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Original Articles

Register of the repressed: Women's voice and body in the nuclear weapons organization

Pages 267-285 | Published online: 05 Jun 2009

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (10)

ShaneT. Moreman. (2009) Memoir as Performance: Strategies of Hybrid Ethnic Identity. Text and Performance Quarterly 29:4, pages 346-366.
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BryanC. Taylor. (2002) Organizing the “unknown subject”: Los Alamos, espionage, and the politics of biography. Quarterly Journal of Speech 88:1, pages 33-49.
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Eric King Watts. (2001) “Voice” and “voicelessness” in rhetorical studies. Quarterly Journal of Speech 87:2, pages 179-196.
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BryanC. Taylor & StephenJ. Hartnett. (2000) “National security, and all that it implies …”: Communication and (post‐) Cold War culture. Quarterly Journal of Speech 86:4, pages 465-487.
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BryanC. Taylor. (1998) Nuclear weapons and communication studies: A review essay. Western Journal of Communication 62:3, pages 300-315.
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BryanC. Taylor. (1997) Home zero: Images of home and field in nuclear‐cultural studies. Western Journal of Communication 61:2, pages 209-234.
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Bryan C. Taylor. (1997) Revis(it)ing nuclear history: narrative conflict at the bradbury science museum . Studies in Cultures, Organizations and Societies 3:1, pages 119-145.
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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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BryanC. Taylor. (1993) Fat man and little boy: The cinematic representation of interests in the nuclear weapons organization. Critical Studies in Mass Communication 10:4, pages 367-394.
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Articles from other publishers (9)

Kjølv Egeland & Hebatalla Taha. (2023) Experts, activists, and girl bosses of the nuclear apocalypse: feminisms in security discourseExpertinnen, Aktivistinnen und Girl Bosses der nuklearen Apokalypse: Feminismen im Sicherheitsdiskurs. Zeitschrift für Friedens- und Konfliktforschung.
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Laura Considine. (2021) Narrative and nuclear weapons politics: the entelechial force of the nuclear origin myth. International Theory, pages 1-20.
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Matthew Bolton & Elizabeth Minor. (2016) The Discursive Turn Arrives in Turtle Bay: The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons’ Operationalization of Critical IR Theories. Global Policy 7:3, pages 385-395.
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Ken Silver, Rick Bird, Alex Smith, Daniel Valerio & Hilario Romero. (2014) Harriet Hardy and the Workers of Los Alamos: A Campus-Community Historical Investigation. NEW SOLUTIONS: A Journal of Environmental and Occupational Health Policy 24:3, pages 303-319.
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Dennis K. Mumby & Karen Lee Ashcraft. (2006) Organizational Communication Studies and Gendered Organization: A Response to Martin and Collinson. Gender, Work & Organization 13:1, pages 68-90.
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Bryan C. Taylor, William J. Kinsella, Stephen P. Depoe & Maribeth S. Metzler. (2005) Chapter 12: Nuclear Legacies: Communication, Controversy, and the U.S. Nuclear Weapons Production Complex. Communication Yearbook 29:1, pages 363-409.
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Jennifer Duffield Hamilton. (2005) Chapter Four: Narrative Inclusions and Exclusions in a Nuclear Controversy. The Environmental Communication Yearbook 2:1, pages 73-97.
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ANANDA MITRA & ERIC WATTS. (2016) Theorizing Cyberspace: the Idea of Voice Applied to the Internet Discourse. New Media & Society 4:4, pages 479-498.
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BRYAN C. TAYLOR. (2016) MAKE BOMB, SAVE WORLD. Journal of Contemporary Ethnography 25:1, pages 120-143.
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