John F. Kennedy began his political communication in the
neighborhoods of the Eleventh Congressional District of
Massachusetts, using informal more than formal speaking as he
learned to speak and began his career as a political leader. For 18
years he practiced the art of communication that is so intrinsic to
the art of politics--speeches, small group deliberation, stump
speaking in campaigns, radio and television press conferences,
debates, and interviews.
Silvestri describes the political and social contexts that
shaped Kennedy's earliest efforts as a communicator and politician
until his death in 1963. His first campaign became the blueprint
for his future political contests; his warnings as Congressman and
Senator about Vietnam and Algeria proved prophetic. Kennedy's
greatest communication tests involved his persuasion of the public
that a Roman Catholic had the right to run for President, his
memorable Inaugural Address to a world deadlocked in nuclear
stockpiling, his deliberation in the Cuban Missile crisis, his
eloquent reasoning for peaceful measures and conciliatory attitudes
through his address at American University, his advocacy of civil
rights, and his televised presidency--historical firsts for a
charismatic American leader of the nuclear half of the 20th
century. Scholars, students, and other researchers as well as lay
readers will find this study of JKF, political communication, and
recent American history fascinating and instructive.
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