Works matching IS 23923113 AND DT 2020 AND VI 7 AND IP 4
Results: 11
The Speaker. The Tradition and Practice of Public Speaking.
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- Res Rhetorica, 2020, v. 7, n. 4, p. 168
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On covert and overt sayers: A pragmatic-cognitive study into Barack Obama's presidential rhetoric of image construction and (de)legitimisation.
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- Res Rhetorica, 2020, v. 7, n. 4, p. 146, doi. 10.29107/rr2020.4.10
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- Article
Construction of Whiteness and Blackness in Herman Melville's Benito Cereno.
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- Res Rhetorica, 2020, v. 7, n. 4, p. 128, doi. 10.29107/rr2020.4.9
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Charles Reznikoff and the Rhetoric of Witnessing through Silence.
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- Res Rhetorica, 2020, v. 7, n. 4, p. 113, doi. 10.29107/rr2020.4.8
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It is More than a Bunch of Numbers: Trauma, Voicing and Identity in Jennifer Chow's The 228 Legacy.
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- Res Rhetorica, 2020, v. 7, n. 4, p. 97, doi. 10.29107/rr2020.4.7
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Slavery through a Rhetorical Lens: The Book of Negroes by Lawrence Hill as the Female Neo-slave Narrative.
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- Res Rhetorica, 2020, v. 7, n. 4, p. 79, doi. 10.29107/rr2020.4.6
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What Is (Not) Told: Memory and the Rhetoric of Silence in Domnica Radulescu's Country of Red Azaleas as an American Émigré Novel.
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- Res Rhetorica, 2020, v. 7, n. 4, p. 66, doi. 10.29107/rr2020.4.5
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The Rhetoric of Silence in Contemporary Autopathography: Susan Gubar and Eve Ensler on Gynecological Cancer.
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- Res Rhetorica, 2020, v. 7, n. 4, p. 48, doi. 10.29107/rr2020.4.4
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Silence, Sound, and Affect.
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- Res Rhetorica, 2020, v. 7, n. 4, p. 32, doi. 10.29107/rr2020.4.3
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Silencing Speech: New American Free Speech Debates.
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- Res Rhetorica, 2020, v. 7, n. 4, p. 16, doi. 10.29107/rr2020.4.2
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Literary means of expressing trauma: silence and darkness in Dara Horn's novel The World to Come.
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- Res Rhetorica, 2020, v. 7, n. 4, p. 1, doi. 10.29107/rr2020.4.1
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- Article