Rhetorical Citizenship and Public Deliberation
In: Rhetoric and Democratic Deliberation 3
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Introduction: citizenship as a rhetorical practice -- Section I: Tracing rhetorical citizenship as concept and practice -- 1 Deliberative Democracy: Mapping Out the Deliberative Turn in Democratic Theory -- 2 The Making of Truth in Debate: The Case of (and a Case for) the Early Sophists -- 3 The Search for "Real" Democracy: Rhetorical Citizenship and Public Deliberation in France and the United States, 1870–1940 -- Section II: Public deliberation as rhetorical practice -- Introduction -- Part 1 Considering Norms of Communicative Behavior -- 4 The Respect Fallacy: Limits of Respect in Public Dialogue -- 5 Dialectical Citizenship? Some Thoughts on the Role of Pragmatics in the Analysis of Public Debate -- 6 Provocative Style: The Gaarder Debate Example -- 7 Virtual Deliberations: Talking Politics Online in Hungary -- Part 2 Critiques of "Elite" Discourse -- 8 Dis-playing Democracy: The Rhetoric of Duplicity -- 9 Rhetoric of War, Rhetoric of Gender -- 10 Speaking of Terror: Norms of Rhetorical Citizenship in Danish Public Discourse -- 11 "This May Be the Law, but Should It Be?": Tony Blair's Rhetoric of Exception -- Part 3 Rhetorical Citizenship Across Communicative Settings -- 12 I Agree, but . . . : Finding Alternatives to Controversial Projects Through Public Deliberation -- 13 Deliberation as Behavior in Public -- 14 Homing in on the Arguments: The Rhetorical Construction of Subject Positions in Debates on the Danish Real Estate Market -- 15 Danish Revue: Satire as Rhetorical Citizenship -- Section III: Toward better deliberative practices -- 16 Presidential Primary Debate as a Genre of Journalistic Discourse: How Can We Put Debate into the Debates? -- 17 A Tool for Rhetorical Citizenship: Generalizing the Status System -- 18 Interpretive Debates Revisited -- About the Contributors -- Index