ISBN-13: 9780367710385 / Miękka / 2023 / 538 str.
ISBN-13: 9780367710385 / Miękka / 2023 / 538 str.
This edited volume presents selected works from the 21st Biennial Alta Argumentation Conference, sponsored by the National Communication Association and the American Forensics Association and held in 2019.
I. The Project of Local Theories of Argument
Chapter 1: Do We Need Local Theories of Argument?
Chapter 2: (Counter) Mapping the Place and Time of Local Argument
Chapter 3: Georhetoric: Toward an Anthropology of Argument
II. Bodies and IdentitiesChapter 4: A Nasty and Persistent Feminist Theory of Argumentative Anger
Chapter 5: Educating and Inspiring Future Women Scientists: Making Arguments about Significance and Contribution in Biography Collections for Young People Chapter 6: Beyond Participation, Toward Disparticipation: Contesting White Feminism at the 2017 Women’s MarchChapter 7: The Best a <man> Can Be? Understanding Localized Arguments about Portrayals in Gillette’s "We Believe" Advertisement
Chapter 8: Representing or Hispandering?: Beto O’Rourke, Political Identity, and Identification
Chapter 9: Developmental Changes and Practices that Facilitate Argumentation: A Brief Review of a Research ProgramChapter 10: Activating Memory: Digital Dialogue with Holographic Holocaust Survivors
Chapter 11: The Argumentative Dimensions of Non-Suicidal Self-Injury (NSSI) in People with Autism-Spectrum
Chapter 12: Where All Arguments are Local: Affective Arguments in Virginia’s Moral Debates about Blackface
Chapter 13: American Patriotism’s Invisible Racial Warrant: Repositioning Colin Kaepernick as a Black Critical Patriot
Chapter 14: Rhetorical Logics of Racist Accusation and Defense
Chapter 15: "The Definition of Racism" – A Critique of Racial Deduction,
Chapter 16: Assemblage Argumentation at the National Memorial for Peace and Justice: Temporary Monumentality and the Localization of Racial (In)Justice
Chapter 17: Disrupting Local Logic: Dress Code Protests and Perelman’s Universal Audience in the Viral Age
Chapter 18: Pleasantries or Putdowns?: Unpacking a Dichotomy in Identity Arguments
Chapter 19: Evolving Deliberative Norms in American Political Debates: A Comparison of the Carter-Reagan Debate in 1980 and the First Obama-Romney Debate in 2012Chapter 20: A Jeremiadic Eulogy: George W. Bush’s Defense of the Forum
Chapter 21: Local Symbols as Grounds for Policy Change in Mass Shooting Eulogies
Chapter 22: Apologia, Argument, and Philosophical Pairs in American Political Discourse
Chapter 23: Reluctant Witness: Christine Blasey Ford Testifies before the Universal Audience During the Kavanaugh HearingsChapter 24: A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Supreme Court: Satirizing Political Ethos and Gendered Pathos in the Clarence Thomas and Brett Kavanaugh Confirmation Hearings
Chapter 25: Reporting from Trump Country: Local Presumption and White Trauma Narratives
Chapter 26: Are Aggressive Argument Strategies in Political Debates Localized Phenomena or Symptoms of Something More Troubling in Contemporary Political Culture?Chapter 27: Local-Chronological Eras of Presidential Debates: Forms, Functions, and Analysis
Chapter 28: Military Heretics: Major Danny Sjursen and Arguments that Challenge Orthodoxy Chapter 29: Surviving R. Kelly: Presenting Testimony as EvidenceChapter 30: The Elision of Definition in the Debate on Born-Alive Abortions
Chapter 31: Locating Utopia in Populism: Considering Progressive Populism, Utopian Rhetoric, and the Populist Argumentative FrameChapter 32: Arguing with Family Members about the 2016 Presidential Election
Chapter 33: (In)civility and the Modern Presidency: Presidential Constructions of a Complex Idea Chapter 34: Anti-Establishment Micropolitics in the Response Closure of Political Campaign Debates Chapter 35: Generating Local Theories of Argument: Romantic Populist Improvisation and Sprezzatura in Donald Trump’s MAGA RalliesIV. Historical United States
Chapter 36: Implicit Theories of Argument in the Lincoln-Douglas Debates
Chapter 37: Locating Argument’s Location: The Stasis of Jurisdiction and the Establishment of the First Meridian of the United States Chapter 38: President Calvin Coolidge’s Local Argumentation: Resolving Questions of Race V. ChinaChapter 39: Local Argument Spheres in China: A Case Study of the Debate Show Qipashuo
Chapter 40: Implying with Analogy and Quoting Authoritative Works: The Argumentation in Yen T’ieh Lun
Chapter 41: Chinese Argumentation in War Rhetoric: A Case Study of Soong Meiling’s Speech at the U.S. Congress on February 18th, 1943
Chapter 42: A Comparative Study of Mediated Public Arguments on Trump’s Trade War in the United States and China
VI. Japan
Chapter 43: Toward Local Theories of Japanese Argumentation: Contexts and Strategies
Chapter 44: Shinzo Abe's Not So Beautiful Lies, or How He Stopped Worrying about Embarrassing Himself in Public
Chapter 45: Proving Sontaku (Surmising of Wishes) at the Japanese National Diet: Attempts to Prove What No One Can Prove
Chapter 46: A Critical Analysis of Meta-Arguments in the National Diet of Japan: The Case of a Debate over Security Legislation in 2015
Chapter 47: How Japan Neglects Workers of Foreign Nationalities: An Analysis of Immigration Control Controversies in the National Diet
Chapter 48: Argumentation in Epideictic Oratory at the Annual State Ritual of March 11 Disaster
VII. Other Parts of the World
Chapter 49: Multiple Temporalities of the Idomeni Camp in Greece
Chapter 50: "Democracy" and Putin’s "Nation:" Pathways for Definitional Argument
VIII. New Media
Chapter 51: Is Cogent Argumentation Possible Through Social Media?
Chapter 52: Digital Infrastructures of Affect and the Future of the Networked Public Sphere
Chapter 53: Locating Judgment in Argument by Algorithm
Chapter 54: New Media and Old Coffee: How Local Styles of Town Hall Meetings Reconfigure a Dialectical Tradition
Chapter 55: Who’s Really the Victim? The "Hashtag Hijacking" of #HimToo as Localized Narrative Argument,
Chapter 56: The Political Mind and Rhetorical Cognition: Arguing Tropes and Fractals on the 4th of July 2019
Chapter 57: Memes as Quasi-Argument: An Insidious Threat to Public Debate
IX. Dinner
Chapter 58: Local Argument Through Presence in Holocaust Cookbooks
Chapter 59: Dissociation, Multimodal Argument, Sean Brock, and the Local
X. Local Places
Chapter 60: Dissociating Means and Ends: Expanding Education Markets and Diminishing Democratic Deliberation
Chapter 61: Modernizing Racism: The Localization of Settler-Colonial Logics in Utah House Bill 93
Chapter 62: The Bensenville Pause: Argumentation, Sound Figuration, and Local Sound Cultures
XI. Pedagogy and the Modern University
Chapter 63: Civic Education through Rhetorical Principles
Chapter 64: Featuring Performance in Intercollegiate Academic Debate Pedagogy and Practice
Chapter 65: Demonstrating Academic Relevance and Rigor: Linking the NCA Learning Outcomes in Communication to Debate Program Assessment through PortfoliosChapter 66: Developing the Whole Director: A Flexible Framework for Professional Development for Intercollegiate Debate
Chapter 67: Assessing Tenure-Track Debate Program Directors: Augmenting Intercollegiate Debate Programs with Service Learning Opportunities in Local University Contexts
Chapter 68: Assessing Argumentation Literacy
XII. Legal Issues
Chapter 69: The Counterside Problem: Blackmun’s Tie-Breaking in Roe v. Wade
Chapter 70: Not Just Twitter: Censorship Threats to Local Communities in Cyberspace
Chapter 71: Originalist Judicial Style: Fake News, Reputation, and Libel LawXIII. Argumentation Theory
Chapter 72: The Received View of Argument and Justification
Chapter 73: Communicative Competence and Local Theories of Argumentation: The Case of Academic Citational Practices
Chapter 74: General and Local Theories of Argument in Late Modernity
Chapter 75: Does the Rhyme Chime? Evaluating the Persuasiveness of a Rhyming Weather Message
Chapter 76: A Temporally Local Theory of Polarizing Argumentative Style
Chapter 77: Large and Small: Motivated Interpretations of Statistical Evidence
Chapter 78: Local Theories of Argument and Immanent Obligations: Inciting an Askesis
Dale Hample is Associate Professor of Communication at the University of Maryland, and Professor Emeritus of Communication at Western Illinois University. He has been a spotlight speaker at argumentation conferences in Canada, Chile, the Netherlands, and the United States. His previous books are Interpersonal Arguing (2018), Arguing: Exchanging Reasons Face to Face (2005), and Readings in Argumentation (1992; co-edited with William and Pamela Benoit). He is a past editor of Argumentation and Advocacy. For the past decade, his research has concentrated on studying orientations toward interpersonal arguing in more than a dozen nations across the world.
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