Ronald Reagan: Rhetorical Sources

Sources

Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and MuseArchives. Web. 10 Jun 2014.

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Blankenship, J. (1986). Toward a developmental model of form: ABC's treatment of the Reagan inaugural and the Iranian hostage release as oxymoron. In H. W. Simons & A. A. Aghazarian. Form, Genre, and the study of political discourse (pp.246-277). Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press.

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Bjork, R. S. (1988). Reagan and the Nuclear Freeze: "Star Wars" as a rhetorical strategy. Journal of the American Forensic Association, 24, 181-192.

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Chase, K. R. (1985). Reagan's first State of the Union Address: A case study in language, argument and culture. In J. R. Cox, M. O. Sillars, & G. B Walker (Eds.), Argument and social practice: Proceedings of the Fourth SCA/AFA Conference on Argumentation (pp. 289-309). Annandale, VA: Speech Communication Association.

Chester, E. W. (1981). Shadow or substance?: Critiquing Reagan's inaugural address. Presidential Studies Quarterly, 11, 172-176.

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Conti, D. B. (1995). President Reagan's trade rhetoric: Lessons for the 1990s. Presidential Studies Quarterly, 25, 91-108.

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Crable, Richard E., and Steven L. Vibbert. "Argumentative Stance and Political Faith Healing: 'The Dream Will Come True." Quarterly Journal of Speech 69 (1983): 290-301.

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Dowling, R. E., & Ginder, G. A. (1995). An ethical appraisal of Ronald Reagan's justification in the invasion of Grenada. In E. Schiappa (Ed.), Warranting assent: Case studies in argument evaluation (pp. 103-124). Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.

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Enholm, D. K., & Gustainis, J. J. (1987). Ronald Reagan and the mixed forms of argument. Journal of The American Forensics Association, 24, 48-56.

Erickson, K. V. (1985). Reagan Speaks: The making of an American myth. New York: New York University Press.

Fine, Marlene G., and Leslie K. Davis. "The 1980 Republican Primary Debates: The Transformation of Actor to Scene." Quarterly Journal of Speech 69 (1983): 290-301.

Fischer, B. A. (1997). Toeing the hardline? The Reagan administration and the ending of the cold war. Political Science Quarterly, 112, 477-496.

Fisher, Walter R. "Romantic Democracy, Ronald Reagan, and Presidential Heroes." Western Journal of Communication 46 (1982): 299-301.

Fisher, W. R. (1987). Narrativity and politics: The case of Ronald Reagan. In W. R. Fisher, Human Communication as narration: Toward a philosophy of reason, value, and action (Chapter 7, pp. 143-157). Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.

Foot, J. S. (1984). Reagan on Radio. In R. N. Bostrom (Ed.), Communication Yearbook 8 (pp. 692-706). Beverly Hills, CA: Sage.

Friedenberg, R. V. (1988). Elie Wiesel vs. president Ronald Reagan: The visit to Bitburg. In H. R. Ryan (Ed.), Oratorical Encounters: Selected studies and sources of Twentieth-century political accusations and apologies (pp. 267-279). Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.

Garlos, R., & Miroff, B. (1983),. Watching Rondal Reagan: Viewers' reactions to the president on television, Congress and the Presidency, 10, 25-46.

Gilboa, E. (1990). Effects of televised presidential addresses on public opinion: President Reagan and terrorism in the Middle East. Presidential Studies Quarterly, 20, 43-54.Gold, Ellen Reid. "Ronald Reagan and the Oral Tradition." Central States Speech Journal 39 (1988): 159-176.

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Goodnight, G. T. (2002). Ronald Reagan and the American dream: A study in rhetoric out of time. In L. G. Dorsey (Ed.), The presidency and rhetorical leadership (pp. 200-230). College Station, TX: Texas A&M University Press.

Goodnight, G. Thomas. "Ronald Reagan's Re-formulation of the Rhetoric of War: Analysis of the 'Zero Option,' 'Evil Empire,' and 'Star Wars' Addresses." Quarterly Journal of Speech 72 (1986): 390-414.

Gouran, Dennis S., Randy Y. Hirokawa, and Amy E. Martz. "A Critical Analysis of Factors Related to Decisional Processes Involved in the Challenger Disaster." Central States Speech Journal 37 (1986): 119-135.

Greenstein, F. I. (1983).Reagan and the lore of the modern presidency: What have we learned? In The Reagan presidency: An early Assessment, Ed R. I. Greenstein, Johns Hopkins Univ Press.

Gronbeck, Bruce. "Ronald Reagan's Enactment of the Presidency in His 1981 Inaugural Address." Form, Genre, and the Study of Political Discourse. Ed. Herbert Simons and Aram Aghazarian. Columbia: Univ. of South Carolina Press, 1986. 226-245.

Gustainis, J. J. (1988, November). There he goes again: Ronald Reagan's use of humor in debates against Carter and Mondale. Paper presented at the meeting of the Speech Communication Association. New Orleans, LA.

Hall, W. C. (2002). The invention of 'Quantifiably safe rhetoric': Richard Wirthlin and Ronald Reagan's instrumental use of public opinion research in Presidential discourse. Western Journal of Communication, 66, 319-346.

Han, L. C. (2006). New Strategies for an Old Medium: The Weekly Radio Addresses of Reagan and Clinton. Congress & the Presidency, 33, 25-45.

Hankins, Sarah Russell. "Archetypal Alloy: Reagan's Rhetorical Image." Central States Speech Journal 34 (1983): 33-43.

Hanska, Jan. Reagan’s Mythical America: Storytelling as Political Leadership.New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012. Print.

Hart, R. P. (1987). The sound of leadership: Presidential communication in the modern age. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Hart, Roderick P. "Of Genre, Computers, and the Reagan Inaugural." Form, Genre, and the Study of Political Discourse. Ed. Herbert Simons and Aram Aghazarian. Columbia: Univ. of South Carolina Press, 1986. 278-300.

Hawdon, J. E. (2004). The role of presidential rhetoric in the creation of a moral panic: Reagan, Bush, and the War on Drugs. Deviant Behavior, 22, 419-445.

Heidt, S. J. (2013). Presidential rhetoric, metaphor, and the emergence of the democracy promotion industry. Southern Communication Journal, 78, 233-255.

Heisey, D. R. (1986). Reagan and Mitterrand respond to international crisis: Creating versus transcending appearances. Western Journal of Speech Communication, 50, 325-335.

Heisey, D. R. (1988). Presidents Ronald Reagan's apologia on the Iran-Contra affair. In H. R. Ryan (Ed.), Oratorical Encounters: Selected studies and sources of Twentieth-century political accusations and apologies (pp. 281-306). Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.

Hocker, J. R. (1986). Ronald Reagan's ‘Star Wars’ address: Mythic containment of technical reasoning. Quarterly Journal of Speech, 72, 415-433.

Holmes, Alison R. "Ronald Reagan: conviction politics and the Transatlantic Relationship." Journal of Transatlantic Studies 8 (2010): 257-67. America: History & Life.

Hoover, J. D. (1994). Ronald Reagan's failure to secure contra-aid: A post-Vietnam shift in foreign policy rhetoric. Presidential Studies Quarterly, 24, 531-542.

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Houge, A. (2012). Stumping God: Reagan, Carter, and the Invention of a Political Faith. Waco, TX: Baylor University Press.

Howell, B. (2008). Unconventional "Exceptionalism": Reagan's Modified 'American Exceptionalism' in His Rhetoric of Public Diplomacy at the United Nations General Assembly, 1982-1988. Conference Papers — National Communication Association

Howell, B. W. (2003). Ronald Reagan's address at Moscow State University: A rhetoric of conciliation and subversion. Southern Communication Journal, 68, 107-120.

Ingold, B. A., & Windt, T. O. (1984). Trying to "stay the course": President Reagan's rhetoric during the 1982 election. Presidential Studies Quarterly, 14, 87-97.

Ivie, Robert L. "Speaking "Common Sense" About the Soviet Threat: Reagan's Rhetorical Stance." Western Journal of Communication 48 (1984): 39-50.

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