Fr. 106.00

American Rhetoric and the Vietnam War

English · Hardback

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Description

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Rhetoric during wartime is about the creation of consensus, writes Justin Gustainis. In American Rhetoric and the Vietnam War, he discusses efforts to build or destroy public support of America's most controversial war of the century. Gustainis analyzes several important aspects of Vietnam era rhetoric: presidential rhetoric, protest rhetoric, and the war as portrayed in popular culture. Broadly defining rhetoric as the deliberate use of symbols to persuade, the author explores partisan use of speeches, marches, songs, military campaigns, gestures, destruction of property, comic strips, and films.

Part One, Prowar Rhetoric, opens with a chapter devoted to the domino theory as a condensation symbol. Subsequent chapters discuss the hero myth in reference to Kennedy and the Green Berets, rhetoric and the Tet Offensive, and Nixon's Silent Majority. Part Two examines antiwar rhetoric, and includes studies of Daniel Berrigan, SDS and the Port Huron Statement, and the Weathermen. Gustainis argues that the antiwar movement did not stop the war, and may have prolonged it. In Part Three, he analyzes Doonesbury as antiwar rhetoric, then turns to an examination of how the war has been portrayed in popular film. Gustainis includes a political, military, and rhetorical chronology of the war as an appendix. Recommended for scholars and students of rhetoric and political communication.

List of contents










Foreword by Robert E. Denton, Jr.
Dangerous Metaphor: The Domino Theory as Condensation Symbol
John F. Kennedy and the Green Berets: The Rhetorical Use of the Hero Myth
"Waist Deep in the Big Muddy": Rhetorical Dimensions of the Tet Offensive
Nixon and the Silent Majority: The Rhetoric of Shared Values
Daniel Berrigan and the Rhetoric of Ultra-Resistance
The Rhetoric of Paradox: SDS and The Port Huron Statement
Bringing the War Home: The Rhetoric of The Weathermen
While the Whole World Watched: Rhetorical Failures of Antiwar Protest
B. D. Goes to 'Nam: Doonesbury as Antiwar Rhetoric
From Savior to Psycho and Back Again: The Changing Role of Green Berets in Vietnam Films
Apocalypse Now: A Burkeian Analysis of Cinematic Rhetoric
Appendix: The Vietnam War: A Political, Military, and Rhetorical Chronology
Selected Bibliography
Index


About the author










J. JUSTIN GUSTAINIS is Associate Professor of Communication at the State University of New York at Plattsburgh. He is currently working on a book-length study of the rhetoric of Jimmy Carter.

Summary

Gustainis analyzes several important aspects of Vietnam era rhetoric: presidential rhetoric, protest rhetoric, and the war as portrayed in popular culture.

Product details

Authors J. Justin Gustainis, J.Justin Gustainis
Publisher Praeger
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 31.12.2019
 
EAN 9780275933616
ISBN 978-0-275-93361-6
No. of pages 192
Dimensions 161 mm x 240 mm x 15 mm
Weight 458 g
Series Praeger Series in Political Communication
Media and Society Series
Media and Society Series
Praeger Series in Political Communication
Subject Social sciences, law, business > Political science > Political science and political education

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