Rhetoric of President Barack Obama

SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY

Last Updated: Sunday, 24-Jan-2016 15:39:23 EST

Amsden, B. (2014). Dimentions of temporality in president Obama's Tucson memorial address. Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 17, 455-476.

Arduser, L., & Koerber, A. (2014). Splitting women, producing biocitizens, and vilifying Obamacare in the 2012 presidential campaign. Women's Studies in Communication, 37, 117-137.

Arnett, R. C. (2011). Civic rhetoric—Meeting the communal interplay of the provincial and the cosmopolitan: Barack Obama’s Notre Dame Speech, May 17, 2009. Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 14, 631–672.

Coe, K., & Reitzes, M. (2010). Obama on the stump: Features and determinants of a rhetorical approach. Presidential Studies Quarterly, 40, 391-413.

Crosby, R. B. (2015). Toward a practical, civic piety: Mitt Romney, Barack Obama, and the race for national Priest. Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 18, 301-330.

Dilliplane, S. (2012). Race, rhetoric, and running for president: Unpacking the significance of Barack obama’s “A More Perfect Union” speech. Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 15, 127-152.

Finnegan, C. A., & Mixon, A. J. (2014). Art Controversy in the Obama White House: Performing Tensions of Race in the Visual Politics of the Presidency Presidential Studies Quarterly, 44, 244–266.

Frank, D. A. (2014). Facing Moloch: Barack Obama’s national eulogies and gun violence. Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 17, 653-678.

Frank, D. A., (2011). Obama’s rhetorical signature: Cosmopolitan Civil Religion in the Presidential Inaugural Address, January 20, 2009. Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 14, 605–630.

Frank, D. A., (2009). The prophetic voice and the face of the other in Barack Obama’s “A More Perfect Union” address, March 18, 2008. Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 12, 167-194.

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.

Garvey, T. (2011). The Obama administration's evolving approach to the signing statement. Presidential Studies Quarterly, 41, 393-407.

Gunn, J. (2010). On speech and public release. Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 13, 1–42. (Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama).

Kephart, J. M., III, & Rafferty, S. F. (2009). "Yes We Can"" Rhizomic rheotrical agency in hyper-moidern campaign ecologies. Argumentation and Advocacy, 46, 6-20.

Leeman, R. W. (2012). The teleological discourse of Barack Obama. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.

Ivie, R. L. (2011). Obama at West Point: A study in ambiguity of purpose. Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 14, 727–760.

McPhail, M. L, & McPhail, R. (2011). (E)raced men: Complicity and responsibility in the rhetorics of Barack Obama. Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 14, 673–692.

Mosley-Jensen, W. (2015). Argumentative dimensions of Pathos: The Patheme in Obama's 2012 State of the Union Address. In C. H. Palczewski, Ed., Disturbing argument (pp. 273--272). Routledge, New York.

Partlow-Lefevre, S. T. (2015). Obama on the Affriormative: Sequester arguments as policy debate. In C. H. Palczewski, Ed., Disturbing argument (pp. 35-41). Routledge, New York.

Rhodes, J., & Hlavacik, M.. Imagining moral presidential speech: Barack Obama's Niebuhrian Nobel. Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 18, 471-504.

Rowland, R. C. (2011). Barack Obama and the revitalization of public reason. Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 14, 693–726.

Rowland, R. C., & Jones, J. M. (2011). One dream: Barack Obama, race, and the American Dream. Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 14, 125–154.

Rowland, R. C., & Jones, J. (2007). Recasting the American Dream and American politics: Barack Obama's keynote address to the 2004 Democratic National Convention. Quarterly Journal of Speech, 93, 425-448.

Sparks, A. (2009). Minstrel plitics or "He speaks too well:" Rhetoric, race, and resistance in the 2008 presidential campaign. Argumentation and Advocacy, 46, 21-38.

Stuckey, M. E., & O’Rourke, S. P. (2014). Civility, Democracy, and National Politics. Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 17, 711-736.

Terrill, R. E. (2011). An uneasy peace: Barack Obama’s Nobel Peace Prize lecture. Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 14, 761–780.

Vaughn, J. S., & Mercieca, J. R. (Eds.) (2014). The rhetoric of heroic expectations: Establishing the Obama presidency. College Station: Texas A&M University Press.

*