Southern Illinois University Press
Rhetorical Listening: Identification, Gender, Whiteness
Rhetorical Listening: Identification, Gender, Whiteness
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Offering an approach grounded in classical rhetorical theory, Heideggerian theory, feminist theory, and critical race theory, Ratcliffe presents rhetorical listening as an invention tactic that engages spoken and written texts and supplements reading, writing, speaking, and silence as a rhetorical art.
Theorizing intersections of gender and whiteness, Rhetorical Listening examines how whiteness functions as an "invisible" racial category and provides disciplinary and cultural reasons for the displacement of listening and for the use of rhetorical listening as a code of cross-cultural conduct. Ratcliffe presents rhetorical listening in terms of cultural logics, stances, and dominant interpretive tropes. She highlights the modern identification theory of Kenneth Burke and the postmodern identification and disidentification theory of Diana Fuss and presents non-identification as a more productive site for rhetorical listening.
Rhetorical Listening offers a mode of historiography that shifts emphasis from origins to usage, traces the U.S. trope of whiteness to expose its dysfunctions, and demonstrates how dysfunctions of whiteness have restricted agency throughout history. The volume extends beyond the feminist rhetorical project, contributing substantially to rhetorical history and theory.
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