The limits of civility in the civil rights and Black Power movements : three African-American women's autobiographies

Rhetoricians have long praised argumentation as a productive alternative to violence, and while I agree that it can be such an alternative, my dissertation aims to complicate our understanding of both violence and coercion by illumination how the strictures of civility limit the rhetoric of dissent....

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Main Author: Boade, Erin Alane
Format: Others
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/23444
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-234442015-09-20T17:21:24ZThe limits of civility in the civil rights and Black Power movements : three African-American women's autobiographiesBoade, Erin AlaneCivil rights movementBlack Power movementCivilityCoercionRhetoricRhetoricians have long praised argumentation as a productive alternative to violence, and while I agree that it can be such an alternative, my dissertation aims to complicate our understanding of both violence and coercion by illumination how the strictures of civility limit the rhetoric of dissent. This study makes two main arguments, 1), that the dominant narrative of the civil rights and Black Power movements has been insufficiently challenged by rhetoricians, and 2), that this lack can be explained in part by these scholars’ preference for civility and decorum over coercion in persuasion. I argue that both the civil rights and Black Power movements share similarities both tactically and philosophically. Looking beyond assessing these movements in terms of their alleged levels of civility allows us more fully to account for the complexity of their rhetorical situations. I use black women’s autobiographies as my focus because they allow a glimpse into the quotidian nature of the civil rights and Black Power movement’s struggles, one that lies on the margin of the media spotlight on movement leadership. In addition, these autobiographies unveil the multiple audiences activist rhetors faced in ways that major speeches, penned and delivered by men, cannot.text2014-03-07T16:13:37Z2014-03-07T16:13:37Z2009-122014-03-07Thesiselectronichttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/23444Copyright is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works.
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Civil rights movement
Black Power movement
Civility
Coercion
Rhetoric
spellingShingle Civil rights movement
Black Power movement
Civility
Coercion
Rhetoric
Boade, Erin Alane
The limits of civility in the civil rights and Black Power movements : three African-American women's autobiographies
description Rhetoricians have long praised argumentation as a productive alternative to violence, and while I agree that it can be such an alternative, my dissertation aims to complicate our understanding of both violence and coercion by illumination how the strictures of civility limit the rhetoric of dissent. This study makes two main arguments, 1), that the dominant narrative of the civil rights and Black Power movements has been insufficiently challenged by rhetoricians, and 2), that this lack can be explained in part by these scholars’ preference for civility and decorum over coercion in persuasion. I argue that both the civil rights and Black Power movements share similarities both tactically and philosophically. Looking beyond assessing these movements in terms of their alleged levels of civility allows us more fully to account for the complexity of their rhetorical situations. I use black women’s autobiographies as my focus because they allow a glimpse into the quotidian nature of the civil rights and Black Power movement’s struggles, one that lies on the margin of the media spotlight on movement leadership. In addition, these autobiographies unveil the multiple audiences activist rhetors faced in ways that major speeches, penned and delivered by men, cannot. === text
author Boade, Erin Alane
author_facet Boade, Erin Alane
author_sort Boade, Erin Alane
title The limits of civility in the civil rights and Black Power movements : three African-American women's autobiographies
title_short The limits of civility in the civil rights and Black Power movements : three African-American women's autobiographies
title_full The limits of civility in the civil rights and Black Power movements : three African-American women's autobiographies
title_fullStr The limits of civility in the civil rights and Black Power movements : three African-American women's autobiographies
title_full_unstemmed The limits of civility in the civil rights and Black Power movements : three African-American women's autobiographies
title_sort limits of civility in the civil rights and black power movements : three african-american women's autobiographies
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/23444
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