Routledge Reader of African American Rhetoric
by
English

About The Book

<p>The Routledge Reader of African American Rhetoric is a comprehensive compendium of primary texts that is designed for use by students, teachers, and scholars of rhetoric and for the general public interested in the history of African American communication. The volume and its companion website include dialogues, creative works, essays, folklore, music, interviews, news stories, raps, videos, and speeches that are performed or written by African Americans. Both the book as a whole and the various selections in it speak directly to the artistic, cultural, economic, gendered, social, and political condition of African Americans from the enslavement period in America to the present, as well as to the Black Diaspora.</p> <p>Part I: African American Rhetoric—Definitions and Understanding </p><p>Introduction: African American Rhetoric: What It Be, What It Do </p><p>Volume Editors: Vershawn Ashanti Young and Michelle Bachelor Robinson</p><p>Section 1. African American Rhetorical theory </p><p>Edited by Vershawn Ashanti Young and Michelle Bachelor Robinson</p><p>Part II: The Blackest Hours—Origins and Histories of African American Rhetoric</p><p>Introduction: "Coming Out of the Dark": The Beginnings of African American Rhetoric </p><p>Edited and with an Introduction by Michelle Bachelor Robinson</p><p>Section 2. Nobody Knows Our Name: African Orature in the American Diaspora</p><p>Edited and with an Introduction by Kermit E. Campbell</p><p>Section 3. Religion and Spirituality/Transportations and Transformations of Spirituality and Identity in the New World</p><p>Edited and with an Introduction by Kameelah Martin and Elizabeth West</p><p>Section 4. Language, Literacy, and Education</p><p>Edited and with an Introduction by Valerie Kinloch and Donja Thomas</p><p>Section 5. Black Presence: African American Political Rhetoric </p><p>Edited and with an Introduction by Michelle Bachelor Robinson</p><p>Part III: Discourses On Black Bodies</p><p>Introduction: Genders and Sexualities </p><p>Vershawn Ashanti Young</p><p>Section 6. Race Women and Black Feminisms </p><p>Edited and with an Introduction by Joy James</p><p>Section 7. Motions of Manhood</p><p>Edited and with an Introduction by Vershawn Ashanti Young</p><p>Section 8. the Quare of Queer</p><p>Edited and with an Introduction by Jeffrey McCune</p><p>Part IV: The New Blackness: Multiple Cultures, Multiple Modes</p><p>Introductions:</p><p>Courageous Rhetoric: Caribbean Foundations, New Media, and Black Aesthetics </p><p>Vershawn Ashanti Young</p><p>Everyday Rhetoric: Rhetoric Everyday</p><p>Michelle Bachelor Robinson</p><p>Section 9. Caribbean Thought and Its Critique of Subjugation</p><p>Edited and with an Introduction by Aaron Kamugisha and Yanique Hume</p><p>Section 10. Black Technocultural Expressivity</p><p>Edited and with an Introduction by Dara N. Byrne</p><p>Section 11. Beat Rebels <i>Corrupting Youth </i>Against Babylon</p><p>Edited and with an Introduction by Greg Thomas</p><p>Section 12. Black Arts: Black Argument</p><p>Edited and with an Introduction by Michelle Bachelor Robinson</p>
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