Topic: Prohibition
Key Term: Progressive rhetoric
“Rhetoric of the Progressive Era” outlines the framework of effective language utilized by influential orators during the Progressive Era. This language was “fueled by a moral rhetoric that was founded on faith in the common man and optimism about the possibilities for human progress, the Progressive Era introduced a new vocabulary along with its new view of society and politics” (Magee 90). For my paper, I will be looking at the rhetorical context of the Progressive Era — specifically, “Progressive rhetoric” and how language influenced and shaped the methods of the anti and pro-Prohibition groups — movements deeply embedded in the Progressive Era. Magee argues that Progressive rhetoric was defined by a reform of not simply socio-political movement, but importantly, of language expressed in a new mannerism — “robust democratic speech and public deliberation” (90).
MLA Citation:
Magee, Malcolm. "Speaking of Progress: The Rhetoric of Reform in the Progressive Era." The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, vol. 3, no. 1, 2004, pp. 90-94.
Topic: The Politicization of Climate Change: the Modern Environmental Movement
MLA Citation:
United States Committee for the Global Atmospheric Research Program, National Research Council. Understanding Climatic Change: A Program for Action. National Academy of Sciences, Washington D.C., 1975.
Topic: Birmingham Campaign
In the book Protest by James M. Jasper, he uses
numerous examples of various protest movements and then defines the different
terminology to discuss the breadth of protests that have and can occur. He uses
a few terms that can specifically define the civil rights movement and
Birmingham Campaign in particular. Jasper discusses how “political contexts are
crucial to most social movements, affecting how they start up and what they do”
(118). The political context for the Birmingham Campaign was the fact that
black people did not have nearly as many rights as white people in the same
community, including their access to education and stores for shopping.
Citizenship movements, which include civil rights, “aim at gaining entry into
the political system, and they usually advance when they find sympathetic
elites already inside” (118). He also says, “civil rights have more to do with
the state’s coercive interference in the lives of citizens” (119). This book will
be useful in interpreting the structure of the Birmingham Campaign.
Jasper, James
M. Protest: A Cultural Introduction
to Social Movements. Malden: Polity, 2014. EBL Reader. Wiley, 15 Oct. 2014. Web.
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