Zobrazeno 1 - 10
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pro vyhledávání: '"Michelle Ballif"'
Autor:
Michelle Ballif
During the decades of the 1980s and 1990s, historians of rhetoric, composition, and communication vociferously theorized historiographical motivations and methodologies for writing histories in their fields. After this fertile period of rich, contest
This volume explores how women in the fields of rhetoric and composition have succeeded, despite the challenges inherent in the circumstances of their work. Focusing on those women generally viewed as'successful'in rhetoric and composition, this volu
Autor:
Michelle Ballif
Publikováno v:
Responding to the Sacred
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::e427d5d8d17f39268673aff830982fa8
https://doi.org/10.1515/9780271089737-009
https://doi.org/10.1515/9780271089737-009
Autor:
Michelle Ballif
Publikováno v:
Philosophy & Rhetoric. 51:202-206
Autor:
Michelle Ballif
Publikováno v:
Rhetoric Society Quarterly. 48:231-233
Raymond Williams’s Keywords was first born in the form of an appendage to his book manuscript Culture and Society, but—although it showed no signs of rupturing or of sepsis—the publisher snipped th...
Autor:
Michelle Ballif
Publikováno v:
Fifty Years of Rhetoric Society Quarterly ISBN: 9781315108889
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::e2dcba71ec9857aadfbb5019c2b30a0e
https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315108889-7
https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315108889-7
Autor:
Michelle Ballif
Publikováno v:
Philosophy & Rhetoric. 47:455-471
Arguing that the foundational relation that constitutes the (rhetorical) address is that between the living and the dead, this article calls on rhetorical studies to reconceive rhetoric as a (non)visual relation between the “invisible” (specter)
Autor:
Diane Davis, Michelle Ballif
Publikováno v:
Philosophy & Rhetoric. 47:346-353
Autor:
Michelle Ballif
Publikováno v:
Rhetoric Society Quarterly. 44:243-255
This essay argues that traditional historical methods elide the radical singularity of the event by subjecting the event to meaning by way of categorical norms that cannot—by definition—include the radical singularity of “what happened.” Such