Description

Book Synopsis

A collection of essays examining citizenship as a discursive phenomenon, in the sense that important civic functions take place in deliberation among citizens and that discourse is not prefatory to real action but in many ways constitutive of civic engagement.



Trade Review

“Anyone who has been reading in rhetoric and democracy and has an interest in ways of pushing the deliberative democracy model forward will agree that this volume enters that conversation, addresses key issues, and offers fresh insights and approaches that warrant further work of this kind.”

—Robert L. Ivie,Indiana University


“At the start of his presidential campaign in February 2007, Barack Obama issued a call for people to reclaim the meaning of citizenship. This timely volume of international collaboration, with its insights drawn from a range of disciplines, is a valuable contribution to such a recovery and the reflections involved. Carefully edited and introduced by Christian Kock and Lisa S. Villadsen, the book brings to life the ‘rhetorical citizen’ as an active deliberator fully engaged in public affairs. Its theoretical insights and practical cases, along with the gathering of perspectives from areas not often brought to a common focus in this way, recommend it to any serious student of deliberative democracy and to all who might appreciate the powerful role that constructive rhetoric can play in the building of informed societies.”

—Christopher Tindale,Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Centre for Research in Reasoning, University of Windsor


“Ranging widely and effectively in time, space, cases, and theory, Rhetorical Citizenship and Public Deliberation shows how and why rhetoric must be central to the practice of politics and citizenship in contemporary democracies. An impressive and strikingly original set of contributions sheds new light on the possibilities for public deliberation.”

—John Dryzek,Australian National University


“This book brings new arguments into an already lively scholarly conversation about public deliberation. The editors and authors bring to the forefront important rhetorical perspectives that previous work on deliberation has overlooked.”

—John Gastil,Pennsylvania State University


Rhetorical Citizenship and Public Deliberation is a comprehensive and provocative assessment of the rhetorical nature of citizenship. Drawing together an impressive group of scholars from various disciplines and countries, Christian Kock and Lisa Villadsen have crafted a volume that is essential reading for scholars interested in the conversations surrounding agency, citizenship, and the prospects for a democratic society.”

—Kendall R. Phillips,Syracuse University



Table of Contents

Contents

Introduction: Citizenship as a Rhetorical Practice

Christian Kock and Lisa S. Villadsen

Section I Tracing Rhetorical Citizenship as Concept and Practice

1 Deliberative Democracy: Mapping Out the Deliberative Turn in Democratic Theory

Kasper Møller Hansen

2 The Making of Truth in Debate: The Case of (and a Case for) the Early Sophists

Manfred Kraus

3 The Search for “Real” Democracy: Rhetorical Citizenship and Public Deliberation in France and the United States, 1870–1940

William Keith and Paula Cossart

Section II Public Deliberation as Rhetorical Practice

Part 1 Considering Norms of Communicative Behavior

4 The Respect Fallacy: Limits of Respect in Public Dialogue

Italo Testa

5 Dialectical Citizenship? Some Thoughts on the Role of Pragmatics in the Analysis of Public Debate

Niels Møller Nielsen

6 Provocative Style: The Gaarder Debate Example

Marie Lund Klujeff

7 Virtual Deliberations: Talking Politics Online in Hungary

Ildikó Kaposi

Part 2 Critiques of “Elite” Discourse

8 Dis-playing Democracy: The Rhetoric of Duplicity

Kristian Wedberg

9 Rhetoric of War, Rhetoric of Gender

Berit von der Lippe

10 Speaking of Terror: Norms of Rhetorical Citizenship in Danish Public Discourse

Lisa S. Villadsen

11 “This May Be the Law, but Should It Be?” Tony Blair’s Rhetoric of Exception

Bart van Klink and Oliver W. Lembcke

Part 3 Rhetorical Citizenship Across Communicative Settings

12 I Agree, but . . . : Finding Alternatives to Controversial Projects Through Public Deliberation

James McDonald

13 Deliberation as Behavior in Public

Tatiana Tatarchevskiy

14 Homing in on the Arguments: The Rhetorical Construction of Subject Positions in Debates on the Danish Real Estate Market

Sine Nørholm Just and Jonas Gabrielsen

15 Danish Revue: Satire as Rhetorical Citizenship

Jette Barnholdt Hansen

Section III Toward Better Deliberative Practices

16 Presidential Primary Debate as a Genre of Journalistic Discourse: How Can We Put Debate into the Debates?

John Adams and Stephen West

17 A Tool for Rhetorical Citizenship: Generalizing the Status System

Christian Kock

18 Potential and Problems of Deliberative Debate: Interpretive Debates Revisited

Georgia Warnke

About the Contributors

Index

Rhetorical Citizenship and Public Deliberation

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    A Hardback by Christian Kock, Lisa Villadsen

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      View other formats and editions of Rhetorical Citizenship and Public Deliberation by Christian Kock

      Publisher: Penn State University
      Publication Date: 9/4/2012 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780271053875, 978-0271053875
      ISBN10: 0271053879

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      A collection of essays examining citizenship as a discursive phenomenon, in the sense that important civic functions take place in deliberation among citizens and that discourse is not prefatory to real action but in many ways constitutive of civic engagement.



      Trade Review

      “Anyone who has been reading in rhetoric and democracy and has an interest in ways of pushing the deliberative democracy model forward will agree that this volume enters that conversation, addresses key issues, and offers fresh insights and approaches that warrant further work of this kind.”

      —Robert L. Ivie,Indiana University


      “At the start of his presidential campaign in February 2007, Barack Obama issued a call for people to reclaim the meaning of citizenship. This timely volume of international collaboration, with its insights drawn from a range of disciplines, is a valuable contribution to such a recovery and the reflections involved. Carefully edited and introduced by Christian Kock and Lisa S. Villadsen, the book brings to life the ‘rhetorical citizen’ as an active deliberator fully engaged in public affairs. Its theoretical insights and practical cases, along with the gathering of perspectives from areas not often brought to a common focus in this way, recommend it to any serious student of deliberative democracy and to all who might appreciate the powerful role that constructive rhetoric can play in the building of informed societies.”

      —Christopher Tindale,Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Centre for Research in Reasoning, University of Windsor


      “Ranging widely and effectively in time, space, cases, and theory, Rhetorical Citizenship and Public Deliberation shows how and why rhetoric must be central to the practice of politics and citizenship in contemporary democracies. An impressive and strikingly original set of contributions sheds new light on the possibilities for public deliberation.”

      —John Dryzek,Australian National University


      “This book brings new arguments into an already lively scholarly conversation about public deliberation. The editors and authors bring to the forefront important rhetorical perspectives that previous work on deliberation has overlooked.”

      —John Gastil,Pennsylvania State University


      Rhetorical Citizenship and Public Deliberation is a comprehensive and provocative assessment of the rhetorical nature of citizenship. Drawing together an impressive group of scholars from various disciplines and countries, Christian Kock and Lisa Villadsen have crafted a volume that is essential reading for scholars interested in the conversations surrounding agency, citizenship, and the prospects for a democratic society.”

      —Kendall R. Phillips,Syracuse University



      Table of Contents

      Contents

      Introduction: Citizenship as a Rhetorical Practice

      Christian Kock and Lisa S. Villadsen

      Section I Tracing Rhetorical Citizenship as Concept and Practice

      1 Deliberative Democracy: Mapping Out the Deliberative Turn in Democratic Theory

      Kasper Møller Hansen

      2 The Making of Truth in Debate: The Case of (and a Case for) the Early Sophists

      Manfred Kraus

      3 The Search for “Real” Democracy: Rhetorical Citizenship and Public Deliberation in France and the United States, 1870–1940

      William Keith and Paula Cossart

      Section II Public Deliberation as Rhetorical Practice

      Part 1 Considering Norms of Communicative Behavior

      4 The Respect Fallacy: Limits of Respect in Public Dialogue

      Italo Testa

      5 Dialectical Citizenship? Some Thoughts on the Role of Pragmatics in the Analysis of Public Debate

      Niels Møller Nielsen

      6 Provocative Style: The Gaarder Debate Example

      Marie Lund Klujeff

      7 Virtual Deliberations: Talking Politics Online in Hungary

      Ildikó Kaposi

      Part 2 Critiques of “Elite” Discourse

      8 Dis-playing Democracy: The Rhetoric of Duplicity

      Kristian Wedberg

      9 Rhetoric of War, Rhetoric of Gender

      Berit von der Lippe

      10 Speaking of Terror: Norms of Rhetorical Citizenship in Danish Public Discourse

      Lisa S. Villadsen

      11 “This May Be the Law, but Should It Be?” Tony Blair’s Rhetoric of Exception

      Bart van Klink and Oliver W. Lembcke

      Part 3 Rhetorical Citizenship Across Communicative Settings

      12 I Agree, but . . . : Finding Alternatives to Controversial Projects Through Public Deliberation

      James McDonald

      13 Deliberation as Behavior in Public

      Tatiana Tatarchevskiy

      14 Homing in on the Arguments: The Rhetorical Construction of Subject Positions in Debates on the Danish Real Estate Market

      Sine Nørholm Just and Jonas Gabrielsen

      15 Danish Revue: Satire as Rhetorical Citizenship

      Jette Barnholdt Hansen

      Section III Toward Better Deliberative Practices

      16 Presidential Primary Debate as a Genre of Journalistic Discourse: How Can We Put Debate into the Debates?

      John Adams and Stephen West

      17 A Tool for Rhetorical Citizenship: Generalizing the Status System

      Christian Kock

      18 Potential and Problems of Deliberative Debate: Interpretive Debates Revisited

      Georgia Warnke

      About the Contributors

      Index

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