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Writing Political Theory Writing Political Theory
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From Resistance to Reception of Rhetoric in Political Theory: The Case of Hobbes’s Leviathan From Resistance to Reception of Rhetoric in Political Theory: The Case of Hobbes’s Leviathan
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On Writtenness On Writtenness
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References References
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Notes Notes
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On the Writtenness of Political Theory
Get accessProfessor of Rhetoric and Public Culture and Director, Center for Global Culture and Communication, Northwestern University
Associate Professor of Political Science, University of California, Irvine
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Published:23 January 2024
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Abstract
This volume of essays brings together a group of distinguished and emerging scholars in political theory, philosophy, communication, literature, history, and other areas of the humanities who share an interest in the rhetorical character of political thought and discourse. The essays focus on a wide range of issues regarding the pivotal function of rhetoric in the history of political thought and contemporary political theory. These include, but are not limited to, questions about the performative and constitutive dimensions of political language; the role of affect and emotion in political life; the relationship between logic and style in political argument; the work of persuasion in politics; the play of contingency, experience, and prudence in political judgment; and the rhetorical structure of political texts as evinced in the unavoidable gap between what they say and what they do.
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