This revised and updated edition remains the only book-length
rhetorical analysis of national political debates from 1960 to the
present. The contributors, all rhetorical critics, answer important
questions about political debating in the United States, including:
Why is the press involved in political debates? Why are debates
likely to be an enduring part of our presidential campaigns? Why
are some candidates successful as debaters while others are not?
Chapter authors offer insight into the goals commonly shared by
political debaters and the rhetorical strategies most frequently
used by national political debaters. By providing an overall
analysis of a variety of debate practices, this book demonstrates
how debates have become more than just campaign spectacles, but
rather complex, calculated political events with significant
consequences. Predebate, debate, and postdebate strategies are
considered in depth in these microanalyses. Scholars and students
of speech communication, particularly those concerned with
political communication, will find this volume noteworthy, as will
those in the related disciplines of political science, history, and
journalism.
General
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