Eminent Rhetoric: Language, Gender, and Cultural Tropes
By (Author) Elizabeth A. Fay
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
20th June 1994
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Sociolinguistics
Gender studies, gender groups
Cultural studies
306.44
Hardback
176
Fay examines the unacknowledged political uses of language in modern culture that engender and effectuate power imbalances among speakers and listeners. She locates six strategies in which women are particularly targeted by politicized rhetoric and shows how they are used in a variety of language-informed social arenas. Using bell hooks' pedagogy of talking back, Eminent Rhetoric argues that women need not only to learn how to recognize victimizing rhetoric, but also to start to challenge it and its rhetors. Women must be shown how the everyday language of politicians, educators, and newscasters is not natural but is marked--designed for manipulative purposes that put women at risk.
Recommended for classes in communication, advanced composition, journalism, and advanced women's studies at both the undergraduate and graduate levels.-Choice
"Recommended for classes in communication, advanced composition, journalism, and advanced women's studies at both the undergraduate and graduate levels."-Choice
ELIZABETH A. FAY is Assistant Professor of English, University of Massachusetts at Boston. She is co-editor of Working-Class Women in Academia: Laborers in the Knowledge Factory (1993) and a contributor to Constructing and Reconstructing Gender: The Links among Communication, Language, and Gender (1992).