Supersession on Rhetorical Citizenship

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearchpeer-review

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Supersession on Rhetorical Citizenship. / Villadsen, Lisa Storm.

2016. Abstract from Rhetoric Society of America, Atlanta, Georgia, United States.

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Villadsen, LS 2016, 'Supersession on Rhetorical Citizenship', Rhetoric Society of America, Atlanta, Georgia, United States, 20/05/2016 - 23/05/2016.

APA

Villadsen, L. S. (2016). Supersession on Rhetorical Citizenship. Abstract from Rhetoric Society of America, Atlanta, Georgia, United States.

Vancouver

Villadsen LS. Supersession on Rhetorical Citizenship. 2016. Abstract from Rhetoric Society of America, Atlanta, Georgia, United States.

Author

Villadsen, Lisa Storm. / Supersession on Rhetorical Citizenship. Abstract from Rhetoric Society of America, Atlanta, Georgia, United States.

Bibtex

@conference{4a83500254ea415c980305d4f455f1f4,
title = "Supersession on Rhetorical Citizenship",
abstract = "Rhetoric is at the heart of citizenship. Rhetoric is key when citizenship is debated and performed. Rhetoric is key to changes in notions of citizenship. This panel features theorists, critics and educators from the fields of English, Communication Studies, Political Theory, and Education who discuss promises and problems inherent in notions and practices of rhetorical citizenship as it is conceived, practiced and problematized in various settings in North America and Europe. The panelists will approach the topic from theoretical angles concerned with policy-making, public opinion formation, dialogue across disagreement, and ethics. They will situate their comments around communicative practices and habits such as coordination, collaboration and cooperation as well as framing, priming, agenda setting. Further, the notion of rhetorical citizenship will be chronicled, exemplified and complicated via case studies of non-citizen refugees seeking asylum, discursive responses to public violence across time, and performative invocations of citizenship in public health controversies. Organizer: Lisa Villadsen Confirmed presenters, in alphabetical order: Robert Asen, Professor of Rhetoric, Politics, and Culture, Communication Arts, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA Jeffrey A. Bennett, Associate Professor, Communication Studies, College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, University of Iowa, USA Simone Chambers, Professor, Political Science, Director of Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto, Canada Robert Danisch, Associate Professor, Drama and Speech Communication, University of Waterloo, Canada Rosa Eberly, Associate Professor, Communication Arts and Sciences, and English, Penn State University, USA David Kerr, Consultant Director of Education at the NGO Citizenship Foundation in London, Senior Teaching Fellow at the University of Bristol and Visiting Professor in Citizenship Education at Birkbeck College, University of London, UK Christian Kock, Professor of Rhetoric, Dept. of Media, Cognition and Communication, University of Copenhagen, Denmark Lisa Villadsen, Associate Professor of Rhetoric, Dept. of Media, Cognition and Communication, University of Copenhagen, Denmark Alessandra Beasley von Burg, Associate Professor, Department of Communication, Wake Forest University, USA ",
author = "Villadsen, {Lisa Storm}",
note = "Panelet accepteret d. 1. april 2015; null ; Conference date: 20-05-2016 Through 23-05-2016",
year = "2016",
language = "English",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Supersession on Rhetorical Citizenship

AU - Villadsen, Lisa Storm

N1 - Conference code: 17

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Rhetoric is at the heart of citizenship. Rhetoric is key when citizenship is debated and performed. Rhetoric is key to changes in notions of citizenship. This panel features theorists, critics and educators from the fields of English, Communication Studies, Political Theory, and Education who discuss promises and problems inherent in notions and practices of rhetorical citizenship as it is conceived, practiced and problematized in various settings in North America and Europe. The panelists will approach the topic from theoretical angles concerned with policy-making, public opinion formation, dialogue across disagreement, and ethics. They will situate their comments around communicative practices and habits such as coordination, collaboration and cooperation as well as framing, priming, agenda setting. Further, the notion of rhetorical citizenship will be chronicled, exemplified and complicated via case studies of non-citizen refugees seeking asylum, discursive responses to public violence across time, and performative invocations of citizenship in public health controversies. Organizer: Lisa Villadsen Confirmed presenters, in alphabetical order: Robert Asen, Professor of Rhetoric, Politics, and Culture, Communication Arts, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA Jeffrey A. Bennett, Associate Professor, Communication Studies, College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, University of Iowa, USA Simone Chambers, Professor, Political Science, Director of Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto, Canada Robert Danisch, Associate Professor, Drama and Speech Communication, University of Waterloo, Canada Rosa Eberly, Associate Professor, Communication Arts and Sciences, and English, Penn State University, USA David Kerr, Consultant Director of Education at the NGO Citizenship Foundation in London, Senior Teaching Fellow at the University of Bristol and Visiting Professor in Citizenship Education at Birkbeck College, University of London, UK Christian Kock, Professor of Rhetoric, Dept. of Media, Cognition and Communication, University of Copenhagen, Denmark Lisa Villadsen, Associate Professor of Rhetoric, Dept. of Media, Cognition and Communication, University of Copenhagen, Denmark Alessandra Beasley von Burg, Associate Professor, Department of Communication, Wake Forest University, USA

AB - Rhetoric is at the heart of citizenship. Rhetoric is key when citizenship is debated and performed. Rhetoric is key to changes in notions of citizenship. This panel features theorists, critics and educators from the fields of English, Communication Studies, Political Theory, and Education who discuss promises and problems inherent in notions and practices of rhetorical citizenship as it is conceived, practiced and problematized in various settings in North America and Europe. The panelists will approach the topic from theoretical angles concerned with policy-making, public opinion formation, dialogue across disagreement, and ethics. They will situate their comments around communicative practices and habits such as coordination, collaboration and cooperation as well as framing, priming, agenda setting. Further, the notion of rhetorical citizenship will be chronicled, exemplified and complicated via case studies of non-citizen refugees seeking asylum, discursive responses to public violence across time, and performative invocations of citizenship in public health controversies. Organizer: Lisa Villadsen Confirmed presenters, in alphabetical order: Robert Asen, Professor of Rhetoric, Politics, and Culture, Communication Arts, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA Jeffrey A. Bennett, Associate Professor, Communication Studies, College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, University of Iowa, USA Simone Chambers, Professor, Political Science, Director of Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto, Canada Robert Danisch, Associate Professor, Drama and Speech Communication, University of Waterloo, Canada Rosa Eberly, Associate Professor, Communication Arts and Sciences, and English, Penn State University, USA David Kerr, Consultant Director of Education at the NGO Citizenship Foundation in London, Senior Teaching Fellow at the University of Bristol and Visiting Professor in Citizenship Education at Birkbeck College, University of London, UK Christian Kock, Professor of Rhetoric, Dept. of Media, Cognition and Communication, University of Copenhagen, Denmark Lisa Villadsen, Associate Professor of Rhetoric, Dept. of Media, Cognition and Communication, University of Copenhagen, Denmark Alessandra Beasley von Burg, Associate Professor, Department of Communication, Wake Forest University, USA

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

Y2 - 20 May 2016 through 23 May 2016

ER -

ID: 135194991