Acknowledgments; Introduction: For Rhetorical Border Studies -- D. Robert DeChaine; I. Conceptual Orientations; 1. Borders That Travel: Matters of the Figural Border -- Kent A. Ono; 2. Bordering as Social Practice: Intersectional Identifications and Coalitional Possibilities -- Julia R. Johnson; 3. Border Interventions: The Need to Shift from a Rhetoric of Security to a Rhetoric of Militarization -- Karma R. Chávez; II. Historical Consequences; 4. A Dispensational Rhetoric in "The Mexican Question in the Southwest" -- Michelle A. Holling
Text of Note
12. Decriminalizing Illegal Immigration: Immigrants' Rights through the Documentary Lens -- Anne Teresa Demo13. The Ragpicker-Citizen -- Toby Miller; Afterword: Border Optics -- John Louis Lucaites; Suggested Readings; Works Cited; Contributors; Index
Text of Note
5. Mobilizing for National Inclusion: The Discursivity of Whiteness among Texas Mexicans' Arguments for Desegregation -- Lisa A. Flores and Mary Ann VillarrealIII. Legal Acts; 6. The Attempted Legitimation of the Vigilante Civil Border Patrols, the Militarization of the Mexican-USBorder, and the Law of Unintended Consequences -- Marouf Hasian Jr. and George F. McHendry Jr.; 7. Shot in the Back: Articulating the Ideologies of the Minutemen through a Political Trial -- Zach Justus; IV . Performative Affects
Text of Note
8. Looking "Illegal": Affect, Rhetoric, and Performativity in Arizona's Senate Bill -- Josue David Cisneros9. Love, Loss, and Immigration: Performative Reverberations between a Great-Grandmother and Great-Granddaughter -- Bernadette Marie Calafell; 10. Borders without Bodies: Affect, Paroximity, and Utopian Imaginaries through ""Lines in the Sand"" -- Dustin Bradley Goltz and Kimberlee Perez; V. Media Circuits; 11. Transborder Politics: The Embodied Call of Conscience in Traffic -- Brian L. Ott and Diane M. Keeling
0
8
8
8
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
Border Rhetorics is a collection of essays that undertakes a wide-ranging examination of the US-Mexico border as it functions in the rhetorical production of civic unity in the United States.A "border" is a powerful and versatile concept, variously invoked as the delineation of geographical territories, as a judicial marker of citizenship, and as an ideological trope for defining inclusion and exclusion. It has implications for both the empowerment and subjugation of any given populace. Both real and imagined, the border separates a zone of physical and symbolic exchange.
OTHER EDITION IN ANOTHER MEDIUM
International Standard Book Number
0817357165
TOPICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Border security-- United States.
Citizenship-- Political aspects-- United States.
Illegal aliens-- United States.
Rhetoric-- Political aspects-- United States.
Border security
Emigration and immigration-- Political aspects
Emigration and immigration-- Social aspects
Illegal aliens
Rhetoric-- Political aspects
SOCIAL SCIENCE-- Emigration & Immigration.
GEOGRAPHICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Mexican-American Border Region, Emigration and immigration, Political aspects.
Mexican-American Border Region, Emigration and immigration, Social aspects.