix/text()$suffix/text(). (1993) Paying attention to channels: Differential images of recruitment in students for a democratic society, 1960‐1965. Communication Studies 44:1, pages 71-86.
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Kari Whittenberger‐Keith. (1992) The good person behaving well: Rethinking the rhetoric of virtue. Southern Communication Journal 58:1, pages 33-43.
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KarenA. Foss. (1992) Out from underground: The discourse of emerging fugitives. Western Journal of Communication 56:2, pages 125-142.
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BonnieJ. Dow. (1992) Femininity and feminism in Murphy Brown . Southern Communication Journal 57:2, pages 143-155.
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KristinS. Vonnegut. (1992) Listening for women's voices: Revisioning courses in American public address. Communication Education 41:1, pages 26-39.
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Sharon D. Downey & Karen Rasmussen. (1991) The Irony of Sophie's Choice. Women's Studies in Communication 14:2, pages 1-23.
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RobertC. Rowland. (1990) On a limited approach to mythic criticism—Rowland's rejoinder. Communication Studies 41:2, pages 150-160.
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PatriciaA. Sullivan. (1989) The 1984 vice‐presidential debate: A case study of female and male framing in political campaigns. Communication Quarterly 37:4, pages 329-343.
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SallyJ. Perkins. (1989) The rhetoric of androgyny as revealed in the feminine mystique . Communication Studies 40:2, pages 69-80.
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Karlyn Kohrs Campbell. (1989) The sound of women's voices. Quarterly Journal of Speech 75:2, pages 212-220.
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A. Cheree Carlson. (1988) Limitations on the comic frame: Some witty American women of the nineteenth century. Quarterly Journal of Speech 74:3, pages 310-322.
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StephenE. Lucas. (1988) The renaissance of American public address: Text and context in rhetorical criticism. Quarterly Journal of Speech 74:2, pages 241-260.
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Martha Solomon. (1988) Ideology as rhetorical constraint: The anarchist agitation of “red Emma” Goldman. Quarterly Journal of Speech 74:2, pages 184-200.
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CarolJ. Jablonski. (1988) Rhetoric, paradox, and the movement for women's ordination in the Roman Catholic Church. Quarterly Journal of Speech 74:2, pages 164-183.
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Mark Paul Moore. (1988) Rhetoric and paradox: Seeking knowledge from the “container and thing contained”;. Rhetoric Society Quarterly 18:1, pages 15-30.
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Carole Spitzack & Kathryn Carter. (1987) Women in communication studies: A typology for revision. Quarterly Journal of Speech 73:4, pages 401-423.
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Elizabeth Walker Mechling & Gale Auletta. (1986) Beyond war: A socio‐rhetorical analysis of a new class revitalization movement. Western Journal of Speech Communication 50:4, pages 388-404.
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J. F. Walsh$suffix/text()$suffix/text(). (1986) An approach to group communication in historical social movements: Group communication in Maoist insurgent mobilization. Southern Speech Communication Journal 51:3, pages 229-255.
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RandallA. Lake. (1986) The rhetor as dialectician in “last chance for survival”. Communication Monographs 53:3, pages 201-220.
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PhyllisM. Japp. (1985) Esther or Isaiah?: The abolitionist‐feminist rhetoric of Angelina Grimké. Quarterly Journal of Speech 71:3, pages 335-348.
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Janice Hocker Rushing. (1985) E.T. As rhetorical transcendence. Quarterly Journal of Speech 71:2, pages 188-203.
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RobertJ. Branham & W. Barnett Pearce. (1985) Between text and context: Toward a rhetoric of contextual reconstruction. Quarterly Journal of Speech 71:1, pages 19-36.
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AndrewS. Rancer, RobertA. Baukus & DominicA. Infante. (1985) Relations between argumentativeness and belief structures about arguing. Communication Education 34:1, pages 37-47.
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W. Barnett Pearce & SharonM. Rossi. (1984) The problematic practices of “feminism”: An interpretive and critical analysis. Communication Quarterly 32:4, pages 277-286.
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CarolynR. Miller. (1984) Genre as social action. Quarterly Journal of Speech 70:2, pages 151-167.
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KarenA. Foss & SonjaK. Foss. (1983) The status of research on women and communication. Communication Quarterly 31:3, pages 195-204.
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RandallA. Lake. (1983) Enacting red power: The consummatory function in native American protest rhetoric. Quarterly Journal of Speech 69:2, pages 127-142.
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Becky Swanson Kroll. (1983) From small group to public view: Mainstreaming the women's movement. Communication Quarterly 31:2, pages 139-147.
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J. Justin Gustainis. (1982) The generic criticism of social movement rhetoric. Rhetoric Society Quarterly 12:4, pages 251-260.
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LucilleM. Pederson. (1981) Pedagogical methods of teaching “women in public speaking”. Communication Education 30:3, pages 256-265.
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MichaelC. Leff. (1980) Interpretation and the art of the rhetorical critic. Western Journal of Speech Communication 44:4, pages 337-349.
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WalterR. Fisher. (1980) Genre: Concepts and applications in rhetorical criticism. Western Journal of Speech Communication 44:4, pages 288-299.
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Suzanne Volmar Riches & MalcolmO. Sillars. (1980) The status of movement criticism. Western Journal of Speech Communication 44:4, pages 275-287.
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CharlesJ. Stewart. (1980) A functional approach to the rhetoric of social movements. Central States Speech Journal 31:4, pages 298-305.
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JamesR. Andrews. (1980) History and theory in the study of the rhetoric of social movements. Central States Speech Journal 31:4, pages 274-281.
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StephenE. Lucas. (1980) Coming to terms with movement studies. Central States Speech Journal 31:4, pages 255-266.
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LelandM. Griffin. (1980) On studying movements. Central States Speech Journal 31:4, pages 225-232.
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MalcolmO. Sillars. (1980) Defining movements rhetorically: Casting the widest net. Southern Speech Communication Journal 46:1, pages 17-32.
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KathleenJ. Turner. (1980) Ego defense and media access: Conflicting rhetorical needs of a contemporary social movement. Central States Speech Journal 31:2, pages 106-116.
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ThomasD. Clark. (1979) An analysis of recurrent features of contemporary American radical, liberal, and conservative political discourse. Southern Speech Communication Journal 44:4, pages 399-422.
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SonjaK. Foss. (1979) Equal rights amendment controversy: Two worlds in conflict. Quarterly Journal of Speech 65:3, pages 275-288.
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Martha Solomon. (1979) The “positive woman's” journey: A mythic analysis of the rhetoric of stop ERA. Quarterly Journal of Speech 65:3, pages 262-274.
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BarbaraF. Sharf. (1979) Rhetorical analysis of nonpublic discourse. Communication Quarterly 27:3, pages 21-30.
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Martha Solomon. (1978) The rhetoric of stop era: Fatalistic reaffirmation. Southern Speech Communication Journal 44:1, pages 42-59.
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PattiP. Gillespie. (1978) Feminist theatre: A rhetorical phenomenon. Quarterly Journal of Speech 64:3, pages 284-294.
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Janet Brown. (1978) Kenneth Burke and the Mod Donna The dramatistic method applied to feminist criticism. Central States Speech Journal 29:2, pages 138-144.
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David Zarefsky. (1977) President johnson's war on poverty: The rhetoric of three “establishment” movements. Communication Monographs 44:4, pages 352-373.
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RalphR. Smith & RusselR. Windes. (1976) The rhetoric of mobilization: Implications for the study of movements. Southern Speech Communication Journal 42:1, pages 1-19.
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JamesW. Chesebro & CarolineD. Hamsher. (1975) Contemporary rhetorical theory and criticism: Dimensions of the new rhetoric. Speech Monographs 42:4, pages 311-334.
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JohnF. Cragan. (1975) Rhetorical strategy: A dramatistic interpretation and application. Central States Speech Journal 26:1, pages 4-11.
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WilA. Linkugel. (1974) The rhetoric of American feminism: A social movement course. The Speech Teacher 23:2, pages 121-130.
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Karlyn Kohrs Campbell. (1974) Criticism: Ephemeral and enduring. The Speech Teacher 23:1, pages 9-14.
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JamesW. Chesebro & CarolineD. Hamsher. (1973) Rhetorical criticism: A message‐centered procedure. The Speech Teacher 22:4, pages 282-290.
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RobertJ. Brake & RobertD. Neuleib. (1973) Famous women orators: An opinion survey. Today's Speech 21:4, pages 33-37.
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