Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 160
978-1-4616-3907-7 • eBook • October 2005 • $30.50 • (£25.00)
Bernard L. Brock is professor emeritus at Wayne State University and author of several books on rhetorical analysis and Burkean theory. Mark E. Huglen is assistant professor of communication at the University of Minnesota at Crookston, and author of several books on rhetorical theory. James F. Klumpp is professor of communication at the University of Maryland. Sharon Howell is chair of the Department of Communication at Oakland University.
Chapter 1 Preface
Chapter 2 1 Ideological Chaos and Political Gridlock: Political Communication in the Early Twenty-first Century
Chapter 3 2 Political Ideology and Democracy
Chapter 4 3 Political Positions and American Politics
Chapter 5 4 Rhetorical Strategies and the Four Political Positions
Chapter 6 5 Beyond the Political Chaos: Where Are We Going?
Chapter 7 Bibliography
With Bell's The End of Ideology in 1960, the rise of image politics, and the growing recognition of the independent voter, for almost fifty years ideology seemed to become an exhausted concept. Making Sense of Political Ideology reinvigorates the concept, suggesting that ideology can be used in and explain a host of interactions and transactions in politics.
— James W. Chesebro, Ball State University
In this timely book, Huglen, Brock, Klumpp, and Howell insightfully analyze a central problem in the American democratic process. While such terms as 'liberal' and 'conservative' figure importantly in the national debate, nobody knows what they mean any longer. In the current climate of ideological incoherence, terminological unpredictability, and loss of historical context, it is small wonder that most Americans attend only superficially to political discourse, especially new voters. In a sense they are right, for our political vocabulary has itself become superficial.
— Herbert W. Simons, Temple University, author of Persuasion in Society, editor of The Rhetorical Turn
The authors provide an insightful critical examination of contemporary political discourse, one that invites a fresh and optimistic view of the transformations in political language necessary to transcend seemingly incompatible values, goals, and visions and renew the civic traditions on which our nation was founded.
— Dale A. Bertelsen, Bloomsburg University
Making Sense of Political Ideology would be a useful addition to libraries for undergraduate use. The style is accessible and the authors are strong on description and analysis.
— Political Studies Review
The authors' contribution to understanding the widespread dissatisfaction with contemporary political discourse is original and provocative. They argue that four familiar political positions are associated with four distinct Burkean rhetorical emphases, different kinds of change, and different kinds of catharsis. This book should be widely read by students of rhetoric and politics at a time when both major political parties search for their identities in the post-Bush era.
— Craig Allen Smith, North Carolina State University
—A brief and accessible introduction to the language of political ideology.
—Defines the reactionary, conservative, liberal, and radical political positions.
—Describes language choices and attitudes toward change that are appropriate to each position.—Views language as inherently value laden rather than neutral.
—Draws on the connections between language and motivation found in the work of Kenneth Burke.
—Suggests how understanding the ideology can help foster constructive political communicationand action.