Regendering Delivery
$35.00
Title | Range | Discount |
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Trade Discount | 5 + | 25% |
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Description
Lindal Buchanan thoroughly analyzes how antebellum women infiltrated the male-dominated realm of public speaking by adapting elocutionary instruction to subversive ends, developing distinctive delivery styles, and reconciling conflicting public and private roles. By detailing the education and oratorical practices of pioneering female public speakers, Regendering Delivery: The Fifth Canon and Antebellum Women Rhetors theorizes how gender impacted the fifth rhetorical canon of delivery and how cultural constructions of the feminine have shaped public performance. Buchanan argues that restrictive gender norms encouraged antebellum women rhetors to develop unique styles and methods of rhetorical production and performance. She examines how schoolgirls devised ways to learn and practice elocution in academic settings and how women developed inventive delivery strategies to maintain the appearance of femininity even as they participated in conventionally masculine discursive activities from general public speaking to political lobbying. She also identifies collaborative methods that enabled antebellum women to negotiate conflicts between their domestic and rhetorical commitments and thus reach public platformsAssessing the calculable impact of gender on rhetorical performance, Buchanan maintains that delivery holds particular sexual and textual connotations for women rhetors. Regendering Delivery notably contributes to ongoing feminist efforts to incorporate women into the rhetorical tradition by probing such gendered—and largely overlooked—aspects of oratorical delivery as cultural context, gender norms, elocutionary education, sexuality, maternity, feminine ethos, and collaboration.
Lindal Buchanan thoroughly analyzes how antebellum women infiltrated the male-dominated realm of public speaking by adapting elocutionary instruction to subversive ends, developing distinctive delivery styles, and reconciling conflicting public and private roles. By detailing the education and oratorical practices of pioneering female public speakers, Regendering Delivery: The Fifth Canon and Antebellum Women Rhetors theorizes how gender impacted the fifth rhetorical canon of delivery and how cultural constructions of the feminine have shaped public performance.
Lindal Buchanan is an assistant professor of communications at Kettering University. Her essays have been published in Rhetoric Society Quarterly and other journals.
“Traditional studies of delivery focus on the speaker’s voice, body, and acts of expression but ignore the cultural networks surrounding speakers, assuming speakers are the same. Lindal Buchanan shows how this is not true and reveals a revolutionary view of how delivery can be regendered by opening our eyes to what we rhetoricians already know and using it to reshape the canon of delivery. Regendering Delivery may turn out to be one of the most significant works in women’s rhetoric of the last decade, building as it does on the large body of rhetorical studies that have come before and putting them into a quite readable and compelling context.”—Catherine Hobbs, University of Oklahoma
Additional information
Dimensions | 1 × 6 × 9 in |
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