The Rhetorics of Feminism: Readings in Contemporary Cultural Theory and the Popular PressIs it possible that changes in rhetorical practice could alter not just how thought is expressed, but also how it is made? Through a close stylistic and rhetorical analysis of contemporary feminist writing - from the cultural theory of Judith Butler to the popular journalism of Naomi Wolf and Germaine Greer - Lynne Pearce demonstrates how feminist thought is created as well as communicated through the frameworks in which it is presented. By linking rhetorical innovation with feminist epistemology in such a direct way, this is a book that will be of immense methodological as well as theoretical interest to readers, providing valuable insight into the often mysterious processes of conception and composition. |
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academic already analysis and/or argue argument audience authors autobiographical bell hooks Berlant body Butler chapter Cixous classical rhetoric concept contemporary feminist Corbett and Connors course Coward cultural theory deployed discourse discussion enthymeme epistemological essay Eve Sedgwick example experience extent fact Female Eunuch feminism feminist writers film first-person focalization gender Germaine Greer Greer Gregory's Girl hooks hypotheses ical ideology images implied inasmuch inductive reasoning innovation interest Jarratt Judith Butler Lakoff and Johnson Lauren Berlant literary means memoir memory metaphor Miller moreover Naomi Wolf narrative narrator narratorial object of utterance particular Pearce personal pronoun personalist criticism Phelan polemic political poststructuralist practice present Probyn produced proposition queer Radstone reader reading Rorty Sedgwick seen sexual skin story story-telling strategic suggest syllogism testimony textual theorists thesis thinking thought thought-production tion Tompkins tradition Veseer vis-à-vis Whole Woman witness Wolf Wolf's women words writing