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Meta G. Carstarphen, [log in to unmask]

Submission: Call for Submissions: Rhetoric, Race and Resentment: Whiteness
and the New Days of Rage

Rhetoric Review: Special 2017 Symposium

Rhetoric, Race and Resentment: Whiteness and the New Days of Rage

Rhetoric Review journal has committed to publishing a special symposium in
2017 entitled “Rhetoric, Race and Resentment: Whiteness and the New Days of
Rage”.  Symposium editors are Meta G. Carstarphen and Kathleen E. Welch,
both from the University of Oklahoma.

While much scholarly inquiry has explored what goes into the construction
of racial pathways of identity, little of that inquiry has considered the
deliberate ways in which rhetoric has been used to foment racial hate and
dissension. These expressions often reveal themselves, not in the grand
occasions of celebrated oratory, but in the familiar expressions
surrounding us.

This special symposium seeks to push harder past our understandings of what
racism is, or how it manifests itself, to explore questions about how
rhetoric has been used, with intentionality and skill, to disrupt a sense
of “order and rightness,” even when these are in direct opposition to a
public discourse that states otherwise.

Yet because the constructions of race and racism are inextricably tied to
structures of power and privilege, it is important that communication
scholars peer deeply, even uncomfortably, into the ways that discursive,
semiotic and symbolic skill is being used to maintain those power
structures at all costs.

The intent of this special issue will be to examine the symbolic use of
images, symbols and texts as part of the rhetorical construction of racial
resentments. And, as the presidential administration of the first African
American U.S. president comes to a close, and the battle for his successor
intensifies, rhetorical scrutiny around shifts of power beg for incisive
examinations too.

Some of the questions this section wants to illuminate are:

-      How can we recognize racist discourse in the public sphere?  What
are the new codes, symbols and representations?

-      What do ancient strategies—including classical schemas from African,
Chinese, Greek and Roman rhetorics—offer to inform us about the craft and
structure of hate speech?

-      What does it mean to be racist and democratic?

-      How have marginalized voices developed and used counter-rhetorics in
response to racial resentments?

-      What does it look like to speak boldly into the public sphere
through media, exhorting philosophies of hate, while simultaneously
championing the right to free speech?

-      How have the contexts of new media contributed enhanced, or
complicated these difficult conversations?

-      How do visual media contribute to interpretations of identity and
social status?

Scholars using critical, cultural and rhetorical approaches who want to be
considered for this special issue are invited to submit a five-page
proposal, with bibliography (MLA) by May 31st, 2016.  Deadline for final
manuscript drafts will be in December 5, 2016.  All submissions will be
peer-reviewed.  Send proposals and inquiries to Meta G. Carstarphen at
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-- 
Know Justice; Know Peace,
Rev. Dr. E-K. Daufin
Professor of Communications
Alabama State University
National Media Size Equity Expert
Winner -- 2000 MaryAnn Yodelis-Smith
  Research Award AEJMC CSW
AEJMC MAC Membership Chair
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