Ethics in Contact Rhetoric: Communication and the Dance of Bodies and Power: Bloomsbury Studies in Contemporary Rhetoric
Autor Jon Radwan, Dale Cyphert, Ellen W. Gorsevski, Omar Swartzen Limba Engleză Hardback – 27 dec 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781666934731
ISBN-10: 1666934739
Pagini: 356
Ilustrații: 19 BW Illustrations
Dimensiuni: 160 x 232 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.6 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Seria Bloomsbury Studies in Contemporary Rhetoric
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1666934739
Pagini: 356
Ilustrații: 19 BW Illustrations
Dimensiuni: 160 x 232 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.6 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Seria Bloomsbury Studies in Contemporary Rhetoric
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Preface: On Co-writing More, Rhetorical Touch, and Dancing Temples of Hope
Introduction: On Feelings, Dance Terms, and Forming Rhetorical Critics
Chapter 1: Centering Contact, Dancing Attitudes: On King Midas' Touch and Defining Terms
Jon Radwan
Chapter 2: Contact Rhetoric: Bodies and Love in Deus Caritas Est
Jon Radwan
Chapter 3: Conquest and Rhetorical Force: Truth, Mutuality, and Just Dancing in Relational Gravity
Jon Radwan
Chapter 4: With or Without God: Dancing and the Apocalypse
Omar Swartz
Chapter 5: "I Am Prepared to Die:" Mandela's Rivonia Address and Sabotage as Rhetorical Contact
Jon Radwan, Dale Cyphert, and Ellen Gorsevski
Chapter 6: Choosing: The Violence of Iowa Nice or an Ethical Bar Fight
Dale Cyphert
Chapter 7: Interspecies Communication Ethics and Relational Force: From Repression to Restorative Ecological Justice
Ellen Gorsevski
Chapter 8: Terrorism, Direction Action, and Holding Prisoners: Rhetorical Dimensions of Violent Contact
Jon Radwan
Introduction: On Feelings, Dance Terms, and Forming Rhetorical Critics
Chapter 1: Centering Contact, Dancing Attitudes: On King Midas' Touch and Defining Terms
Jon Radwan
Chapter 2: Contact Rhetoric: Bodies and Love in Deus Caritas Est
Jon Radwan
Chapter 3: Conquest and Rhetorical Force: Truth, Mutuality, and Just Dancing in Relational Gravity
Jon Radwan
Chapter 4: With or Without God: Dancing and the Apocalypse
Omar Swartz
Chapter 5: "I Am Prepared to Die:" Mandela's Rivonia Address and Sabotage as Rhetorical Contact
Jon Radwan, Dale Cyphert, and Ellen Gorsevski
Chapter 6: Choosing: The Violence of Iowa Nice or an Ethical Bar Fight
Dale Cyphert
Chapter 7: Interspecies Communication Ethics and Relational Force: From Repression to Restorative Ecological Justice
Ellen Gorsevski
Chapter 8: Terrorism, Direction Action, and Holding Prisoners: Rhetorical Dimensions of Violent Contact
Jon Radwan
Recenzii
In an age dominated by digital media, Ethics in Contact Rhetoric offers a crucial reminder of the importance of physical presence and embodied interaction, urging us to reconsider how ethical communication can be maintained in increasingly virtual and mediated spaces. It challenges conventional rhetoric with a fresh perspective, centering dance as a powerful metaphor for understanding relational dynamics, justice, and the fabric of social life; in its own words, '.human development begins in contact and later grows into language and media.'
This creative volume embodies ideas as a poetic dance of discourse. Refreshing and inspiring, ideas leap forth from a stunning array of classical and contemporary sources ranging across philosophy of communication, communication ethics, rhetoric, and theology to open new opportunities for meaningful contact and enduring hope. Here is rhetoric in a genuinely new key. Astounding!
The authors have done a stellar job navigating the axiological assumptions of the fields of communication and rhetoric with regards to the ontological assumptions that often go unchecked, and yet have real impact on our approaches to rhetoric, the nature of personness, and our relationships with one another.
This creative volume embodies ideas as a poetic dance of discourse. Refreshing and inspiring, ideas leap forth from a stunning array of classical and contemporary sources ranging across philosophy of communication, communication ethics, rhetoric, and theology to open new opportunities for meaningful contact and enduring hope. Here is rhetoric in a genuinely new key. Astounding!
The authors have done a stellar job navigating the axiological assumptions of the fields of communication and rhetoric with regards to the ontological assumptions that often go unchecked, and yet have real impact on our approaches to rhetoric, the nature of personness, and our relationships with one another.