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In: Pacific affairs: an international review of Asia and the Pacific, Band 5, Heft 10, S. 905
ISSN: 1715-3379
In: Pacific affairs, Band 5, Heft 10, S. 901
ISSN: 0030-851X
In: Studies in Sensory History
Sonic Persuasion: Reading Sound in the Recorded Age critically analyzes a range of sounds on vocal and musical recordings, on the radio, in film, and in cartoons to show how sounds are used to persuade in subtle ways. Greg Goodale explains how and to what effect sounds can be "read" like an aural text, demonstrating this method by examining important audio cues such as dialect, pausing, and accent in presidential recordings at the turn of the twentieth century. Goodale also shows how clocks, locomotives, and machinery are utilized in film and literature to represent frustration and anxiety about modernity, how race and other forms of identity came to be represented by sound during the interwar period, and how programming producers and governmental agencies employed sound to evoke a sense of fear in listeners. Goodale provides important links to other senses, especially the visual, to give fuller meaning to interpretations of identity, culture, and history in sound.
In: The survey. Survey graphic : magazine of social interpretation, Band 29, S. 246-247
ISSN: 0196-8777
In: Rhetoric and Public Affairs
In: Rhetoric and Public Affairs Ser
Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- I. Refiguring Realism -- Realism and Rhetoric in International Relations -- II. Rereading Realist Writers -- Henry Kissinger: Realism's Rational Actor -- Realism Masking Fear: George F. Kennan's Political Rhetoric -- Reinhold Niebuhr and the Rhetoric of Christian Realism -- E. H. Carr: Ambivalent Realist -- Martin Wight: International Relations as Realm of Persuasion -- Hans J. Morgenthau In Defense of the National Interest:On Rhetoric, Realism, and the Public Sphere -- III. Rewriting Realist Concepts -- Rethinking Sovereignty -- The Meaning of Security -- Metaphors of Prestige and Reputation in American Foreign Policy and American Realism -- Nationalism and Realist Discourses of International Relations -- The Gender of Rhetoric, Reason, and Realism -- A Reinterpretation of Realism: Genealogy, Semiology, Dromology -- IV. Rewriting Foreign Policy -- Rhetorics of Place Characteristics in High-Level U. S. Foreign Policy Making -- The Logic of Différance in International Relations: U. S. Colonization of the Philippines -- Indigenous Peoples, Marginal Sites, and the Changing Context of World Politics -- Realistic Rhetoric but not Realism: A Senatorial Conversation on Cambodia -- V. Post-Realism -- Strategic Intelligence and Discursive Realities / Francis A. Beer and Robert Hariman -- List of Contributors -- Index.
Intro -- Contents -- Preface -- Part I. Moving the Public -- 1 The Permanent Campaign: Why Does the President Go Public? -- 2 Presidential Persuasion: Does the Public Respond? Part I -- 3 Presidential Persuasion: Does the Public Respond?Part II-Ronald Reagan -- Part II The Messenger -- 4 Charisma and Personality: Does the Messenger Matter? -- 5 The Politics of Veneration: Do the People Defer? -- Part III The Message -- 6 Disseminating the Message: Can the President Focus the Public's Attention? -- 7 Framing the Message: Can the President Structure Choice? -- Part IV The Audience -- 8 Receiving the Message: Is Anyone Listening? -- 9 Accepting the Message: Can the President Overcome Predispositions? -- Part V Conclusion -- 10 Going Public in Perspective: What Should the President Do? -- Notes -- Index.
Transcription: Think it over. Advocating special sex legislation is a detriment to the cause of Woman Suffrage. EQUAL SUFFRAGE knows no sex. An ounce of persuasion precedes a pound of coercion. ; https://scholarworks.uni.edu/suffrage_images/1022/thumbnail.jpg
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Transcription: Think it over. Advocating special sex legislation is a detriment to the cause of Woman Suffrage. EQUAL SUFFRAGE knows no sex. An ounce of persuasion precedes a pound of coercion. ; https://scholarworks.uni.edu/suffrage_images/1023/thumbnail.jpg
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Transcription: Think it over. MAN with political aspirations would do well from now on to consult WOMAN. 'Tis a "wise man" who heeds a timely warning. An ounce of persuasion precedes a pound of coercion. ; https://scholarworks.uni.edu/suffrage_images/1032/thumbnail.jpg
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Transcription: Think it over. MAN with political aspirations would do well from now on to consult WOMAN. 'Tis a "wise man" who heeds a timely warning. An ounce of persuasion precedes a pound of coercion. ; https://scholarworks.uni.edu/suffrage_images/1033/thumbnail.jpg
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Transcription: Think it over. Don't consult MACHINE POLITICIANS about WOMAN SUFFRAGE-talk it over with fair minded men "who have no ax to grind." An ounce of persuasion precedes a pound of coercion. ; https://scholarworks.uni.edu/suffrage_images/1030/thumbnail.jpg
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Transcription: Think it over. Don't consult MACHINE POLITICIANS about WOMAN SUFFRAGE-talk it over with fair minded men "who have no ax to grind." An ounce of persuasion precedes a pound of coercion. ; https://scholarworks.uni.edu/suffrage_images/1031/thumbnail.jpg
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Transcription: Think it over. A fundamental principle of this government is TAXATION WITH REPRESENTATION. We are all taxpayers, both WOMAN and MAN. Hence - EQUAL SUFFRAGE. IT ADMITS OF NO ARGUMENT. An ounce of persuasion precedes a pound of coercion. ; https://scholarworks.uni.edu/suffrage_images/1020/thumbnail.jpg
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