Trained capacities: John Dewey, rhetoric, and democratic practice
In: Studies in rhetoric/communication
Dewey and democratic practice :science, pragmatism, religion.Dewey on science, deliberation, and the sociology of rhetoric /William Keith and Robert Danisch --John Dewey, Kenneth Burke, and the role of orientation in rhetoric /Scott R. Stroud --Minister of democracy :John Dewey, religious rhetoric, and the great community /Paul Stob --Dewey and his interlocutors :Thomas Jefferson, Jane Addams, W.E.B. Du Bois, Walter Lippmann, James Baldwin.Dewey on Jefferson :reiterating democratic faith in times of war /Jeremy Engels --John Dewey and Jane Addams debate war /Louise W. Knight --John Dewey, W.E.B. Du Bois, and a rhetoric of education /Keith Gilyard --Walter Lippmann, the indispensable opposition /Jean Goodwin --"All safety is an illusion" :John Dewey, James Baldwin, and the democratic practice of public critique /Walton Muyumba --Dewey as teacher of rhetoric.Rhetoric and Dewey's experimental pedagogy /Nathan Crick --The art of the inartistic, in publics digital or otherwise /Brian Jackson, Meridith Reed, and Jeff Swift --Dewey's progressive pedagogy for rhetorical instruction :teaching argument in a nonfoundational framework /Donald C. Jones --Afterword:the possibilities for Dewey amid the angst of paradigm change /Gerard A. Hauser.