1991
DOI: 10.1080/00335639109383940
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A story of rhetorical‐ideological transformation: Eugene V. Debs as liberal hero

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…An admittedly partial and decidedly unscientific sampling of recent issues of the Quarterly Journal of Speech, concentrating only on those studies that might be properly considered "public address," reveals the following: Ronald Lee and James R. Andrews place Eugene V. Debs firmly on the right side of the colon in their study of rhetorical-ideological transformation. 40 Likewise, E. O. Wilson is relegated to the right side of the colon in John Lyne and Henry F. Howe's "The Rhetoric of Expertise: E. O. Wilson and Sociobiology;" 41 Stephen Browne eschews the colon altogether in his study of the interpretation of political culture as illustrated by Edmund Burke's Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents. 42 Robert Branham, in looking at the films The Silent Scream and Eclipse of Reason is really interested, not in the films, per se, but in the rhetorical phenomenon he identifies as the convert tale, 43 …”
Section: Literary Generalization or Why Quote John Barth?mentioning
confidence: 97%
“…An admittedly partial and decidedly unscientific sampling of recent issues of the Quarterly Journal of Speech, concentrating only on those studies that might be properly considered "public address," reveals the following: Ronald Lee and James R. Andrews place Eugene V. Debs firmly on the right side of the colon in their study of rhetorical-ideological transformation. 40 Likewise, E. O. Wilson is relegated to the right side of the colon in John Lyne and Henry F. Howe's "The Rhetoric of Expertise: E. O. Wilson and Sociobiology;" 41 Stephen Browne eschews the colon altogether in his study of the interpretation of political culture as illustrated by Edmund Burke's Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents. 42 Robert Branham, in looking at the films The Silent Scream and Eclipse of Reason is really interested, not in the films, per se, but in the rhetorical phenomenon he identifies as the convert tale, 43 …”
Section: Literary Generalization or Why Quote John Barth?mentioning
confidence: 97%