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Episodes in the Rhetoric of Government-Indian Relations
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Janice Schuetz
ISBN: 0-275-97613-0
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-97613-2
339 pages
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 5/30/2002
List Price: $103.95 (UK Sterling Price: £71.95)
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Also Available: Ebook
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects:
Description: Scholarly considerations of the relationship between the United States government and Native Americans have largely ignored the rhetoric utilized by both in the course of their ongoing conflicts. This fascinating new study concentrates on the persuasive and public strategies of both government and Indian leaders, focusing on the written and oral records of several key episodes in American history. This approach, which author Janice Schuetz calls rhetorical ancestry reveals the ways in which government and Indian spokespersons have constituted and defined issues; created, prolonged, and managed conflict; and silenced and empowered each other's voices.

Chronicling the emergence of government and Indian leaders who were forced to deal with conflicts in new ways, each chapter makes use of historical evidence to draw inferences about the rhetorical features of the discourse and its effects. Both verbal and nonverbal rhetoric—including treaties, letters, oral histories, speeches, ritual performances, media reports, biographical narratives, protests and demonstrations, political hearings, and legal proceedings—are represented here, illuminating a legacy that evolved in the personal and political language of its participants.
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction
    Dramatistic Analysis and the Puget Sound War, 1854-1858
    Rhetorical Genres and the Sioux Uprising, 1862
    Political Spectacles and the Sand Creek Massacre, 1864-1865
    Colonial Discourse and the Navajo Internment, 1846-1868
    Identity Transformation and the Journeys of Fanny Kelly and Chief Red Cloud, 1864-1870
    Rituals of Redress and Zuni Witch Cases, 1880-1900
    Resistance, Advocacy, and the Southern Cheyenne and Arapaho, 1868-1961
    Legislative Movements and the Return of Blue Lake, 1922-1970
    Ethnography and Puget Sound Indian Fishing Rights, 1973-1974
    Lamentation and Agitation at Wounded Knee, 1890 and 1973
    Indian Alcohol Abuse, Narrative Reasoning, and the Gordon House Case, 1992-2000
    Bibliography
    Index
About the Author: JANICE SCHUETZ is a Professor of Communication at the University of New Mexico. She is the author of The Logic of Women on Trial and more than 60 articles and book chapters, and co-author of Communication and Litigation, The O.J. Simpson Trials, and Perspectives on Argumentation.
LCC Class: 323
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