Everyday White Supremacy: Fundamental Rhetorical Strategies in Racist Discourse

abstract: This dissertation examines racism as discourse and works to explicate, through the examination of historical and contemporary texts, the ways in which racism is maintained and perpetuated in the United States. The project critiques the use of generalized categories, such as alt-right, as a...

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Other Authors: Ladenburg, Kenneth (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.51643
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-516432019-02-02T03:01:10Z Everyday White Supremacy: Fundamental Rhetorical Strategies in Racist Discourse abstract: This dissertation examines racism as discourse and works to explicate, through the examination of historical and contemporary texts, the ways in which racism is maintained and perpetuated in the United States. The project critiques the use of generalized categories, such as alt-right, as an anti-racist tactic and notes that these rigid categories are problematic because they cannot account for the dynamic and rapidly changing nature of racist discourse. The dissertation argues that racist discourse that is categorized as mainstream and fringe both rely upon a fundamental framework of rhetorical strategies that have long been ingrained into the social and political fabric of the United States and are based on the foundational system of white supremacy. The project discusses two of these strategies—projection and stasis diffusion—in case studies that examine their use in texts throughout American history and in mainstream and fringe media. “Everyday White Supremacy” contributes to important academic and societal conversations concerning the how the academy and the public use category to address racism, anti-racist practices, and rhetorical understandings of racist discourse. The project argues for shift away from the use of categorical naming to identify racist groups and people towards the practice of identifying racism as discourse, particularly through its rhetorical strategies. This paradigm shift would encourage scholars, and the general population, to identify racism via the processes by which it is propagated rather than its existence within a person or group Dissertation/Thesis Ladenburg, Kenneth (Author) Miller, Keith (Advisor) Ore, Ersula (Committee member) Bebout, Lee (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Rhetoric Discourse Racism Rhetoric eng 166 pages Doctoral Dissertation English 2018 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.51643 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2018
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Rhetoric
Discourse
Racism
Rhetoric
spellingShingle Rhetoric
Discourse
Racism
Rhetoric
Everyday White Supremacy: Fundamental Rhetorical Strategies in Racist Discourse
description abstract: This dissertation examines racism as discourse and works to explicate, through the examination of historical and contemporary texts, the ways in which racism is maintained and perpetuated in the United States. The project critiques the use of generalized categories, such as alt-right, as an anti-racist tactic and notes that these rigid categories are problematic because they cannot account for the dynamic and rapidly changing nature of racist discourse. The dissertation argues that racist discourse that is categorized as mainstream and fringe both rely upon a fundamental framework of rhetorical strategies that have long been ingrained into the social and political fabric of the United States and are based on the foundational system of white supremacy. The project discusses two of these strategies—projection and stasis diffusion—in case studies that examine their use in texts throughout American history and in mainstream and fringe media. “Everyday White Supremacy” contributes to important academic and societal conversations concerning the how the academy and the public use category to address racism, anti-racist practices, and rhetorical understandings of racist discourse. The project argues for shift away from the use of categorical naming to identify racist groups and people towards the practice of identifying racism as discourse, particularly through its rhetorical strategies. This paradigm shift would encourage scholars, and the general population, to identify racism via the processes by which it is propagated rather than its existence within a person or group === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation English 2018
author2 Ladenburg, Kenneth (Author)
author_facet Ladenburg, Kenneth (Author)
title Everyday White Supremacy: Fundamental Rhetorical Strategies in Racist Discourse
title_short Everyday White Supremacy: Fundamental Rhetorical Strategies in Racist Discourse
title_full Everyday White Supremacy: Fundamental Rhetorical Strategies in Racist Discourse
title_fullStr Everyday White Supremacy: Fundamental Rhetorical Strategies in Racist Discourse
title_full_unstemmed Everyday White Supremacy: Fundamental Rhetorical Strategies in Racist Discourse
title_sort everyday white supremacy: fundamental rhetorical strategies in racist discourse
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.51643
_version_ 1718970030392082432