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Original Articles

The rhetoric of nukespeak

Pages 253-272 | Published online: 02 Jun 2009

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

Read on this site (22)

Bryan C. Taylor. (2017) ‘The movie has to go forward’: surveying the media–security relationship. Annals of the International Communication Association 41:1, pages 46-69.
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Itty Abraham. (2016) What (really) makes a country nuclear? Insights from nonnuclear Southeast Asia. Critical Studies on Security 4:1, pages 24-41.
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Travis J. Cram. (2015) “Peace, Yes, but World Freedom as Well”: Principle, Pragmatism, and the End of the Cold War. Western Journal of Communication 79:3, pages 367-386.
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William J. Kinsella, Dorothy Collins Andreas & Danielle Endres. (2015) Communicating Nuclear Power: A Programmatic Review. Annals of the International Communication Association 39:1, pages 277-309.
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Kevin J. Ayotte. (2011) A Vocabulary of Dis-Ease: Argumentation, Hot Zones, and the Intertextuality of Bioterrorism. Argumentation and Advocacy 48:1, pages 1-21.
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Casey Ryan Kelly. (2010) Orwellian Language and the Politics of Tribal Termination (1953–1960). Western Journal of Communication 74:4, pages 351-371.
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Judith Hendry. (2008) Public Discourse and the Rhetorical Construction of the Technospecter. Environmental Communication 2:3, pages 302-319.
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John M. Jones & Robert C. Rowland. (2005) A Covenant‐affirming jeremiad: The post‐presidential ideological appeals of Ronald Wilson Reagan. Communication Studies 56:2, pages 157-174.
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Bryan C. Taylor. (2003) "Our Bruised Arms Hung Up as Monuments": Nuclear Iconography in Post-Cold War Culture. Critical Studies in Media Communication 20:1, pages 1-34.
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CelesteM. Condit, BenjaminR. Bates, Ryan Galloway, Sonja Brown Givens, CarolineK. Haynie, JohnW. Jordan, Gordon Stables & Hollis Marshall West. (2002) Recipes or blueprints for our genes? How contexts selectively activate the multiple meanings of metaphors. Quarterly Journal of Speech 88:3, pages 303-325.
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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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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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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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BryanC. Taylor. (1993) Register of the repressed: Women's voice and body in the nuclear weapons organization. Quarterly Journal of Speech 79:3, pages 267-285.
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BryanC. Taylor. (1992) The politics of the nuclear text: Reading Robert Oppenheimer's letters and recollections . Quarterly Journal of Speech 78:4, pages 429-449.
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JohnM. Murphy. (1992) Domesticating dissent: The Kennedys and the freedom rides. Communication Monographs 59:1, pages 61-78.
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J. Michael Hogan & Leroy Dorsey. (1991) Public opinion and the nuclear freeze: The rhetoric of popular sovereignty in foreign policy debate. Western Journal of Speech Communication 55:4, pages 319-338.
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BryanC. Taylor. (1990) Reminiscences of Los Alamos: Narrative, critical theory, and the organizational subject. Western Journal of Speech Communication 54:3, pages 395-419.
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Articles from other publishers (14)

Kjølv Egeland. (2022) Sustaining social license: nuclear weapons and the art of legitimation. International Politics 60:3, pages 598-615.
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Biejan Poor Toulabi. (2023) The Myth of the “Poor Man's Atomic Bomb”: Knowledge, Method, and Ideology in the Study of Chemical, Biological, and Nuclear Weapons. Journal of Global Security Studies 8:1.
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Keith M. Hearit. 2022. The Handbook of Crisis Communication. The Handbook of Crisis Communication 81 97 .
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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Paul BeaumontPaul Beaumont. 2021. Performing Nuclear Weapons. Performing Nuclear Weapons 159 213 .
Paul BeaumontPaul Beaumont. 2021. Performing Nuclear Weapons. Performing Nuclear Weapons 55 84 .
Laura Considine. (2016) The ‘standardization of catastrophe’: Nuclear disarmament, the Humanitarian Initiative and the politics of the unthinkable. European Journal of International Relations 23:3, pages 681-702.
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Etsuko Kinefuchi. (2015) Nuclear Power for Good: Articulations in Japan's Nuclear Power Hegemony. Communication, Culture & Critique 8:3, pages 448-465.
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Ralina L. Joseph. (2011) “Hope Is Finally Making a Comeback”: First Lady Reframed. Communication, Culture & Critique 4:1, pages 56-77.
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Julie Doyle. (2011) Acclimatizing nuclear? Climate change, nuclear power and the reframing of risk in the UK news media. International Communication Gazette 73:1-2, pages 107-125.
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Christopher A. Paul. (2009) Welfare Epics? The Rhetoric of Rewards in World of Warcraft. Games and Culture 5:2, pages 158-176.
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Matthew Woods. (2007) Unnatural acts. Journal of Language and Politics 6:1, pages 91-128.
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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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Robin P. Clair. (2016) The Bureaucratization, Commodification, and Privatization of Sexual Harassment through Institutional Discourse. Management Communication Quarterly 7:2, pages 123-157.
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