The rhetoric of common enemies in the racial prerequisites to naturalized citizenship before 1952
This dissertation examines the rhetorical strategy by which groups unite against common enemies as it appears in a series of judicial cases between 1878 and 1952 deciding whether petitioners for naturalization in the United States were "free white persons" as required by the United States...
Main Author: | Coulson, Douglas Marshall |
---|---|
Format: | Others |
Language: | en_US |
Published: |
2013
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/2152/21762 |
Similar Items
-
«Public Enemy»: from Lenin’s Rhetoric to Stalin’s Ideologeme
by: Olga U. Popova
Published: (2012-12-01) -
Complicating the rhetoric: How racial construction confounds market-based reformers’ civil rights invocations
by: Laura Elena Hernandez
Published: (2016-10-01) -
Book Review: Natalia Molina, How Race is Made in America: Immigration, Citizenship, and the Historical Power of Racial Scripts, Los Angeles and Berkeley: University of California Press, 2014
by: Mychal Odom
Published: (2017-05-01) -
“The white man’s burden” : rhetorical constructions of race and identity in U.S. naturalization cases from India, 1914-1926
by: Coulson, Douglas Marshall
Published: (2009) -
A Comparison of Effectiveness of Structured and Non-Structured Strategies of Rhetorical Invention for Written Argumentation Produced by Community College Students
by: Smolova, Alona A.
Published: (2014)