A Choice of Worlds: The Practice and Criticism of Public DiscourseJames Robertson Andrews Harper & Row, 1972 - Počet stran: 164 |
Vyhledávání v knize
Výsledky 1-3 z 22
Strana 37
... aims and attitudes of those who participated . An understanding of the relationship between ethos and style should help to guide the speaker as he selects language that affects the audience's reactions . In order to make reasonable ...
... aims and attitudes of those who participated . An understanding of the relationship between ethos and style should help to guide the speaker as he selects language that affects the audience's reactions . In order to make reasonable ...
Strana 46
... aim was to be accomplished , and accomplished nonviolently , whites as well as blacks had to work in cooperation ... aims . Martin Luther King was , as Louis Lomax wrote , " to the Negro revolt as Paul was to the early church ; not ...
... aim was to be accomplished , and accomplished nonviolently , whites as well as blacks had to work in cooperation ... aims . Martin Luther King was , as Louis Lomax wrote , " to the Negro revolt as Paul was to the early church ; not ...
Strana 77
... aims of the civil rights movement were seen by Johnson as consistent with , even subsumed by , the aims of the Great Society upon which Johnson had so recently built a consensus . As Johnson sought to promote identification along a ...
... aims of the civil rights movement were seen by Johnson as consistent with , even subsumed by , the aims of the Great Society upon which Johnson had so recently built a consensus . As Johnson sought to promote identification along a ...
Obsah
Practical and Critical Principles | 9 |
Speeches for Analysis and Criticism | 39 |
The Audience and the Topic | 55 |
Autorská práva | |
Další části 7 nejsou zobrazeny.
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
action American appeal Applause argued argument assumption attack audience ballot basic believe Berlin Billy Graham black nationalism black nationalist black power brothers bullet choice church Churchill civil rights movement civil-rights struggle Congress Constitution Convention critic democracy Democrats developed discussion Dixiecrats emotional enemy equal ethos evidence example feel filibustering Franklin freedom goals going guerrilla warfare hope House ideas Inaugural James Eastland Jefferson Johnson justice Kennedy language leaders leadership legislation Lincoln Lindsay live Malcolm Malcolm X Malcolm's style Martin Luther King Mayor means Mississippi moral NAACP Negro never noble Lord nonviolence opinion peace persuasion political position President principles problem public discourse racial reason Republican rhetorical Roy Wilkins segregated Senate speak speaker speech was given strategy tion topic Uncle Sam understand United unity values vote Washington words York