Lexington Books
Pages: 242
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-1-4985-1380-7 • Hardback • December 2015 • $121.00 • (£93.00)
978-1-4985-1382-1 • Paperback • July 2017 • $55.99 • (£43.00)
978-1-4985-1381-4 • eBook • December 2015 • $53.00 • (£41.00)
Michael Middleton is assistant professor of argumentation and public discourse in the Department of Communication at the University of Utah.
Aaron Hess is assistant professor of rhetoric at Arizona State University at the Downtown Phoenix campus.
Danielle Endres is associate professor of rhetoric in the Department of Communication at the University of Utah.
Samantha Senda-Cook is assistant professor of rhetoric in the Department of Communication Studies and affiliated faculty with the environmental science and sustainability programs at Creighton University.
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1.Theorizing Participatory Critical Rhetoric
2.The Politics of Participatory Critical Rhetoric
3.An Embodied Critical Presence
4.From Context to Field in Participatory Critical Rhetoric
5.Participants and Perspectives
Conclusion
Overall, Participatory Critical Rhetoric makes significant developments by providing numerous helpful heuristics for theorizing and carrying out field-based rhetorical work. It will be indispensable for scholars interested in critical rhetoric or in situ rhetorical analysis. It will also be helpful for scholars invested in activism, body rhetoric, affect, or rhetoric and place.
— Quarterly Journal Of Speech
Participatory Critical Rhetoric provides a valuable framework for conducting participatory and critical field research that can contribute to social and political change. Clearly written and including the four authors' illustrative “tales from the field," it is an excellent text for graduate and upper-level undergraduate students as well as scholar-activists in rhetoric.
— Phaedra C. Pezzullo, University of Colorado Boulder, author of Toxic Tourism: Rhetorics of Travel, Pollution, and Environmental Justice
Written by the leading proponents and practitioners of rhetorical field methods, this book combines deep scholarship and the authors’ personal experiences to illustrate the scholarly and political importance of studying rhetorical places. I recommend this book to my students and colleagues who are exploring place, space, and progressive political practice.
— Greg Dickinson, Colorado State University
Participatory Critical Rhetoric is a timely contribution to the growing conversation surrounding field methods, critical rhetoric, and participatory research. By focusing on four topoi—immanent politics, critical embodiment, emplaced fields of rhetoric, and gaining perspectives from participants—this book elegantly weaves on-the-ground experiences and sense making with conceptual and theoretical understandings of rhetoric. The result is a truly novel accounting of participatory critical rhetoric that illuminates its comprehensive character.
— erin mcclellan, Boise State University
Participatory Critical Rhetoric nicely consolidates recent work on rhetoric and provides a valuable framework for conducting participatory research that can contribute to social and political change. Clearly written with the four authors' illustrative “tales from the field," this book is an excellent text for graduate students as well as scholar-activists in rhetoric.
— Peter D. Simonson, University Colorado Boulder
Since its inception in ancient Greece, rhetoric has been inseparable from public life. Born of the polis, where orality had not yet ceded its eminence to literacy, rhetoric developed as a verbal art in response to exigencies inevitable in urban communal affairs ruled by citizens through more or less deliberative processes. Little wonder then that one finds Aristotle’s formulation of rhetoric as one of technique (techne), in contradistinction to poetics, which is concerned with pure making (poiesis) as reflected in the Attic drama or tragedy. Participatory Critical Rhetoric is a timely addition to the time-honored tradition of Western rhetorical scholarship. Reflective of a time when rhetorical perspective is proving to be as salutary as any discipline in the humanities and social sciences, this book brings the study of rhetoric to the cusp of 21st-century social theories and criticism in general. It does so—and this is the collection's most distinguishing feature—by updating rhetorical studies with such research tools as participatory observation, interview, and related qualitative methods. Well organized, clearly written, and rich in ethnographic insights, this book will be a useful guide for scholars interested in recapturing the rhetors’ voices, unavoidably muffled by dominant media and conventional documentation. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.
— Choice Reviews
• Winner, The National Communication Association Critical & Cultural Studies Division 2016 Outstanding Book Award