Rhetorica Reclaimed, Andrea Lunsford, editor (1995) Aimed to disrupt the “seamless narrative” of the rhetorical tradition and create space for other rhetorics, Rhetorica Reclaimed offers a series of… more →
thoughtjamwrote 1 week ago: Overall, this is a promising research proposal. I think your proposed topic is very plausible, and … more →
wrote 7 months ago: Monberg, Terese Guinsatao. “Listening for Legacies, or How I Began to Hear Dorothy Laigo Cordova, th … more →
wrote 8 months ago: This essay by Professor Helen Irving has more to do with law and women’s rights, but it bears … more →
wrote 12 months ago: Rhetorica Reclaimed, Andrea Lunsford, editor (1995) Aimed to disrupt the “seamless narrative” of t … more →
wrote 12 months ago: In this important text, Cherly Glenn studies the ways in which women from antiquity through the Rena … more →
wrote 12 months ago: Man Cannot Speak for Her Karlyn Kohrs Campbell In this seminal text in feminist historiography, C … more →
wrote 12 months ago: Methodologies: “uses trends and practices in rhetorical criticism, discourse analysis, ethnograph … more →
wrote 12 months ago: In a radical genre she calls autohistoria, which offers an innovative way to write history, Gloria A … more →
wrote 2 years ago: In this article, Mattingly identifies weaknesses of early recovery efforts, which because of our own … more →
wrote 2 years ago: A fan of primary research, Sutherland identifies common practices of feminist rhetorical history suc … more →
wrote 2 years ago: In this article, Bizzell identifies three approaches to feminist research in rhetoric: resistant rea … more →
wrote 2 years ago: As evident in the Winter 2002 edition of Rhetoric Society Quarterly, feminist historiography in rhet … more →