University Press Copublishing Division / Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Pages: 232
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-61147-650-7 • Hardback • November 2013 • $101.00 • (£78.00)
978-1-61147-853-2 • Paperback • August 2015 • $50.99 • (£39.00)
978-1-61147-651-4 • eBook • November 2013 • $48.50 • (£37.00)
Pat Arneson is associate professor of communication and rhetorical studies at Duquesne University.
Introduction: “Changing the Conversation”
PART I: FORGING AN OPENING
Chapter One: Anchored in the Life-World and Moored to Social Worlds
Chapter Two: Communicative Engagement: The Reasoning Art of Theōría-Poíēsis-Praxis
Chapter Three: Liberating Possibilities in Communicative Engagement
Chapter Four: Communicative Engagement: The Ethical Demand for a Fitting Response
PART II: FORGING A LIFE
Chapter Five: Myrtilla Miner: Advocate for the Right to Education
Chapter Six: Mary White Ovington: Advocate for Civil and Political Rights
Chapter Seven: Jessie Daniel Ames: Advocate for Even Justice in the Right to Legal Protection
PART III: OPENING A LIFE
Chapter Eight: Seeking Social Liberation
Chapter Nine: Communicative Engagement and Social Liberation
Bibliography
Professor Arneson is gifted with an exceptionally keen analytic eye and a creative mind. These talents are obvious as she eloquently integrates teachings in philosophy, communication ethics, and rhetorical theory to explore with the help of marvelous case studies the social injustice of racism.
— Michael J. Hyde, Wake Forest University
There is always more to be said and sometimes it gets said by saying things otherwise. We mistakenly think we know enough until someone such as Dr. Arneson puts it otherwise from a fresh perspective. By making use of a thoughtful philosophy of communication, things as yet hidden from our thinking about liberation, ethics, and the history of American feminism are here brought to light. This is no small feat as it requires erudition in both philosophy and rhetorical/historical study to say such things. We have here in Dr. Arneson’s courageous work a significant contribution to our thinking in all these many ways.
— Ramsey Eric Ramsey, Author of “Leaving Us to Wonder: An Essay on the Questions Science Can’t Ask,” Arizona State University
“Pat Arneson's telling of how teacher Myrtilla Miner, social worker Mary White Ovington, and political activist Jessie Daniel Ames worked against economic, legal, and social injustice portrays a rhetorical history beginning in the United States during the mid-1980s. By placing our current communicative engagement into juxtaposition with that of Miner, Ovington, and Ames, Arneson reveals the tensions between imaginative creativity that actualizes possibilities for changing sociopolitical norms, and entrenched ways of thinking that suppress democracy's potential for sociopolitical liberation.”
— Lenore Langsdorf, emerita professor, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale
In her carefully crafted book Professor Arneson furrows new conceptual territory on the entwinement of communication, social liberation, and the quest for justice in civil society. The philosophical backdrop of her stimulating discussion is a retrieval and reinterpretation of the processes at work on the interconnected landscapes of the ancient Greek triad of theoria/praxis/poiesis. That which makes her work especially important for interdisciplinary research in philosophy and communication studies is her demonstration of how the philosophical issues at stake in her project are exhibited in the case studies of three American women who devoted their lives to the advancement of liberation from a variety of social injustices. She deftly supplements her philosophical analysis and argumentation with dialogues and encounters that arise within the economies of everyday lived experiences.
— Calvin O. Schrag, George Ade Distinguished Professor of Philosophy Emeritus, Purdue University
In this important book, Pat Arneson reminds us that some citizens have always imagined a fuller, fairer America and have had the courage to work to realize that vision.
Arneson’s careful research and compelling storytelling bring to life the (his)stories of three remarkable women whose work for racial justice in America has heretofore been too little noticed.
Arneson provides compelling accounts of Myrtilla Miner, Mary White Ovington, and Jessie Daniel Ames, three courageous white women who dared to step out of their assigned place in order to fight against racial injustices that prevailed in America.
Arneson persuasively shows that the issues of racial injustice that these three women resisted are not confined to history, but persist in our era as we continue to struggle to create a more perfect union.
Arneson offers communicative engagement as a transformative means by which individuals can move themselves and others out of injustices that mark a particular time and place.
— Julia T. Wood, Lineberger Distinguished Professor of Humanities Emerita, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill