In this third volume of Greenwood's "Great American Orators" series, Logue delineates the oratory career of Eugene Talmadge whose public speaking illustrates the use--and some would say the abuse--of a most necessary democratic institution: free speech in the political arena. Logue notes in Talmadge's speeches the seeds of today's public discourse, preoccupied as it often is with distorting issues and conduct. Talmadge based his political rise in Georgia on appeals to the experiences, values, and prejudices of his listeners; perceptions that were geographic, social, and racial. For...
In this third volume of Greenwood's "Great American Orators" series, Logue delineates the oratory career of Eugene Talmadge whose public speaking i...