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Rhetorical Reception
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Description
Rhetorical Reception also considers silence as a form of reception, exploring why some potential commentators, including African American women and working-class white women, left almost no record of their reception of Sex in Education, despite the fact that its call for limits on women's hours at school and work would have affected their education and livelihoods. Rhetorical Reception argues that reception is an important discursive phenomenon, one that illuminates how rhetoric contributes to social change not primarily through powerful acts of rhetorical production but through the receptive acts of audiences articulating their acceptance, rejection, or transformation of arguments and perspectives.About the Author¿¿Carolyn Skinner is Associate Professor of English at The Ohio State University at Newark. She has taught courses on histories of rhetoric, women's rhetoric, health and medical rhetoric, and technical writing. Her research examines the development of professional and scientific rhetoric in the nineteenth-century United States, especially medical rhetoric written by or about women; historical women's rhetorical theory; and rhetorical reception. Skinner's work has appeared in College English, Advances in the History of Rhetoric, Technical Communication Quarterly, Rhetoric Society Quarterly, and Rhetoric Review. Her earlier book, Women Physicians & Professional Ethos in Nineteenth-Century America (Southern Illinois University Press), examines the rhetorical practices of early women medical professionals.
Product details
Binding:
Paperback
Number of Pages:
254
Release Date:
2025-06-18
Publication Date:
2025-06-18
Publisher:
Parlor Press
Languages:
Original:
English
ISBN10:
1643175297
ISBN13:
9781643175294
Weight:
418 g
Height:
152 cm
Width:
229 cm
Thickness:
15 cm
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