The Rhetoric of the Urban Crisis

The Rhetoric of the Urban Crisis
Title The Rhetoric of the Urban Crisis PDF eBook
Author Gail Rotegard
Publisher
Pages 182
Release 1968
Genre
ISBN

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Distant Publics

Distant Publics
Title Distant Publics PDF eBook
Author Jennifer Rice
Publisher University of Pittsburgh Pre
Pages 242
Release 2012-08-19
Genre Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN 0822978016

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Urban sprawl is omnipresent in America and has left many citizens questioning their ability to stop it. In Distant Publics, Jenny Rice examines patterns of public discourse that have evolved in response to development in urban and suburban environments. Centering her study on Austin, Texas, Rice finds a city that has simultaneously celebrated and despised development. Rice outlines three distinct ways that the rhetoric of publics counteracts development: through injury claims, memory claims, and equivalence claims. In injury claims, rhetors frame themselves as victims in a dispute. Memory claims allow rhetors to anchor themselves to an older, deliberative space, rather than to a newly evolving one. Equivalence claims see the benefits on both sides of an issue, and here rhetors effectively become nonactors. Rice provides case studies of development disputes that place the reader in the middle of real-life controversies and evidence her theories of claims-based public rhetorics. She finds that these methods comprise the most common (though not exclusive) vernacular surrounding development and shows how each is often counterproductive to its own goals. Rice further demonstrates that these claims create a particular role or public subjectivity grounded in one's own feelings, which serves to distance publics from each other and the issues at hand. Rice argues that rhetoricians have a duty to transform current patterns of public development discourse so that all individuals may engage in matters of crisis. She articulates its sustainability as both a goal and future disciplinary challenge of rhetorical studies and offers tools and methodologies toward that end.

The New Urban Crisis

The New Urban Crisis
Title The New Urban Crisis PDF eBook
Author Richard Florida
Publisher Basic Books
Pages 334
Release 2017-04-11
Genre Social Science
ISBN 0465097782

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In recent years, the young, educated, and affluent have surged back into cities, reversing decades of suburban flight and urban decline. And yet all is not well, Richard Florida argues in The New Urban Crisis. Florida, one of the first scholars to anticipate this back-to-the-city movement in his groundbreaking The Rise of the Creative Class, demonstrates how the same forces that power the growth of the world's superstar cities also generate their vexing challenges: gentrification, unaffordability, segregation, and inequality. Meanwhile, many more cities still stagnate, and middle-class neighborhoods everywhere are disappearing. Our winner-take-all cities are just one manifestation of a profound crisis in today's urbanized knowledge economy. A bracingly original work of research and analysis, The New Urban Crisis offers a compelling diagnosis of our economic ills and a bold prescription for more inclusive cities capable of ensuring growth and prosperity for all.

Bibliography on the Urban Crisis

Bibliography on the Urban Crisis
Title Bibliography on the Urban Crisis PDF eBook
Author Jon K. Meyer
Publisher
Pages 474
Release 1969
Genre City dwellers
ISBN

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Bibliography on the Urban Crisis

Bibliography on the Urban Crisis
Title Bibliography on the Urban Crisis PDF eBook
Author National Clearinghouse for Mental Health Information (U.S.)
Publisher
Pages 172
Release 1968
Genre African Americans
ISBN

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City of Crisis

City of Crisis
Title City of Crisis PDF eBook
Author Frank Eckardt
Publisher Transcript Verlag, Roswitha Gost, Sigrid Nokel u. Dr. Karin Werner
Pages 200
Release 2015-05-15
Genre Economic history
ISBN 9783837628425

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The on-going crisis in Europe has dramatic impact on the life in many Southern European cities: Unemployment, social deprivation, poverty, political instability, severe cuts in the welfare state budgets and a wide spread feeling of despair have eroded much of the social foundation of the cities. In this book, contributors from Spain, Greece, Portugal and Italy provide an insight into the complex interference between the different aspects of the crisis. They show that the recent urban crisis is not purely a result of the budgetary problems of the nation state ("austerity urbanism") but needs to be seen as multiple contestations. It is therefore regarded in connection to the conditions of a changing nation state, cultural diversity, challenged urban planning and politics and a globalised economy.

The Modern Presidency and Crisis Rhetoric

The Modern Presidency and Crisis Rhetoric
Title The Modern Presidency and Crisis Rhetoric PDF eBook
Author Amos Kiewe
Publisher Praeger
Pages 300
Release 1994
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN

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This volume examines how presidents from Truman to Bush rhetorically approached and managed political, military, judicial, legislative, and economic crises during their presidencies. Editor Amos Kiewe assembles new essays by communications scholars who look at rhetoric initiated during national crises, and account for various rhetorical developments affected by crises, changes in presidential rhetoric, and rhetorical and situational crisis constraints. Their studies suggest similarities in rhetoric in different types of crises, and yield resources for postulating patterns of crisis rhetoric. Each chapter's author presents a crisis rhetoric case study, analyzing initial strategies and tactics, shifts in rhetorical tactics, adjustments of discourse to particular phases in the crises, and unique rhetorical approaches designed to accommodate unexpected turns of events. The contributors discuss how presidents use rhetorical inventions, flip-flops, face-saving posturing, and even silence to diffuse crises. Specific topics include Eisenhower's response to the constitutional crisis in Little Rock, Kennedy and the Berlin Wall crisis, Johnson and the Kennedy assassination, Nixon and Watergate, and Bush and the Persian Gulf Crisis. Recommended for political scientists and communication theorists.