Assembling Global (Non)Belongings: Settler Colonial Memoryscapes and the Rhetorical Frontiers of Whiteness in the US Southwest, Christians United for Israel, and FEMEN
abstract: Scholars of rhetoric, critical intercultural communication, and gender studies have offered productive analyses of how discourses of terror and national security are rooted in racialized juxtapositions between "East" against "West, or "us" and "them." Les...
Other Authors: | Chevrette, Roberta (Author) |
---|---|
Format: | Doctoral Thesis |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2016
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.40192 |
Similar Items
-
A Post-Colonial Ontology? Tim Winton’s <i>The Riders</i> and the Challenge to White-Settler Identity
by: Lyn McCredden
Published: (2020-08-01) -
“I Dreamed of Snow Today”: Impediments to Settler Belonging in Northern Queensland as Depicted in a Selection of Recent Fiction
by: Jacqueline Stockdale
Published: (2010-12-01) -
The Times of Settler Colonialism
by: Melissa Gniadek
Published: (2017-05-01) -
Ongoing Colonial Violence in Settler States
by: Beenash Jafri
Published: (2017-05-01) -
The rhetoric of invasive species: Managing belonging on a novel planet
by: Alison E. Vogelaar
Published: (2021-01-01)