Lexington Books
Pages: 244
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7391-1022-5 • Hardback • August 2005 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
978-0-7391-1199-4 • Paperback • August 2005 • $54.99 • (£42.00)
978-0-7391-5570-7 • eBook • August 2005 • $52.00 • (£40.00)
Karrin Vasby Anderson is assistant professor of speech communication at Colorado State University. Kristina Horn Sheeler is assistant professor of communication studies at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis.
Chapter 1 Introduction: The Role of Language in Politics
Chapter 2 Gender, Metaphor, and Political Identity
Chapter 3 Ann Richards
Chapter 4 Christine Todd Whitman
Chapter 5 Hillary Rodham Clinton
Chapter 6 Elizabeth Dole
Chapter 7 Conclusion: Cracking the Governing Codes
Governing Codes: Gender, Metaphor, and Political Identity makes a significant scholarly contribution. The depth and breadth of the authors' research is impressive. The prose is engaging and the extensive use of examples insightful. I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in political communication, gender studies, media, and language use....
— Molly Mayhead
Focusing on the power of metaphor in the rhetorical construction of political reality, Anderson and Sheeler put the spotlight on gender and politics like no one before.....
— Martin J. Medhurst
Karrin Vasby Anderson and Kristina Horn Sheeler have combined forces to produce a smart, crisply written treatment of metaphor's strategic role in contemporary U.S. politics. They focus on the constitutive uses of language by four strong women, each working to re-articulate and thus turn to her political advantage otherwise negative stereotypes of women in positions of leadership. Ann Richards, Christine Todd Whitman, Elizabeth Dole, and Hillary Rodham Clinton provide rich cases for the authors to probe and critique the nexus of gender, metaphor, and political identity. This is a study not only of cultural constraints but also of rhetorical ingenuity and the enhancement of women's political agency. It confronts head on the troublesome metaphor of sexual containment that has trapped political women in a debilitating double bind. This is a book that will be of immediate interest to scholars and students alike for its accessible insights into rhetorical constraint, ingenuity, and maneuver..
— Robert L. Ivie