This essay argues that President John F. Kennedy\u27s civil rights discourse evidences an important evolutionary pattern marking a transition from legal argument to moral argument, and highlights two speeches as exemplars of this change. Three rhetorical constraints are identified which help account for and explain this shift in the president\u27s public rhetoric. Finally, we offer implications of this essay for the study of contemporary presidential discourse during times of domestic crisis
Kennedy\u27s rhetoric on Vietnam serves as an exemplar of how presidents balance idealistic argument...
In this essay the public discourses of U.S. president Barack Obama and former U.S. president George ...
The Civil Rights Act of 1968 was the result of a complex convergence of presidential public persuasi...
On the eleventh of June, 1963, the 35th President of the United States, John F. Kennedy, gave his Ci...
Jeffery K. Tulis authored a book entitled The Rhetorical Presidency, in which he argues the role of ...
This first book-length critical analysis of Kennedy\u27s public address defines how he aroused Ameri...
This essay explores the rhetorical complexity of Martin Luther King\u27s dual role as political and ...
Ethical appeal in the international crisis speeches of President Kennedy related to the development ...
Political language is marked with the feature of persuasiveness and is starkly different from the o...
John F. Kennedy maintains a reputation in American memory with respect to civil rights that he does ...
The study examined how John F. Kennedy made use of the epideictic or ceremonial nature of his June 1...
Robert Kennedy\u27s announcement of the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., in an Indianapolis...
This is a study of Robert F. Kennedy"s ethical appeals in 1968 presidential campaign addresses. The ...
Producing rhetoric in the form of speeches is one of the major functions of the modern American pres...
Several political scientists have argued that the presidential recourse to public rhetoric as a mode...
Kennedy\u27s rhetoric on Vietnam serves as an exemplar of how presidents balance idealistic argument...
In this essay the public discourses of U.S. president Barack Obama and former U.S. president George ...
The Civil Rights Act of 1968 was the result of a complex convergence of presidential public persuasi...
On the eleventh of June, 1963, the 35th President of the United States, John F. Kennedy, gave his Ci...
Jeffery K. Tulis authored a book entitled The Rhetorical Presidency, in which he argues the role of ...
This first book-length critical analysis of Kennedy\u27s public address defines how he aroused Ameri...
This essay explores the rhetorical complexity of Martin Luther King\u27s dual role as political and ...
Ethical appeal in the international crisis speeches of President Kennedy related to the development ...
Political language is marked with the feature of persuasiveness and is starkly different from the o...
John F. Kennedy maintains a reputation in American memory with respect to civil rights that he does ...
The study examined how John F. Kennedy made use of the epideictic or ceremonial nature of his June 1...
Robert Kennedy\u27s announcement of the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., in an Indianapolis...
This is a study of Robert F. Kennedy"s ethical appeals in 1968 presidential campaign addresses. The ...
Producing rhetoric in the form of speeches is one of the major functions of the modern American pres...
Several political scientists have argued that the presidential recourse to public rhetoric as a mode...
Kennedy\u27s rhetoric on Vietnam serves as an exemplar of how presidents balance idealistic argument...
In this essay the public discourses of U.S. president Barack Obama and former U.S. president George ...
The Civil Rights Act of 1968 was the result of a complex convergence of presidential public persuasi...