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Michelle Obama: First Lady, American Rhetor is an edited anthology
that explores the persona and speech-making of the country's first
African American first lady. The result of these thought-provoking
essays is an interdisciplinary text that explores the First Lady
from a rhetorical and cultural point of view. Authors analyze her
Democratic National Convention speeches, her brand as First Lady,
her communication from her latest trip to Africa, her agenda
rhetoric in Let's Move! and Reach Higher, and her coming out as a
Black feminist intellectual when she spoke at Maya Angelou's
memorial service. Readers will recognize Michelle Obama as a rhetor
of our times-a woman who influences America at the intersections of
gender, race, and class and who is representative of what women are
today.
Michelle Obama: First Lady, American Rhetor is an edited anthology
that explores the persona and speech-making of the country's first
African American first lady. The result of these thought-provoking
essays is an interdisciplinary text that explores the First Lady
from a rhetorical and cultural point of view. Authors analyze her
Democratic National Convention speeches, her brand as First Lady,
her communication from her latest trip to Africa, her agenda
rhetoric in Let's Move! and Reach Higher, and her coming out as a
Black feminist intellectual when she spoke at Maya Angelou's
memorial service. Readers will recognize Michelle Obama as a rhetor
of our times-a woman who influences America at the intersections of
gender, race, and class and who is representative of what women are
today.
If, fundamentally, education is about change and transformation,
this is all the more true where teaching and learning about
diversity is concerned. Yet teachers rarely know what influence
their instruction has had on the lives of their students. Given the
social importance of this enterprise, there is a compelling need to
evaluate diversity education and student outcomes. This edited
volume provides insights into the teaching and learning experiences
of diversity educators and their students. College-level teachers
from such disciplines as biology, social work, sex education,
communication, political science, English literature, and
criminology share their general philosophy of teaching and how
teaching diversity offers insights and challenges in the classroom.
This book uniquely integrates revealing letters from former
students within each teacher's chapter. These letters offer
observations and reflections upon key lessons learned or ideas that
were challenged in the teacher's classroom and how these lessons
are connected to or disconnected from their professional and/or
personal lives. We also see how the teachers in turn have modified
their practice in the light of their students' feedback. The
editors revisit the chapters to find the emergent Best Practices as
take-aways for the reader. This book will be useful to college
teachers who currently teach courses with a diversity-focused
content, and to instructors who plan to incorporate diversity
content within an existing course. Directors of teaching and
learning centers, coordinators of doctoral programs, and TA centers
will also find helpful information and insights about pedagogy,
process, and learning outcomes.
Race relations remain an important and salient issue, particularly
in such diverse societies as the United States. With all the
benefits of life in a multi-cultural setting, drawbacks are
inevitable, with conflict being among the most
prevalent.  Such conflicts are fueled by real and
perceived differences among people in their manner, custom, values,
and beliefs. Interracial Communication:Â Contexts,
Communities, and Choices offers opportunities for the reader to
engage in thought, reflection, and dialogue around many of the
issues that frame and inform interracial communication which
necessarily affect the quality of these intergroup relationships.
Filling a long-standing gap in the interracial communication
conceptual and pedagogical literature, Interracial
Communication:Â Contexts, Communities, and Choices Arranges
26 original essays by context:Â Identity, Relationships and
Families, Communities, Academic Stories, Politics, and Mass Media.
Explores a range of communication topics among, between, and across
racial groups. Gives the instructor flexibility to arrange
readings independently across the course syllabus. Features
an abstract, key words list, and discussion questions in each
chapter to further engage the reader beyond the issues and themes
presented in the reading.Â
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