Description

Book Synopsis
Features cutting-edge research on a range of traditions and practices, challenging the field’s emphasis on Western, Hellenistic, and Christian rhetorics and ideologies.

Trade Review

“Exceptional, even necessary, reading—not only as a starting place for those interested in broadening discussions of rhetoric and religion but for those seeking to challenge their own thinking about the coherence of the ‘rhetorical tradition.’”—Roger Thompson, author of Emerson and the History of Rhetoric

Rhetoric and Religion in the Twenty-First Century: Pluralism in a Postsecular Age confirms the centrality of religious rhetorics to our discipline and to our nation's civic health. The book's exceptionally argued chapters and compelling interludes masterfully engage Indigenous, Jewish, Arab-Islamic, and Buddhist perspectives and think intersectionally about religion's connection to race, culture, gender, and sexuality. This collection is a must read for teachers and students of rhetoric who must see critical engagements with religion as key concerns for pluralism.”—Jessica Enoch, author of Domestic Occupations: Spatial Rhetorics and Women’s Work

“This excellent collection is an inclusive, pluralistic example of the next stage in rhetoric’s contribution to the religious turn in the human sciences. The essays provide valuable general accounts of current approaches to reconceiving the interdisciplinary study of traditional religious rhetorics. Also included are chapter interludes with engaging narratives of how authors entered the field.”—Steven Mailloux, author of Rhetoric's Pragmatism: Essays in Rhetorical Hermeneutics

“With Rhetoric and Religion in the Twenty-First Century: Pluralism in a Postsecular Age, DePalma, Lynch, Ringer, and their contributors continue a set of important conversations—not only about the role of religion in rhetoric, but also about the hybridity of rhetorical tradition(s) writ large. Deliberately building on previous work about rhetoric and religion and by challenging monolithic perspectives, the volume's essays and unique commentary interludes will encourage, if not demand, other useful scholarship to benefit the field of rhetoric and composition.”—Deborah H. Holdstein, author of Lost Texts in Rhetoric and Composition and coauthor of Judaic Perspectives in Rhetoric and Composition

“At this contentious cultural moment, when religious identity is used to draw political boundaries and encourage factionalism, the diverse and illuminating contributions to this volume complicate flattened conceptions of religion in the US and call for renewed appreciation of scholarship rooted in faith. This compelling collection dismisses acts of token tolerance and instead embraces rhetorical contemplation, interanimation, and resonance in the search for religious plurality. Readers come away both critical of shortsighted academic condescension aimed at religion and equipped to incorporate religious rhetoric into classroom discussions—a remarkable achievement.”—LynÉe Lewis Gaillet, coeditor of Remembering Women Differently: Refiguring Rhetorical Work

“The coeditors of Rhetoric and Religion in the Twenty-First Century: Pluralism in a Postsecular Age offer a kaleidoscope of insight into the persuasive and rhetorical impact of differing religious traditions, announcing for the reader the good, the bad, and the problematic inherent within the rhetorical power of religious influence. I recommend this work as a touchstone for conversation about a perennial topic of unification and dispute, religion.”—Ronald Arnett, author of Communication Ethics and Tenacious Hope: Contemporary Implications of the Scottish Enlightenment



Table of Contents
  • CONTENTS
  • Acknowledgments
  • Foreword: Martin Camper
  • Introduction: Michael-John DePalma, Paul Lynch, and Jeff Ringer
  • Section 1: Interrogating Rhetorics
  • 1.“To Do Things in a Good (Decolonial) Way: Putting Indigenous Rhetorics and Rhetorics of Religion in Conversation,” by Lisa King
  • Interlude: Patricia Bizzell
  • 2.“Feminist Rhetorical Historiography and Religion,” by Lisa Zimmerelli
  • Interlude: Beth Daniell
  • 3.“‘Joy Anyway!’ Narratives of Harm and Flourishing at the Intersections of Religious and LGBTQ+ Rhetorics,” by TJ Geiger, III
  • Interlude: Beverly Moss
  • 4.“We Are Not Born for Ourselves Alone: Jesuit Rhetoric for the Twenty-First Century,” by John Brereton and Cinthia Gannett
  • Interlude: Laurent Pernot
  • Section 2: Inventing Rhetorics
  • 5.“Creating Pathways for Ethical (Inter)Actions: New Directions for Jewish Rhetorics,” by Janice W. Fernheimer
  • Interlude: Patricia Roberts-Miller
  • 6.“Rhetoric and Buddhism Unchained,” by Kurt Spellmeyer
  • Interlude: Elizabeth Vander Lei
  • 7.“Engaging with Arab-Islamic Religious Rhetorics: Why It Matters to Rhetorical Studies,” by Rasha Diab
  • Interlude: Robert Yagelski
  • 8.“Race at the Intersection of Rhetoric and Religion,” by Andre E. Johnson
  • Afterword: Jonathan Alexander
  • Contributors
  • Index

Rhetoric and Religion in the TwentyFirst Century

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    A Paperback by Michael–john Depalma, Paul Lynch, Jeff Ringer

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      Publisher: MP-SIL Southern Illinois Uni
      Publication Date: 11/30/2023 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780809339167, 978-0809339167
      ISBN10: 0809339161

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Features cutting-edge research on a range of traditions and practices, challenging the field’s emphasis on Western, Hellenistic, and Christian rhetorics and ideologies.

      Trade Review

      “Exceptional, even necessary, reading—not only as a starting place for those interested in broadening discussions of rhetoric and religion but for those seeking to challenge their own thinking about the coherence of the ‘rhetorical tradition.’”—Roger Thompson, author of Emerson and the History of Rhetoric

      Rhetoric and Religion in the Twenty-First Century: Pluralism in a Postsecular Age confirms the centrality of religious rhetorics to our discipline and to our nation's civic health. The book's exceptionally argued chapters and compelling interludes masterfully engage Indigenous, Jewish, Arab-Islamic, and Buddhist perspectives and think intersectionally about religion's connection to race, culture, gender, and sexuality. This collection is a must read for teachers and students of rhetoric who must see critical engagements with religion as key concerns for pluralism.”—Jessica Enoch, author of Domestic Occupations: Spatial Rhetorics and Women’s Work

      “This excellent collection is an inclusive, pluralistic example of the next stage in rhetoric’s contribution to the religious turn in the human sciences. The essays provide valuable general accounts of current approaches to reconceiving the interdisciplinary study of traditional religious rhetorics. Also included are chapter interludes with engaging narratives of how authors entered the field.”—Steven Mailloux, author of Rhetoric's Pragmatism: Essays in Rhetorical Hermeneutics

      “With Rhetoric and Religion in the Twenty-First Century: Pluralism in a Postsecular Age, DePalma, Lynch, Ringer, and their contributors continue a set of important conversations—not only about the role of religion in rhetoric, but also about the hybridity of rhetorical tradition(s) writ large. Deliberately building on previous work about rhetoric and religion and by challenging monolithic perspectives, the volume's essays and unique commentary interludes will encourage, if not demand, other useful scholarship to benefit the field of rhetoric and composition.”—Deborah H. Holdstein, author of Lost Texts in Rhetoric and Composition and coauthor of Judaic Perspectives in Rhetoric and Composition

      “At this contentious cultural moment, when religious identity is used to draw political boundaries and encourage factionalism, the diverse and illuminating contributions to this volume complicate flattened conceptions of religion in the US and call for renewed appreciation of scholarship rooted in faith. This compelling collection dismisses acts of token tolerance and instead embraces rhetorical contemplation, interanimation, and resonance in the search for religious plurality. Readers come away both critical of shortsighted academic condescension aimed at religion and equipped to incorporate religious rhetoric into classroom discussions—a remarkable achievement.”—LynÉe Lewis Gaillet, coeditor of Remembering Women Differently: Refiguring Rhetorical Work

      “The coeditors of Rhetoric and Religion in the Twenty-First Century: Pluralism in a Postsecular Age offer a kaleidoscope of insight into the persuasive and rhetorical impact of differing religious traditions, announcing for the reader the good, the bad, and the problematic inherent within the rhetorical power of religious influence. I recommend this work as a touchstone for conversation about a perennial topic of unification and dispute, religion.”—Ronald Arnett, author of Communication Ethics and Tenacious Hope: Contemporary Implications of the Scottish Enlightenment



      Table of Contents
      • CONTENTS
      • Acknowledgments
      • Foreword: Martin Camper
      • Introduction: Michael-John DePalma, Paul Lynch, and Jeff Ringer
      • Section 1: Interrogating Rhetorics
      • 1.“To Do Things in a Good (Decolonial) Way: Putting Indigenous Rhetorics and Rhetorics of Religion in Conversation,” by Lisa King
      • Interlude: Patricia Bizzell
      • 2.“Feminist Rhetorical Historiography and Religion,” by Lisa Zimmerelli
      • Interlude: Beth Daniell
      • 3.“‘Joy Anyway!’ Narratives of Harm and Flourishing at the Intersections of Religious and LGBTQ+ Rhetorics,” by TJ Geiger, III
      • Interlude: Beverly Moss
      • 4.“We Are Not Born for Ourselves Alone: Jesuit Rhetoric for the Twenty-First Century,” by John Brereton and Cinthia Gannett
      • Interlude: Laurent Pernot
      • Section 2: Inventing Rhetorics
      • 5.“Creating Pathways for Ethical (Inter)Actions: New Directions for Jewish Rhetorics,” by Janice W. Fernheimer
      • Interlude: Patricia Roberts-Miller
      • 6.“Rhetoric and Buddhism Unchained,” by Kurt Spellmeyer
      • Interlude: Elizabeth Vander Lei
      • 7.“Engaging with Arab-Islamic Religious Rhetorics: Why It Matters to Rhetorical Studies,” by Rasha Diab
      • Interlude: Robert Yagelski
      • 8.“Race at the Intersection of Rhetoric and Religion,” by Andre E. Johnson
      • Afterword: Jonathan Alexander
      • Contributors
      • Index

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