1994
DOI: 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1994.tb01738.x
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Reconsidering Kenneth Burke: His Contributions to the Identity Controversy

Abstract: The social theory of Kenneth Burke is relevant to the contemporary controversy about identity. His theory of identity, developed in the 1930s, addresses several important issues at the heart of contemporary debate. Though not naively, Burke believed that identity can serve as an instrument of social critique. His own defense of this position is, I think, worthy of consideration.

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Cited by 11 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 13 publications
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“…Yet, Burke does not suggest that the critical resources of language are equally available to all (Branaman, 1994). If we carry the notion that a leader possesses highly developed rhetorical skills, the Burkean logic indirectly implies followers are eventually likely to be out competed by the more resourceful leaders.…”
Section: Burke's Dramatistic Perspective: Life Is Dramamentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Yet, Burke does not suggest that the critical resources of language are equally available to all (Branaman, 1994). If we carry the notion that a leader possesses highly developed rhetorical skills, the Burkean logic indirectly implies followers are eventually likely to be out competed by the more resourceful leaders.…”
Section: Burke's Dramatistic Perspective: Life Is Dramamentioning
confidence: 97%
“…In addition, follower responses ensured through identification are essential for leader identity (Howell and Shamir, 2005). As underscored by Branaman (1994) leader identity can, in such instances, become a tool with which followers can cunningly appropriate the leader's language of dominance towards their collective ends.…”
Section: Demystifying 6 Identification Motivesmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Recalling that Burke does not rely on a notion of an unsocialized, prediscursive essential 'self' and that identity is defined wholly in terms of social categories (Branaman, 1994), we argue that leader identity can become a key instrument of social criticism. This can be achieved by determining the standards or principles by which social hierarchy is structured and leader/follower identities allotted.…”
Section: Leader Identity Constructionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This idea entered sociology in the 1950s, principally through the work of Erving Goffman (1959Goffman ( , 1967. Influenced by earlier theorists from outside the discipline like Kenneth Burke (Branaman 1994;Burke [1945] 1969), Goffman created a framework in which individuals perform actions that they intend their audience to read in a certain way. For a performance to be successful, people must act in a way consistent with their interlocutors' understanding of the role they are playing.…”
Section: Dramaturgical Sociologymentioning
confidence: 99%