Political Argumentation in the United States Argumentation in Context (AIC) This new book series highlights the variety of argumentative practices that have become established in modern society by focusing on the study of context-dependent characteristics of argumentative discourse that vary according to the demands of the more or less institutionalized communicative activity type in which the discourse takes place. Examples of such activity types are parliamentary debates and political interviews, medical consultations and health brochures, legal annotations and judicial sentences, editorials and advertorials in newspapers, and scholarly reviews and essays. For an overview of all books published in this series, please see http://benjamins.com/catalog/aic Editors Frans van Eemeren Bart Garssen University of Amsterdam University of Amsterdam Editorial Board Mark Aakhus Eddo Rigotti Rutgers University University of Lugano Marianne Doury Sara Rubinelli CNRS Paris ILIAS, Swiss Paraplegic Research & University of Lucerne Eveline Feteris University of Amsterdam Takeshi Suzuki Meiji University G. Thomas Goodnight University of Southern California Giovanni Tuzet Bocconi University Cornelia Ilie Zayed University, Abu Dhabi David Zarefsky Northwestern University Sally Jackson University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Gábor Zemplén Budapest University of Technology and Manfred Kienpointner Economic University of Innsbrueck Volume 7 Political Argumentation in the United States Historical and contemporary studies Selected essays by David Zarefsky Political Argumentation in the United States Historical and contemporary studies Selected essays by David Zarefsky Northwestern University John Benjamins Publishing Company Amsterdam / Philadelphia TM The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of 8 the American National Standard for Information Sciences – Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ansi z39.48-1984. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Zarefsky, David. Political Argumentation in the United States : Historical and contemporary studies / Selected essays by David Zarefsky / David Zarefsky. p. cm. (Argumentation in Context, issn 1877-6884 ; v. 7) Includes bibliographical references and index. 1. Persuasion (Rhetoric)--Political aspects--United States. 2. Communication-- Political aspects--United States. 3. Rhetoric--Political aspects--United States. 4. Interviewing--United States. 5. Conversation analysis--United States. 6. Reasoning--United States. I. Title. P301.5.P47Z37 2014 320.97301’4--dc23 2014012491 isbn 978 90 272 1124 8 (Hb ; alk. paper) isbn 978 90 272 6990 4 (Eb) © 2014 – John Benjamins B.V. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, by print, photoprint, microfilm, or any other means, without written permission from the publisher. John Benjamins Publishing Co. · P.O. Box 36224 · 1020 me Amsterdam · The Netherlands John Benjamins North America · P.O. Box 27519 · Philadelphia pa 19118-0519 · usa For Beth and Danny, Marc and Emily the promise of the next generation Table of contents introduction The field of political argumentation 1 Part I. Early American political argumentation chapter 1 From “conflict” to “Constitutional question”: Transformations in early American public discourse 11 (with Victoria J. Gallagher) chapter 2 John Tyler and the rhetoric of the accidental presidency 31 chapter 3 Debating slavery by proxy: The Texas annexation controversy 51 chapter 4 Henry Clay and the election of 1844: The limits of a rhetoric of compromise 63 Part II. Abraham Lincoln’s political argumentation chapter 5 Consistency and change in Lincoln’s rhetoric about equality 85 chapter 6 “Public sentiment is everything”: Lincoln’s view of political persuasion 109 chapter 7 Lincoln and the House Divided: Launching a national political career 125 chapter 8 The Lincoln-Douglas debates revisited: The evolution of public argument 155 chapter 9 Philosophy and rhetoric in Lincoln’s First Inaugural Address 185 viii Political Argumentation in the United States Part III. Argumentation and American foreign policy chapter 10 The self-sealing rhetoric of John Foster Dulles 209 (with Frank E. Tutzauer and Carol Miller-Tutzauer) chapter 11 Foreign policy as persuasion: Lyndon Johnson and Vietnam 221 chapter 12 George W. Bush discovers rhetoric: September 20, 2001 and the U.S. response to terrorism 233 chapter 13 Making the case for war: Colin Powell at the United Nations 255 chapter 14 The U.S. and the world: The rhetorical dimensions of Obama’s foreign policy 281 Part IV. American political argumentation since the 1960s chapter 15 The Great Society as a rhetorical proposition 303 chapter 16 Lyndon Johnson redefines “equal opportunity”: The beginnings of affirmative action 323 chapter 17 Civil rights and civil conflict: Presidential communication in crisis 337 chapter 18 Martin Luther King, the American Dream, and Vietnam: A collision of rhetorical trajectories 347 (with George N. Dionisopoulos, Victoria J. Gallagher, and Steven R. Goldzwig) chapter 19 Reagan’s safety net for the truly needy: The rhetorical uses of definition 365 (with Carol Miller-Tutzauer and Frank E. Tutzauer) chapter 20 Obama’s Lincoln: Uses of the argument from historical analogy 375 Index 383 Permissions Chapter 1 originally appeared as an article in Quarterly Journal of Speech, 76: 247–261 (August, 1990). Reprinted with permission of Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group, www.tandfonline.com, and with the approval of Victoria J. Gallagher, coauthor. Chapter 2 originally appeared as a chapter in Before the Rhetorical Presidency (Martin J. Medhurst, Ed.), pp. 63–82 (College Station, TX: Texas A&M University Press, 2008). Reprinted with permission of Texas A&M University Press. Chapter 3 originally appeared as a chapter in In the Shadow of Freedom (Paul Finkelman and Donald R. Kennon, Ed.), pp. 125–137 (Athens, Ohio: Ohio Uni versity Press, 2011), © Ohio University Press. Reprinted with permission of Ohio University Press, www. ohioswallow.com. Chapter 4 originally appeared as an article in Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 6: 79–96 (Spring 2003). Reprinted with permission of Michigan State University Press. Chapter 5 originally appeared as an article in Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 1: 21–44 (Spring 1998). Reprinted with permission of Michigan State University Press. Chapter 6 originally appeared as an article in Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association, 15: 23–40 (Summer 1994). © 1994 by the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois. Reprinted with permission of University of Illinois Press. Chapter 7 originally appeared as an article in Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 13: 421–453 (Fall 2010). Reprinted with permission of Michigan State University Press. Chapter 8 originally appeared as an article in Quarterly Journal of Speech, 72: 162–184 (May 1986). Reprinted with permission of Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group, www. tandfonline.com. Chapter 9 originally appeared as an article in Philosophy & Rhetoric, 45: 165–188 (2012). Reprinted with permission of Penn State University Press. Chapters 10 and 11 have not been previously published. Chapter 10 appears here with the approval of Frank E. Tutzauer and Carol Miller-Tutzauer, coauthors. Chapter 12 originally appeared as a chapter in The Ethos of Rhetoric (Michael J. Hyde, Ed.), pp. 136–155 (Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 2004). Reprinted with permission of the University of South Carolina Press.
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