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The Rhetoric of Fascism (Hardcover)
Nathan Crick; Patrick D. Anderson, Rya Butterfield, Nathan Crick, Elizabeth R. Earle, …
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R1,617
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Highlights the persuasive devices most common to fascist appeals
Fascism has resurfaced as one of the most pressing problems of our
time. The rise of extremist parties and candidates in Europe, the
United States, and around the globe has led even mainstream
political commentators to begin using the term “fascism” to
describe dangerous movements that have revived and repackaged many
of the strategies long thought to have been relegated to the
margins of political rhetoric. No longer just confined to the state
regimes of the past, fascism thrives today as a globally
self-augmenting, self-propagating rhetorical phenomenon with a
variety of faces and expressions. The Rhetoric of Fascism defines
and interprets the common persuasive devices that characterize
fascist discourse to understand the nature of its enduring appeal.
By approaching fascism from a rhetorical perspective, this volume
complements established political and sociological understandings
of fascism as a movement or regime. A rhetorical approach studies
fascism less as a party one joins than as a set of persuasive
strategies one adopts. Fascism spreads precisely because it is not
a coherent entity. Instead, it exists as a loosely bound and often
contradictory collection of persuasive trajectories that have
attained enough coherence to mobilize and channel the passions of a
self-constituted mass of individuals. Introductory chapters focus
on general theories of fascism drawn from twentieth-century history
and theory. Contributors investigate specific historical figures
and their relationship to contemporary rhetorics, focusing on a
specific rhetorical device that is characteristic of fascist
rhetoric. A common thread throughout every chapter is that fascist
devices are appealing because they speak to us in the familiar
language of our culture. As we are seduced by one device at a time,
we soon find ourselves part of a movement, a group, or a campaign
that makes us act in ways we might never have imagined. This volume
reveals that fascism may be closer to home than we think.
CONTRIBUTORS Patrick D. Anderson / Rya Butterfield / Nathan Crick /
Elizabeth R. Earle / Zac Gershberg / Stephen J. Hartnett /
Marie-Odile N. Hobeika / Sean Illing / Jacob A. Miller / Fernando
Ismael QuiÑones Valdivia / Patricia Roberts-Miller / Raquel M.
Robvais / Bradley A. Serber / Ryan Skinnell
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