The passionate negation: The chartist movement in rhetorical perspective
- 1 April 1973
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Quarterly Journal of Speech
- Vol. 59 (2) , 196-208
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00335637309383168
Abstract
A movement can be studied rhetorically through an investigation of rhetorical imperatives, strategic indicators, patterns of advocacy and reaction, and influential relationships. The perspective which this examination of Chartism provides suggests that the unique rhetorical approach to movements may be grounded in perception and interpretation of events.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- New approaches to the study of movements: Defining movements rhetoricallyWestern Speech, 1972
- Chain of argument in the British free‐trade debatesQuarterly Journal of Speech, 1972
- Studying social movements: A rhetorical methodologyThe Speech Teacher, 1971
- The rhetoric of coercion and persuasion: The reform bill of 1832Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1970
- Requirements, problems, and strategies: A theory of persuasion for social movementsQuarterly Journal of Speech, 1970
- Piety and pragmatism: Rhetorical aspects of the early British peace movementSpeech Monographs, 1967
- The rhetorical structure of the “new left” movement: Part IQuarterly Journal of Speech, 1964
- Orator hunt at Peterloo and SmithfieldQuarterly Journal of Speech, 1962
- The rhetoric of historical movementsQuarterly Journal of Speech, 1952