The Revolutionary Rhetoric of Hamilton explores how the musical confronts conventional conceptions of American history, racial equity, and political power. Scholars of theatre studies, media studies, and communication studies will find this book particularly useful.
The Revolutionary Rhetoric of Hamilton explores how the musical confronts conventional conceptions of American history, racial equity, and political power. Scholars of theatre studies, media studies, and communication studies will find this book particularly useful.
Luke Winslow is assistant professor of rhetorical studies in the Department of Communication at Baylor University. Nancy J. Legge is professor in the Department of Communication, Media, and Persuasion at Idaho State University. Jacob Justice is assistant professor of speech communication and the director of forensics in the Department of Writing and Rhetoric at the University of Mississippi.
Inhaltsangabe
Contents Acknowledgments Introduction: Turning the World Upside Down Nancy J. Legge, Jacob Justice, and Luke Winslow Section I: Revelations About History 1"If You Had to Choose": Hamilton, Public Memory, and the Hamilton-Jefferson Rivalry Talya Peri Slaw and Jacob Justice 2Washington Says Good-bye: Examining 'One Last Time' through Public Memory Jessica L. Gehrke 3The Rhetorical Significance of John Laurens in Hamilton: An American Musical Nancy J. Legge 4Da Da Dada Da: The Discourse of the Mad Monarch Sarah Mayberry Scott Section II: Revelations About Race 5 Casting as a Rhetorical Act: Color-Purposeful Casting and Hamilton's Anti-White Casting Call Ailea G. Merriam-Pigg 6 Hamilton's Revolutionary Aesthetic: Race, Hip hop, and the American Style Luke Winslow and Jonathan Veal 7 Hamilton, Social Revolution, and the Black Lives Matter Movement Caleb George Hubbard Section III: Revelations About Socio-Political Issues 8 Immigrants: Getting the Job Done Then and Now Judith P. Ro
Contents Acknowledgments Introduction: Turning the World Upside Down Nancy J. Legge, Jacob Justice, and Luke Winslow Section I: Revelations About History 1"If You Had to Choose": Hamilton, Public Memory, and the Hamilton-Jefferson Rivalry Talya Peri Slaw and Jacob Justice 2Washington Says Good-bye: Examining 'One Last Time' through Public Memory Jessica L. Gehrke 3The Rhetorical Significance of John Laurens in Hamilton: An American Musical Nancy J. Legge 4Da Da Dada Da: The Discourse of the Mad Monarch Sarah Mayberry Scott Section II: Revelations About Race 5 Casting as a Rhetorical Act: Color-Purposeful Casting and Hamilton's Anti-White Casting Call Ailea G. Merriam-Pigg 6 Hamilton's Revolutionary Aesthetic: Race, Hip hop, and the American Style Luke Winslow and Jonathan Veal 7 Hamilton, Social Revolution, and the Black Lives Matter Movement Caleb George Hubbard Section III: Revelations About Socio-Political Issues 8 Immigrants: Getting the Job Done Then and Now Judith P. Ro
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