This dissertation is a study of political realignment from a rhetorical perspective. Specifically, I use the lens of doxa to rhetorically explore how basic assumptions regarding the role of government shift over time, and how crisis narratives are used to usher in these doxastic transformations. I explore the elections of Franklin Roosevelt, Ronald Reagan, and Barack Obama as markers of such shifts. In chapter one, I provide a statement of purpose and justification for my study, along with a description of the historical contexts of the 1932, 1980, and 2008 presidential elections. Chapter two includes a literature review, in which I discuss scholarship related to political realignment, the rhetorical situation, doxa, and crisis rhetoric. I ...
Purpose/Aim: To study the rhetorical changes in the speeches of Barack Obama from being a presidenti...
The language of politics is a complex issue which includes many strategies of language use to infl...
This thesis addresses the analytical deficiencies of the popular press in describing and elucidating...
This dissertation examines the role of presidential rhetoric in the process of partisan regime creat...
This dissertation research focuses on broad questions of democratic practice and institutional desig...
This thesis will examine the rhetorical style of Barack Obama throughout the 2008 presidential campa...
In this dissertation, I argue that Stephen Skowronek’s theory of political time can be used as analy...
Access to thesis permanently restricted to Ball State community onlyThis thesis examines three case ...
This dissertation research focuses on broad questions of democratic practice and institutional desig...
textThis dissertation analyzes the discourse of Obama’s speeches to argue my thesis that Obama won e...
This essay uses thematic analysis through the lens of framing theory to dissect how former U.S. Pres...
Several political scientists have argued that the presidential recourse to public rhetoric as a mode...
This thesis measures the rhetoric and effect of political campaign discourse. It is a rhetorical ana...
Rhetoric and politics have been interrelated through time. Major political leaders have tried to inf...
This essay explores the 2016 election using 1964 for comparison. The central theme is that 1964 set ...
Purpose/Aim: To study the rhetorical changes in the speeches of Barack Obama from being a presidenti...
The language of politics is a complex issue which includes many strategies of language use to infl...
This thesis addresses the analytical deficiencies of the popular press in describing and elucidating...
This dissertation examines the role of presidential rhetoric in the process of partisan regime creat...
This dissertation research focuses on broad questions of democratic practice and institutional desig...
This thesis will examine the rhetorical style of Barack Obama throughout the 2008 presidential campa...
In this dissertation, I argue that Stephen Skowronek’s theory of political time can be used as analy...
Access to thesis permanently restricted to Ball State community onlyThis thesis examines three case ...
This dissertation research focuses on broad questions of democratic practice and institutional desig...
textThis dissertation analyzes the discourse of Obama’s speeches to argue my thesis that Obama won e...
This essay uses thematic analysis through the lens of framing theory to dissect how former U.S. Pres...
Several political scientists have argued that the presidential recourse to public rhetoric as a mode...
This thesis measures the rhetoric and effect of political campaign discourse. It is a rhetorical ana...
Rhetoric and politics have been interrelated through time. Major political leaders have tried to inf...
This essay explores the 2016 election using 1964 for comparison. The central theme is that 1964 set ...
Purpose/Aim: To study the rhetorical changes in the speeches of Barack Obama from being a presidenti...
The language of politics is a complex issue which includes many strategies of language use to infl...
This thesis addresses the analytical deficiencies of the popular press in describing and elucidating...