Lexington Books
Pages: 244
Trim: 6⅜ x 9
978-1-4985-8865-2 • Hardback • October 2020 • $123.00 • (£95.00)
978-1-4985-8866-9 • eBook • October 2020 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Theodore F. Sheckels is Charles J. Potts professor of social science and professor of English and communication studies at Randolph-Macon College.
Preface
Chapter One – Political Party Conventions: History and Criticism
Chapter Two – 1948
Chapter Three – 1952
Chapter Four – 1956
Chapter Five – 1960
Chapter Six – 1964
Chapter Seven – 1968
Chapter Eight – 1972
Chapter Nine – 1976
Chapter Ten – 1980
Chapter Eleven – 1984
Chapter Twelve – 1988
Chapter Thirteen—1992
Chapter Fourteen—1996
Chapter Fifteen – 2000
Chapter Sixteen – 2004
Chapter Seventeen – 2008
Chapter Eighteen – 2012
Chapter Nineteen – 2016
Chapter Twenty -- Conclusions
Bibliography
About the Author
With pundits claiming that conventions are an anachronism, Sheckels' book disproves that claim. By placing convention speeches within the larger political context and viewing the conventions as a unified message to address the context, this study clearly makes the case for the importance of conventions to shape the fall campaign. This book's unique approach also provides a new direction for political communication research.
— Diana B. Carlin, Saint Louis University
Sheckels aptly situates each quadrennial political convention in its own social and political context, examining not only convention speeches, but the confluence of factors conditioning convention messaging in all its myriad forms. He gives equal time to the discourses of competing political parties and their agents, recognizing the changing functions of conventions across decades and probing the diverse influences of television coverage, external events, and candidate foibles. By treating each political party convention as is own unique text, replete with dominant tropes and styles, Sheckels celebrates the rhetorical dynamism and fluidity of American political party conventions throughout the years. This book will make an excellent and informative reader for classes in political communication, media and politics, contemporary American public address, and campaign communication.
— Mary L. Kahl, Professor Emerita, Penn State, the Behrend College