Lexington Books
Pages: 282
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-4985-5371-1 • Hardback • April 2018 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-4985-5372-8 • eBook • April 2018 • $105.50 • (£82.00)
Kenneth Collier is professor of political science at Stephen F. Austin State University.
Chapter 1: The State of Presidential Speeches
Chapter 2: Why Presidents Talk
Chapter 3: Ghostwriters: From FDR to LBJ
Chapter 4: The Institutionalization of Speechwriting: Nixon to the Present
Chapter 5: Lessons on the White House
Chapter 6: Donald Trump, MODERN DAY PRESIDENTIAL, and the Future of Presidential Rhetoric Construction
This is an important book that will be of interest to all scholars of the U.S. presidency.
— Congress & the Presidency
What presidents say and why has never been more important. Collier’s excellent book gives a first of its kind insight inside the mind of presidential speechwriters and voice to what shapes presidential speech. The impact of speechwriting on policy and the tone of American politics is too important to stay inside the black box, and Collier gives us a rare window into this essential process.— Brandon Rottinghaus, University of Houston
Speechwriting in the White House is both art and science, and no one understands that better than Ken Collier. Collier deftly explains how the institutionalization of speechwriting duties evolved along with the rise of the public presidency. Readers will come away equally informed and fascinated by the details as Collier narrates the path presidential speechwriting took from the ghostwriters of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's era to the celebrity staff wordsmiths of the Twenty-First Century.— Justin S. Vaughn, Boise State University
Ken Collier has written an engaging, historically detailed study of presidential speechwriting. The book is grounded in careful archival research and enlivened by his interviews with presidential speechwriters. It is accessible to undergraduates and informed enough to be of interest to scholars and practitioners. I highly recommend this work to anyone interested in the contemporary presidency.— Mary E. Stuckey, The Pennsylvania State University