Confronting Toxic Rhetoric contributes to the extant scholarship on toxic rhetoric, specifically the negative and extreme political discourse surrounding the Trump years of campaigning, rallying, tweeting, holding office, and the ongoing culture war in the US (Duffy, 2020). Toxic rhetoric challenged the foundational purposes of teaching writing and rhetoric, such as ethical argumentation and critical thinking. Teachers’ narratives, case studies, and reflections bring to light the ruptures, resistance, and resilience of teaching amid the extreme polarization of partisan politics, distrust of science, and increased hate speech, among other issues associated with toxic rhetoric.
Readers will learn from teachers who were challenged to cope with toxic rhetoric, using both rhetorical and extra-disciplinary lenses. Their experiences present a vulnerable yet resolved expression of coping, activism, and belief in the future of rhetoric and democracy.
""Toxic rhetoric is the proverbial fly in the soup of our political and public discourse, poisoning our politics, and by extension, our classrooms. Confronting Toxic Rhetoric takes up the arduous task of treating the contamination in our classrooms while encouraging us to advance the work of decontamination in our broader rhetorical ecosystems.""
—Ryan Skinnell, Editor of Faking the News: What Rhetoric Can Teach Us About Donald J. Trump
Edited by:
Jamie White-Farnham,
Cathryn Molloy,
Bryna Siegel Finer
Imprint: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
Country of Publication: Switzerland
Edition: New edition
Volume: 25
Dimensions:
Height: 229mm,
Width: 152mm,
Weight: 369g
ISBN: 9783034353038
ISBN 10: 3034353030
Series: Studies in Composition and Rhetoric
Pages: 232
Publication Date: 24 December 2024
Audience:
Professional and scholarly
,
Undergraduate
Format: Paperback
Publisher's Status: Active
Acknowledgments – Jamie White-Farnham: Confronting Toxic Rhetoric Prelude: Origin Stories of Toxic Rhetoric – Jamie White-Farnham/Cathryn Molloy/BrynaSiegel Finer: Introduction – Whitney Jordan Adams: Site of Contention: Rhetorics of/and Stone Mountain, Georgia – Craig A. Meyer: When Two Sides Are Too Many: Using Fairness in Unfair Ways – MatthewBoedy: Taking on Toxic Rhetoric in the Classroom – Liping Yang: From ""Kung Flu"" to #StopAAPIHate: Confronting Toxic Anti-AAPI Rhetoric through Contemporary Activism and Digital Literacy – Sarah Lonelodge: Responding in Real Time: A Course in Rhetoric, Propaganda, Demagoguery, and Misinformation – MirandaL. Egger: Social, Digital Annotation as a Tool for the Future of Democratic Discourse – Bruce Bowles Jr.: ""The Action is on You!"": Examining When and Why to Engage—or not Engage—Rhetorically – Charles McMartin: Teaching Toward Coalitions: Combating the Toxic Rhetoric Around Critical Race Theory and Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion – Sarah M. Shea: The Elephant in the Room: On Responding to Potential Toxic Rhetoric in Tutoring Sessions – Daniel Cole: Detoxifying Debate: Confluences of Composition and Conflict Resolution – Postscript: (Re)Calling the Character of a Career: A Letter of Thanks to John Duffy by Rachel Ketai – Notes on Contributors – Index.
Jamie White-Farnham is Professor in the Writing Program and Director of Teaching, Learning and Technology at the University of Wisconsin-Superior. Her research on feminist and material rhetorics, women’s health rhetorics, and antiracist rhetorics can be found in College English, Rhetoric Review, Computers & Compositions, among others. She is the co-editor of Writing Program Architecture and Women’s Health Advocacy: Rhetorical Ingenuity for the 21st Century and co-author of Patients Making Meaning: Theorizing Sources of Information and Forms of Support in Women’s Health (2023). Cathryn Molloy is Professor of Writing Studies in the University of Delaware’s Department of English. She is co-editor of the Rhetoric of Health and Medicine journal as well as co-editor of the books Strategic Interventions in Mental Health Rhetoric, and Women’s Health Advocacy: Rhetorical Ingenuity for the 21st Century. She is the author of Rhetorical Ethos in Health and Medicine: Patient Credibility, Stigma, and Misdiagnosis (2020) and co-author of Patients Making Meaning: Theorizing Sources of Information and Forms of Support in Women’s Health (2023). Bryna Siegel Finer is Professor of English and Director of Undergraduate Writing Programs at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. She is associate editor of the Rhetoric of Health & Medicine journal as well as co-editor of the Writing Spaces book series. Her research focuses primarily on women’s health rhetorics and writing program administration and has been published in Rhetoric of Health & Medicine, Rhetoric Review, Teaching English in the Two Year College, Journal of Writing Assessment, and elsewhere. She is the co-editor of Writing Program Architecture and Women’s Health Advocacy: Rhetorical Ingenuity for the 21st Century, and co-author of Patients Making Meaning: Theorizing Sources of Information and Forms of Support in Women’s Health.