Between myth and history: Enacting time in Native American protest rhetoric
- 1 May 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Quarterly Journal of Speech
- Vol. 77 (2) , 123-151
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00335639109383949
Abstract
The rhetorical effort to create a shared time can divide groups as much as unify them. For example, temporal framing plays a vital part in efforts by dominant groups to marginalize others and by the marginalized to escape this fate. Both Euramerican and Native American activist discourses construct a history of Native/Euroamerican relations, construe the relevance of this past to current conditions, and predict their ultimate triumph, but differently. The activist narrative, which enacts a “sacred” time through religious ritual, is particularly significant because it subverts not only the Euramerican narrative but many common sense notions of the nature of time itself; thus, it participates in and extends the consummatory dimension of Native American protest rhetoric.Keywords
This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- Native American rhetoric: Dancing in the shadows of the ghost danceQuarterly Journal of Speech, 1990
- The sound of women's voicesQuarterly Journal of Speech, 1989
- The controversy over President Reagan's visit to Bitburg: Strategies of definition and redefinitionQuarterly Journal of Speech, 1989
- Message in the Deodorant Bottle: Inventing TimeCritical Inquiry, 1989
- Dimensions of temporality in Lincoln's second inauguralCommunication Reports, 1988
- Ronald Reagan's “star wars” address: Mythic containment of technical reasoningQuarterly Journal of Speech, 1986
- Textual criticism: The legacy of G. P. MohrmannQuarterly Journal of Speech, 1986
- The rhetor as dialectician in “last chance for survival”Communication Monographs, 1986
- Only Time Can Tell: On the Topology of Mental Space and TimeCritical Inquiry, 1981
- Narrative TimeCritical Inquiry, 1980