City Places, Country Spaces - Rhetorical Explorations of the Urban/Rural Divide
Verlag | Peter Lang Ltd. International Academic Publishers |
Auflage | 2020 |
Seiten | 306 |
Format | 14,9 x 1,8 x 22,4 cm |
Gewicht | 446 g |
Artikeltyp | Englisches Buch |
Reihe | Frontiers in Political Communication 44 |
EAN | 9781433163906 |
Bestell-Nr | 43316390UA |
This volume explores how rhetoric surrounding the urban and rural binary helps shape our understanding of those regions and the people who reside there.
Klappentext:
Regional differences matter. Even in an increasingly globalized world, rhetorical attention to regionalism yields very different understandings of geographic areas and the people who inhabit them. Regional identities often become most apparent in the differences (real and perceived) between urban and rural areas. Politicians recognize the perceived differences and develop messages based on that knowledge. Media highlight and exacerbate the differences to drive ratings. Cultural markers (from memorials to restaurants and memoirs and beyond) point to the differences and even help to construct those divisions. The places identified as urban and rural even visually demarcate the differences at times. This volume explores how rhetoric surrounding the urban and rural binary helps shape our understanding of those regions and the people who reside there. Chapters from award-winning rhetorical scholars explain the implications of viewing the regions as distinct and divided, exploring h ow they influence our understanding of ourselves and others, politics and race, culture, space and place, and more. Attention to urban and rural spaces is necessary because those spaces both act rhetorically and are also created through rhetoric. In a time when thoughtful attention to regional division has become more critical than ever, this book is required reading to help think through and successfully engage the urban/rural divide.
Inhaltsverzeichnis:
Illustrations - Acknowledgments - Introduction - Wendy Atkins-Sayre/Ashli Quesinberry Stokes: The Rhetorical Construction of Urban and Rural America - Part I Politics - Brandon Inabinet: A More Purple Union: Visual Legacies of the 2004 DNC Keynote - Jennifer A. Jackson/Leland G. Spencer: Remembering Rural Rankin: Feminism, Pacifism, and Rurality in Jeannette Rankin's Identity - Laura Alberti/L. Paul Strait: Inventing Suburbia: Spatialized Constitutive Rhetoric in Richard Nixon's Suburban Strategy - Owen Sayre/Wendy Atkins-Sayre: The NRA, Hunting, and "Facing" the Rural - Part II Culture - Christina L. Moss: Reclaiming the Rural South: Queen Sugar and African-American Regional Identity - Ashli Quesinberry Stokes: Upscale, Down South: Urban Southern Restaurants and the Rhetorical Limits of Rurality - Daniel A. Grano: Southern Identity on the Fly: Carnivalesque Advocacy in Southern Fly Fishing - Part III Place - Faber McAlister: Meditations on Midwestern Identity: Rethinking Crit ical Regionalism Through Maharishi Vedic City's Modes of Belonging Joan - Harry Archer: Traveling the 'A-Line': A Rhetorical Journey from the City - Christopher Eisenhart: Reunion, Colorado: One City's Brand-New, Old, Rural Hometown - Joshua L. Guitar: The Visual Rhetoric of White Abandonment - Contributors - Index.