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When Congress Debates: A Bakhtinian Paradigm

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

When Congress Debates: A Bakhtinian Paradigm

Contributors:
ISBN:

9780275966676

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Praeger Publishers Inc

Publication Date:

30th September 2000

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Central / national / federal government
Political structure and processes

Dewey:

328.7302

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

176

Description

Sheckels provides the first book-length study of Congressional debating. The limited work on the topic in the communication discipline has argued that such debating is tedious and inconsequential. Sheckels, however, offers a new paradigm, derived from the work of Mikhail Bakhtin, that counteracts this assumption. This paradigm also counters the often unvoiced assumption that debates are inherently biopolar with the initial premise that they are instead polyphonic. The polyphony, however, goes beyond the recognition of the multiple speakers who participate and the drama they enact, to the awareness of the voices these speakers introduce within their discourse. These voices range from the words of authorities to the narratives of average Americans, from classical prosopopoeia to what Bakhtin terms stylization. Speakers also sometimes enact what Bakhtin terms double-voiced discourse; furthermore, there are moments of what Bakhtin terms carnivalesque energy. Bakhtin's work finally alerts the critic to the illusion of finalizability in Congressional debates. After outlining this paradigm, Sheckels uses it to examine six Congressional debates, ranging in date from a 1960 Senate filibuster on a civil rights matter to the 1999 House debate on articles of impeachment and includes analyses of such flash points as the Confederate flag, sexual harassment in the military, and partial-birth abortion. These case studies reveal both the utility and the flexibility of the Bakhtinian perspective. Thoughtful analyses that will be of great interest to scholars and researchers involved with rhetoric and political communication.

Reviews

"Professor Sheckles approach to the study of Congressional debates is both innovative and insightful. By focusing on Bakhtinian literary theory, he offers a critique that manages to be both flexible and inclusive....When Congress Debates makes an important contribution to the study of political communication and to the advancement of rhetorical criticism. It will be an important read for rhetorical critics and theorists alike."-Janette Kenner Muir Associate Professor of Communication George Mason University
"This book offers a much more nuanced and complex account of congressional discourse than anything in rhetoric before."-Carole Blair Professor of American Studies University of California, Davis

Author Bio

THEOORE F. SHECKELS is Professor of English and Communication at Randolph-Macon College. He is the author of Debating: Applied Rhetorical Theory (1984) and The Lion on the Freeway: A Thematic Introduction to Contemporary South African Literature in English (1996).

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