POLITICAL CONVENTIONS: RHETORIC & CAMPAIGN FILMS

SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Allan Louden, Wake Forest University (louden@wfu.edu)
Last Updated:

See Politics and Film Wednesday, 28-Jan-2015 11:08:30 EST

Adams, W. C. (1985, Dec./Jan.). Convention coverage: Did the networks miss the big story at the conventions? Public Opinion, 43-54.

Andrew, B. (1971). The Effects of Television Coverage on the Nature of Political Party Conventions, 1952 - 1964. Unpublished MA Thesis, University of Georgia.

Barefield, P. A. (1970). Republican keynoters. Speech Monographs, 37, 232-239.

Benoit, W. L., Blaney, J R., & Pier, P. M. (2000). Acclaiming, attacking, and defending: A functional analysis of U.S. nominating convention keynote speeches. Political Communication, 17, 61-84.

Benoit, W. L., & Gustainis, J. J. (1986). An analogic analysis of the keynote addresses at the 1980 presidential conventions. Speaker and Gavel, 23, 95-108.

Benoit, W. L., Stein, K. A., & Hansen, G. J. (2004). How newspapers cover presidential nomination acceptance addresses. Newspaper Research Journal, 25, 83-89.

Benoit, W. L., Wells, W. T., Pier, P. M., & Blaney, J. R. (1999). Acclaiming, attacking, and defending in presidential nominating acceptance addresses, 1960-1996. Quarterly Journal of Speech, 85, 247-267.

Blankenship, J., Robson, D. C., & Williams, M. S. (1997). Conventionalizing gender: Talk by and about women at the 1996 national political conventions. American Behavioral Scientist, 40, 1020-1047.

Campbell, J. E., Cherry, L. L., & Wink, K. A. (1992). The convention bump. American Politics Quarterly, 20, 287-307.

Cera, J, & Weinschenk, A. C. (2012). Polls and elections: The conditional effects of competing messages during presidential nominating conventions. Presidential Studies Quarterly, 42, 161–175.12

Claussen. E. N. (1965) John Sharp Williams: Pacesetter for Democratic keynoters. Southern Speech Journal, 31, 1-9.

Cline, R. J. (1985). The Cronkite-Ford interview at the 1980 Republican National Convention: A therapeutic analogue. Central States Speech Journal, 36, 92-104.

Cornfield, M. (2007). Rewiring the coventions (again): The Internet and innovation in politics and media. In C. Panagopoulos (Ed.). Rewriing politics: Presidential nominating coventions in the media age (pp. 133-146). Baton Rogue, LA: Louisiana State University Press.

Depoe, S. P. (1990). Requiem for liberalism: The therapeutic and deliberative functions of nostalgic appeals in Edward Kennedy's address to the 1980 Democratic National Convention. The Southern Communication Journal, 55, 175-192.

DeRosa, K. L., & Bystrom, D. G. (1999). The voice of and for women in the 1996 presidential campaign: Style and substance of convention speeches. In L. L. Kaid and Bystrom, D. G. (Eds.), The electronic election: Perspectives on the 1996 campaign communication (pp. 97-111). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.

Di Mare, L A. (1987). Functionalizing conflict: Jesse Jackson's rhetorical strategy at the 1984 Democratic National Convention. Western Journal of Speech Communication, 51, 218-226.

Edwards, J. L. (2005). Presidential campaign films in a televisual convention environment: The example of 2004. In R. E. Denton (Ed.), The 2004 presidential campaign: A communication perspective (pp. 75-92). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Pub.

Edwards, J. L., & Smith, S. M. (2003). Myth and anti-myth in presidential campaign films 2000. In L. L Kaid, J. C. Tedesco, D. G. Bystrom, & M. S. McKinney (Eds.) The millennium election: Communication in the 2000 campaign (pp. 17-25) . New York: Rowman & Littlefield.

Fant, C. H. (1980). Televising presidential conventions, 1952-1980. Journal of Communication, 30, 130-139.

Ferrell, T. B. (1978). Political conventions as legitimization ritual. Communication Monographs, 45, 294-305.

Field, W. (1998). Reading conventions: Political stories from 1988. Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 1, 89-116.

Fine, T. S. (2007). Mass media and the democratiztion of the presidentail nominating coventions. In C. Panagopoulos (Ed.). Rewriing politics: Presidential nominating coventions in the media age (pp. 165-188). Baton Rogue, LA: Louisiana State University Press.

Foote, J., & Rimmer, T. (1983). The ritual of convention coverage in 1980. In W. C. Adams (Ed.). Television coverage of the 1980 presidential campaign (pp. 69-88). Norwood, NJ: Ablex.

Frank, D. A., & McPhail, M. L. (2005). Barack Obama's address to the 2004 Democratic National Convention: Trauma, compromise, consilience, and the (im)possibility of racial reconciliation. Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 8, 571-594.

Frye, J. K., & Krohn, F. B. (1977). An analysis of Barbara Jordan's 1976 Keynote address. Journal of Applied Communication Research, 5, 73-82.

Gustainis, J. J., & Benoit, W. L. (1987). Analogic analysis of the presidential candidates' acceptance speeches at the 1980 national nominating conventions.Speaker and Gavel, 25, 14-23.

Hagen, M. G., & Johnston, R. (2007). Coventions and campaign dynamics. In C. Panagopoulos (Ed.). Rewriing politics: Presidential nominating coventions in the media age (pp. 29-52). Baton Rogue, LA: Louisiana State University Press.

Harpine, W. D. (2001). Bryan's "Cross of Gold:" The rhetoric of polarization at the 1986 Democratic Convention. Quarterly Journal of Speech, 87, 291-304.

Henry, D. (1988). The rhetorical dynamics of Mario Cuomo's keynote address: Situation, speaker, metaphor. Southern Speech Communication Journal, 53, 105-120.

Hoffman, G. (2005). Political conventions, images and spin. ETC: A Review of General Semantics, 62, 67-70.

Holloway, R. L. (2002). One nation, after all.: Convedn tion frames and political cultgure. In R. E. Denton Jr. (Ed.), The 2000 presidential campaign: A communicatgion Perspective (pp. 117-134). Westport, CT: Praeger.

Holloway, R. L. (2005). Political coventions of 2004: A study in character and contrast. In R. E. Denton (Ed.), The 2004 presidential campaign: A communication perspective (pp. 29-73). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Pub.

Houck, D. W. (1997). Reading the body of the text: FDR’s 1932 speech to the democratic National Convention. Southern Communication Journal, 63, 20-36.

James, S. L., (1990). It happened in Philadelphia. Television Quarterly, 24, 71-77. [TV coverage of political conventions]

Jamieson, K. H., Johnston, Rl, Hagen, M. G., Waldman, P., & Kenski, K. (2000). The pubic learned about Bush and gore from conventions; half ready to make an informed choice. Philadelphia: Annenberg Public Policy Center.

Jarvis, S. E. (2001). Campaigning alone: Partisan versus personal language in the presidential nominating convention acceptance addresses, 1948-2000. American Behavioral Scientist, 44, 2152-2171.

Jarvis, S. (1997). Television coverage of presidential nominating conventions. In H. Newcomb (Ed.), Encyclopedia of television. Chicago: Fitzroy & Dearborn.

Jarvis, S. E., & Jones E. B. (2005). Party labesl in presidential acceptance addresses: 1948-2000. In L. C. Han and D. J. Heith (Eds.) In the public domain: Presidents and the challenges of public leadership (pp. 29-48). Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.

Kern, M. (2001). Disadvantage Al Gore in election 2000. American Behavioral Scientist, 44, 2125-2139. [examines Convention web stories]

Mackey-Kallis, S. (1991). Spectator desire and narrative closure: The Reagan 18-minute political film. Southern Communication Journal, 56, 308-314.

Miles, E. A. (1960). The keynote speech at national nominating conventions. Quarterly Journal of Speech, 46, 26-31.

Morreale, J (1994). American self images and the presidential campaign film, 1964-1992. In A. H. Miller & B. E. Gronbeck (Eds.) Presidential campaigns and American self images (pp. 19-39). Boulder, CO: Westview.

Morreale, J. (1994). The Bush and Dukakis convention campaign films. Journal of Popular Culture, 27, 141-152.

Morreale, J. (1993). The presidential campaign film: A critical history. Westport, CT: Praeger.

Morreale, J. (1991). A New Beginning: A textual frame analysis of the political campaign film. New York: State University of New York, Albany.

Morreale, J. (1991). The political campaign film: Epidictic rhetoric in a documentary frame. In F. Biocca Ed), Television and political advertising, Vol. 2: Signs, codes, and images, (pp. 187-201). Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.

Morris, J. S., & Francia, P. L. (2007). Losing control? The rise of cable news and its effect on party convention coverage.In C. Panagopoulos (Ed.). Rewriing politics: Presidential nominating coventions in the media age (pp. 147-164). Baton Rogue, LA: Louisiana State University Press.

National party conventions, 1831-1984 (1987). Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly.

Nevell-Shepard (2015). Distrubing the conventions of national political conventions: Crossover addresses and reluctant testimony. In C. H. Palczewski, Ed., Disturbing argument (pp. 207-212). Routledge, New York.

Newell. S. A., & King, T. R. (1974). The keynote address of the Democratic national convention, 1972: The evolution of a speech. Southern Speech Communication Journal, 39, 246-358.

Novak, J. (1997). Hope springs eternal: The reinvention of America in Bill Clinton’s 1996 campaign biography video. American Behavioral Scientist, 40, 1048-1057.

Olson, K. (2005). Evaporation symbols in argument: Emotional dispersion in a Goldwater campaign film. In C. A. Williard (Ed.), Critical problems in argumentation (pp. 238-245). Washington, DC: National Communication Association.

Paletz, D. L., & M. Elson (1976). Television coverage of presidential conventions: Now you see t, now you don't. Political Science Quarterly.

Panagopoulos, C. (Ed.) (2007). Rewriing politics: Presidential nominating coventions in the media age. Baton Rogue, LA: Louisiana State University Press.

Panagopoulos, C. (2007). Follow the bouncing ball: Assessing covention bumps, 1964-2004). In C. Panagopoulos (Ed.). Rewriing politics: Presidential nominating coventions in the media age (pp. 16-28). Baton Rogue, LA: Louisiana State University Press.

Parry-Giles, T., & Parry-Giles, S. J. (1997). Political scopophilia, presidential campaigning, and the intimacy of American politics. Communication Studies, 47, 191-205. (uses campaign films)

Parry-Giles, S. J., & Parry-Giles, T. (1996). Gendered politics and presidential image construction: A reassessment of the "Feminine Style." Communication Monographs, 63, 337-353. (uses campaign films)

Pomper, G. M. the new role of the conventions as political rituals. In C. Panagopoulos (Ed.). Rewriing politics: Presidential nominating coventions in the media age (pp. 189-208). Baton Rogue, LA: Louisiana State University Press.

Rice, J. L. (1996). Reflections on the 1984 and 1988 Democratic party platforms: Case studies in consubstantiation. Speaker and Gavel, 33, 42-58.

Ritter, K. (1980). American political rhetoric and the jeremiad tradition: Presidential nomination acceptance address, 1960-1976. Central States Speech Journal, 31, 153-171.

Roberts, M. S., & Golan, G. (2005). Issues, inclusion, and illusion: The 2000 Republican National Convention reaches out. In M. S. McKinney, L. L. Kaid, D. G. Bystrom,& D. B. Carlin (Eds.) Communicating politics: Engaging the public in democratic life (pp. 249-259). New York: Peter Lang.

Rosteck, T. (1994). The intertextuality of "The Man From Hope": Bill Clinton as a person, as persona, as star. In S. A. Smith (Ed.), Bill Clinton on stump, state, and stage: The Rhetorical road to the White House (pp. 223-248). Fayetteville, AR: University of Arkansas Press.

Scheele, H. Z. (1984). Ronald Reagan's 1980 acceptance address: A focus on American Values. Western Journal of Speech Communication, 48, 51-61.

Schultz, A. (1993). Political advertising and the use of modern myths: A campaign film for Ronald Reagan 1984. Politics and the Individual, 3, 95-103.

Sesno, F. (2001). Let's cover the conventions. Harvard International Journal of Press/Politics, 6, 11-15.

Simon, H. W. (1991). Network coverage of video politics: "A New Beginning" in the limits of criticism. In R. Biocca (ED.), Television and political advertising. Volume 2: Signs, codes and images (pp. 203-228). Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.

Simons, H. W., Stewart, D. J., & Harvey, D. (1989). Effects of network treatments on perceptions of a political campaign film: Can rhetorical criticism make a difference. Communication Quarterly, 37, 184-198.

Smith, C. R. (1975). The Republican keynote address of 1968: Adaptive rhetoric for the multiple audience. Western Speech Journal, 39, 32-39.

Smith, C. R. (1971). Richard Nixon's 1968 acceptance speech as a model of dual audience adaption. Today's Speech, 29, 15-22.

Smith, L. D. (1994). The New York convention: Bill Clinton and "A Place Called Hope." In S. A. Smith (Ed.), Bill Clinton on stump, state, and stage: The Rhetorical road to the White House (pp. 201-222). Fayetteville, AR: University of Arkansas Press.

Smith, L. D. (1989). A narrative analysis of the party platforms: The Democrats and Republicans of 1984. Communication Quarterly. 37, 91-99.

Smith, L. D. (1987). The nominating convention as purveyor of political medicine: An anecdotal analysis of the Democrats and Republicans of 1984. Central States Speech Journal, 38, 252-261.

Smith, L. D. (1988). Narrative styles in network coverage of the 1984 nominating conventions. Western Journal of Speech Communication, 52, 63-74.

Smith, L. D. (1989). A narrative analysis of the party platforms: The Democrats and Republicans of 1984. Communication Quarterly, 37, 91-99.

Smith, L. D. (1990). Convention oratory as institutional discourse: A narrative synthesis of the Democrats and Republicans of 1988. Communication Studies, 41, 19-34.

Smith, L. D., & Nimmo, D. (1991). Cordial concurrence: Orchestrating national party conventions in the telepolitical age. Westport, CT: Praeger.

Smith, R. L. (1962). A keynoter's dilemmas: A new dimension. The Forensic, 47, 9-11, 13.

Strachan, HJ. C., & Kendall, K. E. (2004). Political candidates' conventoinal films: An overview of political image making. In C. Hill and M. Helmers, Defining visual rhetorics (pp. 135-154). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.

Stuckey, M. E. (2005). One nation (pretty darn) divisible: National identity in the 2004 conventions. Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 8, 639-656.

Thompson, W. N. (1979). Barbara Jordan's keynote address: Fulfilling dual and conflicting purposes. Central States Speech Journal, 30, 272-277.

Thompson, W. N. (1979). Barbara Jordan's keynote address: The juxtaposition of contradictory values. Southern Speech Communication Journal, 44, 223-232.

Tiemens, R. K., Sillars, M. O., Alexander, D. C., & Werling, D. (1988). Television coverage of Jesse Jackson's speech to the 1984 Democratic National Convention. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 32, 1-22.

Timmerman, D. M., & Weier, G. M. (1998). The 1996 presidential nominating conventions: Good television and shallow identification. In R. E. Denton (Ed.) The 1996 presidential campaign: A communication perspective (pp. 77-100). Westport, CT: Praeger.

Timmerman, D. (1996). The 1992 presidential candidate films: The contrasting narratives of George Bush and Bill Clinton. Presidential Studies Quarterly, 26, 364-373.

Timmerman, D. M. & Smith. L. D. (1994). The 1992 presidential nominating conventions: Cordial concurrence revisited. In R. E. Denton (Ed.), The 1992 presidential campaign: A communication perspective (pp. 66-87). Westport, CT: Praeger.

Turner, K. J. (1988, November). Conventional rhetoric: Television and the Republicans in New Orleans. Paper presented at the Speech Communication Association. New Orleans, LA.

Valley, D. B. (1988). A history and analysis of Democratic presidential nomination acceptance speeches to 1968. Lanham, MD: Univ. Press of American.

Valley, D. B. (1978). Significant characteristics of Democratic presidential nomination acceptance speeches. Central State Speech Journal, 25, 56-62.

Waltzer, H. (1999). TV coverage of the U.S. party conventions: A proposal for 2000. The Harvard International Journal of Press/Politics, 4, 119-121.

Waltzer, H. (1966). In the Magic Lantern: Television coverage of the 1964 national conventions." Public Opinion Quarterly .

Wilson, P. (1996). The rhythm of rhetoric: Jesse Jackson at the 1988 Democratic National Convention. Southern Communication Journal, 61, 253-274.

Womack, D. L. (1985). Live ABC, CBS, and NBC Interviews During Three Democratic Conventions. Journalism Quarterly.

Womack, D. L. (1986). Status of News Sources Interviewed During Presidential Conventions." Journalism Quarterly.

Womack, D. L. (1988). Live TV Interviews at the 1984 GOP Convention." Journalism Quarterly, .

Womack, D. L. (1989). Live television interviews at the 1988 Democratic convention. Journalism Quarterly, 66, 670-674.

Womack, D. L., & Hoar, J. R. (1981). Treatment of candidates in convention floor interviews. Journalism Quarterly, 58, 300-302.

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