Player FM - Internet Radio Done Right
Checked 3M ago
Added six years ago
Content provided by re:verb, Calvin Pollak, and Alex Helberg. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by re:verb, Calvin Pollak, and Alex Helberg or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Player FM - Podcast App
Go offline with the Player FM app!
Go offline with the Player FM app!
Podcasts Worth a Listen
SPONSORED
S
State Secrets: Inside The Making Of The Electric State


1 Family Secrets: Chris Pratt & Millie Bobby Brown Share Stories From Set 22:08
22:08
Play Later
Play Later
Lists
Like
Liked22:08
Host Francesca Amiker sits down with directors Joe and Anthony Russo, producer Angela Russo-Otstot, stars Millie Bobby Brown and Chris Pratt, and more to uncover how family was the key to building the emotional core of The Electric State . From the Russos’ own experiences growing up in a large Italian family to the film’s central relationship between Michelle and her robot brother Kid Cosmo, family relationships both on and off of the set were the key to bringing The Electric State to life. Listen to more from Netflix Podcasts . State Secrets: Inside the Making of The Electric State is produced by Netflix and Treefort Media.…
re:verb
Mark all (un)played …
Manage series 2460300
Content provided by re:verb, Calvin Pollak, and Alex Helberg. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by re:verb, Calvin Pollak, and Alex Helberg or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
re:verb is a podcast about politics, culture, and language in action, featuring interviews and segments from scholars, writers, critics, and activists in the humanities, social sciences, and outside the academy.
…
continue reading
98 episodes
Mark all (un)played …
Manage series 2460300
Content provided by re:verb, Calvin Pollak, and Alex Helberg. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by re:verb, Calvin Pollak, and Alex Helberg or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
re:verb is a podcast about politics, culture, and language in action, featuring interviews and segments from scholars, writers, critics, and activists in the humanities, social sciences, and outside the academy.
…
continue reading
98 episodes
Semua episod
×r
re:verb

1 E98: Discourse & Manipulation, Pt. 3 - Manipulative Silences in Post-Election Post-Mortems 1:17:00
1:17:00
Play Later
Play Later
Lists
Like
Liked1:17:00
On today’s show, Alex and Calvin continue their series on Discourse and Manipulation by examining the role of manipulative silence in various post-mortems to the 2024 Presidential Election. As a second-term President Donald Trump looms, many have been debating: what went wrong in the Democrats’ campaign? What policy positions, rhetorical strategies and slip-ups, or other contextual factors led Kamala Harris and Tim Walz to be so soundly defeated? However, amidst all of the post-mortem analysis by institutional Democrats and their surrogates in the media, some salient concerns seem to be missing : namely, the various causes and effects of economic and political precarity that many communities in the US are actively experiencing, and the Democrats’ seeming unwillingness to address these issues head-on. Instead, many are using this epideictic moment to blame scores of abstract, ill-defined terms for the election loss: “wokeness,” “inflation,” “misogyny,” “political headwinds,” and “anti-incumbent sentiment,” among others. When we apply a Critical Discourse Studies lens, we can see that all of these concepts share a common grammatical category: each one is a nominalization , or a noun that has been made out of a verb or adjective. These nominalizations serve the useful purpose of obscuring or silencing important information, such as who is responsible for an action (or who/what is being affected by it), as well as the scale of the issue. In this episode, we examine a series of texts that use manipulative nominalizations and other discourse structures to erase the specific ways that Democratic leaders, campaign staff, and consultancy firms have acted ineffectively and destructively both in this failed run and in the recent past (e.g. Biden’s and Obama’s presidencies and Clinton’s losing bid in 2016). Instead of taking real stock of this history, these texts are mainly platforms for powerful actors to attack broad, abstract concepts, or worse, to victim-blame the voters themselves. We conclude by reflecting upon how these manipulative silences betray the Democratic establishment’s inability or unwillingness to reckon with how its own economic and material interests might be at odds with policies and platforms that could help uplift the most vulnerable in our society. Texts Analyzed in this Episode: Maureen Dowd - “Democrats and the Case of Mistaken Identity Politics” National Organization for Women President Christian F. Nunes: “Racism, Sexism, Misogyny and Hate Won This Election, But We Won’t Let Our Democracy Be Destroyed” David Plouffe dialogue on Pod Save America podcast episode: “Exclusive: The Harris Campaign On What Went Wrong” Works & Concepts Cited in this Episode Fairclough, N. (2003). Analysing discourse (Vol. 270). London: Routledge. Huckin, T. (2002). Textual silence and the discourse of homelessness. Discourse & Society , 13 (3), 347-372. Van Dijk, T. A. (1998). Ideology: A multidisciplinary approach. London: Sage. Cameron Mozafari's Twitter thread summarizing his work with Michael Israel on the changing meaning of “woke” re:verb episode 71: re:pronouns re:verb episode 14: re:blurb - Ideographs An accessible transcript of this episode can be found here (via Descript)…
r
re:verb

1 E97: re:joinder - OI: Oprahficial Intelligence 1:27:57
1:27:57
Play Later
Play Later
Lists
Like
Liked1:27:57
On today’s show, we once again fire up our rhetorical stovetop to roast some dubious public argumentation: Oprah Winfrey’s recent ABC special, “AI and the Future of Us.” In this re:joinder episode, Alex and Calvin listen through and discuss audio clips from the show featuring a wide array of guests - from corporate leaders like Sam Altman and Bill Gates to technologists like Aza Raskin and Tristan Harris, and even FBI Director Christopher Wray - and dismantle some of the mystifying rhetorical hype tropes that they (and Oprah) circulate about the proliferation of large language models (LLMs) and other “AI” technologies into our lives. Along the way, we use rhetorical tools from previous episodes, such as the stasis framework, to show which components of the debate around AI are glossed over, and which are given center-stage. We also bring our own sociopolitical and media analysis to the table to help contextualize (and correct) the presenters’ claims about the speed of large language model development, the nature of its operation, and the threats - both real and imagined - that this new technological apparatus might present to the world. We conclude with a reflection on the words of novelist Marilynne Robinson, the show’s final guest, who prompts us to think about the many ways in which “difficulty is the point” when it comes to human work and developing autonomy. Meanwhile, the slick and tempting narratives promoting “ease” and “efficiency” with AI technology might actually belie a much darker vision of “the future of us.” Join us as we critique and rejoin some of the most common tropes of AI hype, all compacted into one primetime special. In the spirit of automating consumptive labor, we watched it so you don’t have to! Works & Concepts cited in this episode: Bender, E. M., Gebru, T., McMillan-Major, A., & Shmitchell, S. (2021, March). On the dangers of stochastic parrots: Can language models be too big? 🦜. In Proceedings of the 2021 ACM conference on fairness, accountability, and transparency (pp. 610-623). Rather, S. (2024, 25 Apr.). How is one of America's biggest spy agencies using AI? We're suing to find out . ACLU . [On the potential harms of the US NSA implementing AI into existing dragnet surveillance programs domestically & internationally] Robins-Early, N. (2024, 3 Apr.). George Carlin’s estate settles lawsuit over comedian’s AI doppelganger . The Guardian . re:verb Episode 12: re:blurb - Stasis Theory re:verb Episode 17: re:blurb - Dialogicality re:verb Episode 75: A.I. Writing and Academic Integrity (w/ Dr. S. Scott Graham) re:verb Episode 91: Thinking Rhetorically (w/ Robin Reames) [Episode referencing the importance of following the stasis categories in public debates]…
r
re:verb

1 E96: Urban Renewal and Black Rhetorical Citizenship (w/ Dr. Derek G. Handley) 59:32
59:32
Play Later
Play Later
Lists
Like
Liked59:32
On today’s show, we bring back one of our all-time favorite guests (and emeritus co-Producer / co-Founder of re:verb ) Dr. Derek G. Handley to talk about his newly-published book, Struggle for the City: Rhetorics of Citizenship and Resistance in the Black Freedom Movement . This episode is a spiritual successor to our first episode with Derek ( all the way back in Episode 6 !), which focused on the rhetoric of 20th-century urban renewal policies in Pittsburgh, and African American citizens’ resistance to those policies and practices that threatened their homes and businesses. Derek has now expanded his analysis of urban renewal rhetorics - and the modes of citizenship and resistance practiced by African American community members in response to them. His new book, Struggle for the City , focuses on urban renewal policy struggles that played out across three Northern cities in the 1950s and ‘60s: St. Paul Minnesota, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and Milwaukee, Wisconsin. In each of these case studies, Derek deftly traces the rhetorical contours of the master narrative (such as the use of the “blight” metaphor) that shaped how urban renewal policies, including highway and infrastructure development, ultimately uprooted and destabilized African American communities. In turn, his case studies center on the voices of these communities, showing how they responded using a framework he calls “Black Rhetorical Citizenship.” The rhetorical practices inherent within this mode of citizenship - which include deliberation and community decision-making, the circulation of multi-modal counterstories, and a forward-looking focus on public memory - are not only essential touchstones in the less-publicized history of Civil Rights struggles in Northern cities during the 20th century; they also provide an important scaffold for current rhetorical strategies in ongoing Black freedom and justice struggles in the US writ large. In this conversation, Derek also shares some details of his ongoing public scholarship project (co-directed with UW-M Geography Professor Dr. Anne Bonds) Mapping Racism and Resistance in Milwaukee County , which seeks to document restrictive and racist housing covenants in the city of Milwaukee, Wisconsin and its surrounding suburbs, as well as community resistance to these and related practices. Derek’s book, Struggle for the City: Rhetorics of Citizenship and Resistance in the Black Freedom Movement , is available via Penn State University Press on September 24, 2024 More information on the Mapping Racism and Resistance in Milwaukee County project can be found here Works and Concepts Referenced in this Episode Handley, D. G. (2019). “The Line Drawn”: Freedom Corner and Rhetorics of Place in Pittsburgh, 1960s-2000s. Rhetoric Review , 38 (2), 173-189. Houdek, M., & Phillips, K. R. (2017). Public memory . In Oxford research encyclopedia of communication . Kock, C., & Villadsen, L. (Eds.). (2015). Rhetorical citizenship and public deliberation . Penn State Press. Loyd, J. M., & Bonds, A. (2018). Where do Black lives matter? Race, stigma, and place in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The Sociological Review , 66 (4), 898-918. Mapping Prejudice [University of Minnesota Project on restrictive housing covenants] Musolff, A. (2012). Immigrants and parasites: The history of a bio-social metaphor. In Migrations: Interdisciplinary Perspectives (pp. 249-258). Vienna: Springer Vienna. [on the use of “disease” metaphors in immigration discourse] Nelson, H. L. (2001). Damaged identities, narrative repair . Fordham University. [on the concepts of “master narrative” and “counterstories”] Pittsburgh Courier Archive (from Newspapers.com) Wilson, A. (2007). The August Wilson Century Cycle . Theatre Communications Group. An accessible transcript for this episode can be found here…
On today’s show, Calvin and Alex analyze the rhetoric and politics of the 2024 presidential election in terms of a particularly significant job this cycle: the vice president, or veep! We begin by discussing Vice President Kamala Harris’s meteoric rise to the Democratic nomination following President Biden’s departure from the race, as well as Harris’s conspicuous similarities to HBO’s fictional Veep , Selena Meyer (played by Julia Louis-Dreyfus). We then compare and contrast the aesthetics, rhetorical styles, and political stances of Harris’s vice presidential nominee and Minnesota governor Tim Walz, and Republican veep nominee and Donald Trump’s running mate J.D. Vance. Along the way, we discuss how the Democratic Party under Harris and Walz is embracing a rhetoric of normalcy vs. “weirdness” that is genuinely novel and effective as a strategy for delegitimizing GOP policy, and how this approach may help to expand the Democratic voting base in response to state-level crises over reproductive justice and public education. We theorize the Dems’ normalizing discourse as a way of forthrightly indexing liberal values and connecting to core American ideographs while also positioning themselves as outsiders fighting a noble cause against entrenched GOP power in state governments and the national judiciary. Nevertheless, we conclude on a cautionary note about the dangers of normalization rhetoric, particularly in a country with an ongoing legacy of structural racism and imperialist foreign policy – including the brutal and unresolved conflict in the Gaza Strip. Textual Artifacts Analyzed Harris-Meyer comparison text: https://youtu.be/72vUngNA9RM?si=izGYEEFsBRjQrlXj Walz artifacts: https://www.msnbc.com/inside-with-jen-psaki/watch/-these-guys-are-weird-gov-walz-blasts-trump-vance-obsession-with-anti-freedom-agenda-215711813835 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M7ajzMgbGsY Vance artifacts: https://x.com/ProjectLincoln/status/1820913476514279744 https://x.com/ProjectLincoln/status/1820913478808342571 https://x.com/ProjectLincoln/status/1820913483606901062 https://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/17/us/politics/read-the-transcript-of-jd-vances-convention-speech.html Vance RNC speech: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_8TlBHRtrvM Vance’s TED Talk, “America’s Forgotten Working Class” Scholarly Works and Concepts Referenced Kiossev, A. (2008). The oxymoron of normality. Eurozine http://www.eurozine. com/the-oxymoron-of-normality/ Pollak, C. (2021). Legitimation and Textual Evidence: How the Snowden Leaks Reshaped the ACLU’s Online Writing About NSA Surveillance. Written Communication , 38 (3), 380-416. van Dijk, T. A. (2000). Ideology: A multidisciplinary approach . SAGE Publications Ltd, https://doi.org/10.4135/9781446217856 Kairos: https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/28358 Ethos: https://www.reverbcast.com/podcasts/2024/6/28/e94-reblurb-ethos An accessible transcript of this episode can be found here…
Have you ever wondered why you immediately gravitate towards some speakers and writers? How they form a connection with you and make you want to pay closer attention? Or why you react with disgust and revulsion to other kinds of communicators? What is it about strategic discourse that fosters and nurtures deep connections with some audiences while (intentionally or unintentionally) turning other kinds of people off right away? On today's re:blurb episode, we address these questions through a wide-ranging discussion of the classical rhetorical concept of ethos , one of the three classical appeals (along with logos and pathos). We begin by overviewing the origins of ethos in ancient Athenian courts of law, recounting debates between Plato and Aristotle about whether ethos is core to the corrupting (or liberating) influence of rhetoric in society. We then explain modern theories such as Kenneth Burke’s identification and Michael J. Hyde and Calvin Schrag’s notion of ethos as a “dwelling place” shared by speakers and audiences. Ultimately, we argue that the history of ethos theory is defined by attention to how credibility, trust, and persuasion are not accomplished unilaterally or unidirectionally, but rather occur in the dynamic, situated, dialogic interplay between communicators and their audiences. This particular understanding of ethos enlivens our sample analysis, which shows the concept’s enduring utility as a critical tool. We introduce and critique the pro-Biden X account @BidensWins, which has been strategically constructing Biden’s 2024 re-election campaign ethos. We describe how the posts’ recurring language patterns constitute an identity grounded in “win”-quantification and newsworthiness, and how their hyper-patriotism and policy stances seem to be targeting specific voter constituencies for persuasion (while ignoring or disavowing others). We question both the pragmatic wisdom of this ethos strategy and the moral consequences of it for various core Democratic voter blocs that Biden will need in order to defeat Donald Trump. @BidensWins X Posts Analyzed: https://x.com/BidensWins/status/1802423240876331122 https://x.com/BidensWins/status/1803251566356426859 https://x.com/BidensWins/status/1803451317098074344 https://x.com/BidensWins/status/1778407786302341419 https://x.com/BidensWins/status/1797668724008489005 https://x.com/BidensWins/status/1798060384487948536 https://x.com/POTUS/status/1803176039603957883 Works and Concepts Referenced in this Episode Baumlin, J.S. (2001) Ethos. In T. Sloane (Ed.), Encyclopedia of Rhetoric (pp. 209-217). Oxford University Press. Burke, K. (1969). A rhetoric of motives . University of California Press. Hyde, M. J. & C.O. Schrag (Eds.). (2004). The ethos of rhetoric. University of South Carolina Press. Ridolfo, J., & DeVoss, D. N. (2009). Composing for Recomposition: Rhetorical Velocity and Delivery. Kairos: A Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, and Pedagogy , 13(2), n2. An accessible transcript of this episode can be found here…
r
re:verb

1 E93: Queer Techné and Queering A.I. (w/ Dr. Patricia Fancher) 1:02:15
1:02:15
Play Later
Play Later
Lists
Like
Liked1:02:15
On today’s show, Alex and Calvin are thrilled to be joined by Dr. Patricia Fancher, a Continuing Lecturer in the Writing Program at the University of California, Santa Barbara. In her fabulous new book Queer Techné: Bodies, Rhetorics, and Desire in the History of Computing , Dr. Fancher offers a groundbreaking history of how the Manchester University Computer and discourses about it were shaped by queerness, embodied gender performativity, and invisibilized gendered labor in the early 1950s. Some of the figures that Fancher’s book offers new understandings of include Alan Turing, Christopher Strachey, Audrey Bates, and Cicely Popplewell, with each case study capturing how technical communication and technology development are about more than just usability, efficiency, and innovation. A recurring theme in Dr. Fancher’s rhetorical reading of Turing and his colleagues is that there is something queer, performative, and playful about intelligence, and that these dimensions are mostly ignored by the hype around so-called “artificial intelligence” tools like large language models. To explore this theme, we chat about Christopher Strachey’s rudimentary love letter generation program, comparing its output to ChatGPT’s for similar prompts. We ultimately explore what Turing might have thought of LLMs, and how we can begin to ask queerer questions of our digital tools to produce more interesting and intelligent discourses and technologies. Works and Concepts Referenced in this Episode Edenfield, A. C., Holmes, S., & Colton, J. S. (2019). Queering tactical technical communication: DIY HRT. Technical Communication Quarterly, 28(3), 177-191. Fancher, P. (2024). Queer Techné: Bodies, Rhetorics, and Desire in the History of Computing . NCTE. Fancher, P. (2016). Composing artificial intelligence: Performing Whiteness and masculinity . Present Tense, 6(1). Haas, A. M. (2012). Race, rhetoric, and technology: A case study of decolonial technical communication theory, methodology, and pedagogy. Journal of Business and Technical Communication, 26(3), 277-310. Henrik Oleson exhibition about Turing. Matt Sefton and David Link’s web version of Strachey’s love letter program Rhodes, J., & Alexander, J. (2015). Techne: Queer meditations on writing the self. Computers and Composition Digital Press/Utah State University Press.…
r
re:verb

1 E92: Academic Organizing and Palestinian Solidarity (w/ Olivia Wood) 54:03
54:03
Play Later
Play Later
Lists
Like
Liked54:03
On today’s show, Alex is joined by Olivia Wood, a lecturer in the English Department at City College of New York (CCNY) to discuss the recent escalations of force by the NYPD and campus administrators against student protesters in solidarity with Palestine over the past several weeks. In particular, we touch on the flashpoint raids by police - at the behest of campus administrators - at Columbia and CCNY on Tuesday, April 30th, the rhetorical strategies used by student organizers at the encampments to advocate for their causes of disclosure and divestment, and the problematic discourse that mainstream journalists have been circulating when discussing these movements. We conclude by reflecting on the ways that academic worker collectivities (including but not limited to unions) can help show critical support to student demonstrators exercising free speech on campus and advocating for justice in Palestine. References Remembering Dr. Refaat Alareer (1979-2023) The Killing of 6-year-old Hind Rajab ‘This machine bonks fascists’: US student protester’s water jug becomes symbol of resistance Doctor in Gaza refuses to evacuate, pleads for Israel-Hamas war to stop Links to some of Olivia’s reporting on academic and student organizing in solidarity with Palestine : Faculty, Staff, and Students Must Unite Against Repression of the Palestine Movement (4/23/24) Faculty at University of Texas Austin Strike in Solidarity with Student Protesters (4/25/24) CUNY Students Occupy Campus in Solidarity with Palestine, Building on the University’s Legacy of Radical Organizing (4/27/24) CUNY Rank-and-File Workers Stand With the Student Encampment (4/30/24) An accessible transcript for this episode is available upon request - please send us an email at reverbcontent[at]gmail.com or DM us on Twitter / X…
r
re:verb

1 E91: Thinking Rhetorically (w/ Dr. Robin Reames) 45:01
45:01
Play Later
Play Later
Lists
Like
Liked45:01
On today’s show, Calvin and Alex sit down with Dr. Robin Reames - Associate Professor of English at the University of Chicago - to discuss her new book The Ancient Art of Thinking for Yourself: The Power of Rhetoric in Polarized Times . In this book, Robin synthesizes rhetorical theories and concepts from Greek antiquity to the 20th century to deliver some of the most practical lessons that rhetorical knowledge can offer. In our conversation, we discuss what it means to be a rhetorical thinker, some of the key characters from ancient Greek rhetorical history who hold important lessons for our current era, and illustrate some examples of how thinking like a rhetorician can help us reason more critically in our day-to-day lives. We conclude with a meditation on how rhetorical knowledge can help us better understand disagreements - from those in our interpersonal relationships to the larger divides that seem to define and constrict our current political reality. Robin Reames’s The Ancient Art of Thinking for Yourself is available now from Basic Books Listen to our episode on Stasis Theory here An accessible transcript of this episode can be found here…
r
re:verb

1 E90: reel:verb - Civil War (Garland, 2024) 1:12:59
1:12:59
Play Later
Play Later
Lists
Like
Liked1:12:59
Spoiler Alert: This episode contains numerous plot spoilers for Civil War . On today’s show, we inaugurate a new episode series called reel:verb , in which we rate, review, and analyze a recent movie from the perspective of politics, culture, and language in action. In the first installment, Alex, Olivia, and Calvin tackle the 2024 dystopian thriller Civil War , directed by Alex Garland ( Ex Machina, Annihilation ). Civil War depicts a near-future US torn apart by domestic warfare, as seen from the perspectives of a small group of journalists (played by Kirsten Dunst, Wagner Moura, Cailee Spaeny, and Stephen McKinley Henderson, respectively) who are documenting the fighting and plotting to photograph and interview the besieged US president (Nick Offerman). We begin by providing our individual ratings of the film (out of 5 verbs ), and then we recap the major plot points and set pieces that take place along Dunst et. al’s roadtrip from hell. We conclude with a wide-ranging analysis of the film’s politics and rhetoric, in which we unpack how it depicts journalism (and journalists) and consider its social significance in the midst of ongoing US-backed conflicts in the Middle East and elsewhere around the world. Ultimately, we argue, this film’s vision of civil war is too far-fetched, abstracted, and underdeveloped to serve as a true cautionary tale for US audiences – perhaps because Garland, like his cast of photojournalists, is apparently more invested in aestheticizing violence than cogently critiquing it. Works and Concepts Referenced In this Episode Chouliaraki, L. (2005). Spectacular ethics: on the television footage of the Iraq war. Journal of language and politics, 4(1), 143-159. Cloud, D. L. (2018). Reality bites: Rhetoric and the circulation of truth claims in US political culture . The Ohio State University Press. Foucault, M. (1984). The Foucault reader . Vintage. Our previous episode with Dr. Roger Stahl on US military cooperation in entertainment products Reuters photographer [Mohammed Salem] wins World Press Photo of the Year with poignant shot from Gaza Transcript of Pod Save America episode featuring Alex Garland (interview begins at 38:50) An accessible transcript of this episode is available upon request. Please reach out to us via email (reverbcontent[AT]gmail.com), social media, or our website contact form to request a transcript.…
r
re:verb

1 E89: Distance and Suffering in News Reporting (w/ John Oddo, Cameron Mozafari, & Alex Kirsch) 1:07:11
1:07:11
Play Later
Play Later
Lists
Like
Liked1:07:11
On today’s show, Calvin and Alex sit down with the co-authors of a hot-off-the-presses article in Discourse & Society about journalistic reporting on US drone strikes in the Middle East: Dr. John Oddo (Carnegie Mellon University), Dr. Cameron Mozafari (Cornell University), and Alex Kirsch (MA Professional Writing graduate, CMU). In their article, entitled “Sustaining or overcoming distance in representations of US drone strikes,” they examine deictic language - words and phrases that “point” to contextual elements construed as “close” or “far away.” Specifically, they analyze how this type of language is used to make US audiences feel sympathetic or apathetic toward the US drone war and the suffering it caused to ordinary civilians in the 2000s and 2010s. In our conversation, we talk with the authors about how deictic language can position a reader audience as “near” or far” from descriptions of suffering in terms of space, time, veracity, sense perception, emotion, and perspective. They take us through the major findings in their article’s comparison between how the Associated Press and The American Prospect used this language - to different extremes - in order to render people suffering from US military violence as immediate, worthy of attention and sympathy, or distant, opaque, and foreign. We also discuss the implications for how this language is used in reporting on other policy issues both foreign and domestic, and the affordances of this model for helping us understand how language in news reporting creates mental images. John, Cameron, and Alex’s co-authored article: Oddo, J., Mozafari, C., & Kirsch, A. (2024). Sustaining or overcoming distance in representations of US drone strikes. Discourse & Society . Works & Concepts Referenced in this Episode: Bloom, P. (2017). Against empathy: The case for rational compassion . Random House. Boltanski, L. (1999). Distant suffering: Morality, media and politics . Cambridge University Press. Cap, P. (2008). Towards the proximization model of the analysis of legitimization in political discourse. Journal of Pragmatics , 40 (1), 17-41. Chilton, P. (2004). Analysing political discourse: Theory and practice . Routledge. ————. (2014). Language, space and mind: The conceptual geometry of linguistic meaning . Cambridge University Press. Chouliaraki, L. (2013). The ironic spectator: Solidarity in the age of post-humanitarianism . John Wiley & Sons. Kopytowska, M. (2015a). Covering conflict: Between universality and cultural specificity in news discourse, genre and journalistic style. International Review of Pragmatics , 7 (2), 308-339. ————. (2015b) Ideology of ‘here’ and ‘now’: Mediating distance in television news. Critical Discourse Studies 12(3): 347-365.…
r
re:verb

1 E88: re:joinder - Lose Bigly with Scott Adams, pt. 3: Movies, Moist Robots, and Mass Delusions 1:27:43
1:27:43
Play Later
Play Later
Lists
Like
Liked1:27:43
Do you consider yourself to be a rational person? If so, Scott Adams (a.k.a. “The Dilbert Guy”), has some bad news for you. On today’s show, we attempt to surmount our various cognitive dissonances and confirmation biases to better understand “How to See Reality in a More Useful Way,” according to the third chapter of Scott Adams’s 2017 pseudo-rhetorical quasi-treatise, Win Bigly: Persuasion in a World Where Facts Don’t Matter. This chapter takes us headlong into Scott’s psychology, charting his journey through various “filters” he developed to help him “predict the future” at various stages in his life: among them, the “Santa Claus filter,” the “Alien Experiment filter,” and most ridiculous of all, his self-proclaimed current “Moist Robot filter.” This one has to be heard to be believed, trust us. Among other topics covered in this chapter are Scott’s “two movie” theory of reality, and his assertion that beliefs are really just “mass delusions” that determine how we react to new events and information. As usual, this chapter uncovers yet another layer of Scott’s solipsistic nihilism toward the world and its social dynamics. It also contains a whole section on how to become a trained hypnotist. He’s a man of many talents, folks. An accessible transcript of this episode can be found here…
r
re:verb

1 E87: Self-Immolation as Rhetorical Protest (w/ Dr. James Chase Sanchez) 48:07
48:07
Play Later
Play Later
Lists
Like
Liked48:07
Disclaimer: This episode covers sensitive issues related to suicide and self-harm. If this topic makes you uncomfortable, we recommend skipping this episode. If you or someone you know is in crisis, in the US, you can call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline on 988, chat on 988lifeline.org, or text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor. On the morning of February 25, 2024, Aaron Bushnell, a 25-year-old US Air Force service member, posted a link to his Twitch channel on Facebook, commenting: “Many of us like to ask ourselves, ‘What would I do if I was alive during slavery? Or the Jim Crow South? Or apartheid? What would I do if my country was committing genocide?’ The answer is, you’re doing it. Right now.” Several hours later, around 1pm Eastern, Bushnell live-streamed himself walking toward the Israeli embassy in Washington, D.C. carrying a metal bottle without a lid. Bushnell recorded himself saying: “I am an active duty member of the United States Air Force, and I will no longer be complicit in genocide. I am about to engage in an extreme act of protest. But compared to what people have been experiencing in Palestine at the hands of their colonizers, it’s not extreme at all. This is what our ruling class has decided will be normal.” After setting up his camera several feet away, still live-streaming, he poured the liquid from his bottle over his head, and lit himself on fire from his feet, shouting “Free Palestine,” over and over, with increasing agony. Bushnell’s is the second nationally documented instance of self immolation in response to the ongoing Israeli war on Gaza. In December, a protester - whom the media has refused to name - set themselves on fire outside of the Israeli consulate in Atlanta while holding a Palestinian flag. How can we best understand these cases: as noble and heroic protests? Or irrational acts of self-harm and self-destruction? To help us think through these questions, we are joined by Dr. James Chase Sanchez, Associate Professor of Writing and Rhetoric at Middlebury College and eminent scholar of racism, white supremacy, and social movements. James has published two relevant books: the co-authored collection Race, Rhetoric, and Research Methods, and Salt of the Earth: Rhetoric, Preservation, and White Supremacy , both published in 2021. He also produced the 2018 documentary film Man on Fire , which tells the story of Charles Moore, a 79-year-old minister who self-immolated in protest against racism in his hometown of Grand Saline, Texas. We discuss Moore’s and Bushnell’s acts in the context of the history of social movement rhetorics, and consider how to reframe current conversations away from Bushnell the individual and towards issues of collective and internationalist solidarity. You can find more information on James’s documentary Man on Fire at this link James’s 2021 book Salt of the Earth can be purchased at this link…
r
re:verb

1 E86: Discourse & Manipulation (Part 2) 1:17:09
1:17:09
Play Later
Play Later
Lists
Like
Liked1:17:09
On today’s show, Alex and Calvin continue to break down the concept of “Manipulation” in rhetoric and political discourse, recapping part one of this series , demonstrating strategies for identifying and critiquing manipulation, and discussing how this kind of large-scale “mind control” is affecting contemporary foreign policy discourse in the US. The term manipulation, as we define it, comes from a school of linguistic and discourse analysis known as Critical Discourse Studies (CDS), which is primarily concerned with the ways language is used to reinforce inequality and power differentials in society. We walk through how the term is defined by CDS scholar Teun van Dijk, from his landmark 2006 article “Discourse and Manipulation.” In it, van Dijk gives us a toolkit for understanding 3 different levels of manipulation: (1) social, which designates the human relationships, power positions, and organizational and political resources required to effect manipulation at scale; (2) cognitive, which designates how manipulative language forms mental models that influence people’s thoughts and actions in the world; and (3) discursive, which captures the various linguistic, stylistic, and rhetorical strategies that tend to recur in manipulation. This time, to put this term in context, we analyze an example of discourse manipulation surrounding US foreign policy, specifically as it relates to Israel’s ongoing war on Gaza: President Joe Biden’s November 18 opinion article in the Washington Post , entitled “The U.S. won’t back down from the challenge of Putin and Hamas.” We closely analyze how President Biden uses manipulation strategies straight out of Van Dijk to persuade WaPo-reading liberals to ignore both the US’s constant and substantial material support for Israel’s war and its own military’s history of bloody and destructive imperialism throughout the Middle East, North Africa, and elsewhere in the world. We also note various tactics that the president deploys to naturalize inequality and normalize bigotry, all while touting the US’s role as the “essential” peace-loving, freedom-spreading nation. “The U.S. won’t back down from the challenge of Putin and Hamas” - Joe Biden Link to Part One of this Series Works and Concepts Cited in this Episode: Azoulay, A., & Ophir, A. (2012). The one-state condition: occupation and democracy in Israel/Palestine . Stanford University Press. Fairclough, N. (2003). Analysing discourse: Textual analysis for social research . Psychology Press. Fifield, A. (19 March 2013). “Contractors reap $138B from Iraq war.” CNN.com . McGee, M. C. (1980). The “ideograph”: A link between rhetoric and ideology. Quarterly journal of speech , 66(1), 1-16. [ Our 2018 re:blurb on Ideographs can be found here .] Oddo, J. (2019). The discourse of propaganda: Case studies from the Persian Gulf War and the War on Terror . Penn State University Press. [ Our September 2021 episode with CDS scholar John Oddo can be found here .] Perelman, C. & Olbrechts-Tyteca, L. (1969). The New Rhetoric: A Treatise on Argumentation . Trans. John Wilkinson and Purcell Weaver. University of Notre Dame Press. Schneider, T. (8 Oct 2023). “For years, Netanyahu propped up Hamas. Now it’s blown up in our faces.” The Times of Israel. Van Dijk, T. A. (2006). Discourse and manipulation. Discourse & society , 17(3), 359-383. An accessible transcript of this episode is available upon request. Please reach out to us via email (reverbcontent[AT]gmail.com), social media, or our website contact form to request a transcript.…
r
re:verb

On today’s show, Alex and Calvin break down the concept of “Manipulation” in rhetoric and political discourse. We outline some key strategies for identifying and critiquing manipulation, and discuss its social and political implications as a form of large-scale “mind control.” The term manipulation, as we define it, comes from a school of linguistic and discourse analysis known as Critical Discourse Studies (CDS), which is primarily concerned with the ways language is used to reinforce inequality and power differentials in society. We walk through how the term is defined by CDS scholar Teun van Dijk, from his landmark 2006 article “Discourse and Manipulation.” In it, van Dijk gives us a toolkit for understanding 3 different levels of manipulation: (1) social, which designates the human relationships, power positions, and organizational and political resources required to effect manipulation at scale; (2) cognitive, which designates how manipulative language forms mental models that influence people’s thoughts and actions in the world; and (3) discursive, which captures the various linguistic, stylistic, and rhetorical strategies that tend to recur in manipulation. To put this term in context, we analyze an example of discourse manipulation surrounding student protests against the most recent flare-up in Israel’s war on Gaza: Carnegie Mellon University President Farnam Jahanian’s email to university students and faculty in response to a recent student vigil where the phrase “from the river to the sea” was chanted. We closely analyze the careful manipulations of emphasis and value that Jahanian creates in his discourse, which subtly demonizes student demonstrators advocating for peace and the cessation of violence between Israel and Hamas, while reaffirming the supposedly apolitical “commitments” of the institution he represents. Full Text Version of Farnam Jahanian Email Works and Concepts Cited in this Episode: Fairclough, N. (2003). Analysing discourse: Textual analysis for social research . Psychology Press. McGee, M. C. (1980). The “ideograph”: A link between rhetoric and ideology. Quarterly journal of speech , 66(1), 1-16. [ Our 2018 re:blurb on Ideographs can be found here .] Oddo, J. (2019). The discourse of propaganda: Case studies from the Persian Gulf War and the War on Terror . Penn State University Press. [ Our September 2021 episode with CDS scholar John Oddo can be found here .] van Dijk, T. A. (2006). Discourse and manipulation. Discourse & society , 17(3), 359-383. An accessible transcript of this episode is available upon request. Please reach out to us via email (reverbcontent@gmail.com), social media, or our website contact form to request a transcript.…
r
re:verb

1 E84: Toward a Media Theory of the U.S.-Mexico Underground (w/ Dr. Juan Llamas-Rodriguez) 1:11:47
1:11:47
Play Later
Play Later
Lists
Like
Liked1:11:47
On today’s show, Ben sits down with Dr. Juan Llamas-Rodriguez, Assistant Professor at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania, to discuss his research at the intersections of border studies, infrastructure studies, and Latin American and Latinx diasporic media. We begin by discussing Juan’s approaches to media studies and challenges in the field, then dive into his new book, Border Tunnels: A Media Theory of the U.S.-Mexico Underground (University of Minnesota Press) . Together, we reflect on the role of media representing border tunnels–underground networks of built and excavated spaces circumventing the above-ground border. As Juan notes, these tunnels are “nearly inaccessible” to the general public, so through their representation, we see media’s capacity to give meaning to “spaces and structures in excess of their real referent.” Importantly, Juan shows us how the “figure of the border tunnel” relates to the escalating efforts to violently fortify and police the U.S.-Mexico border. Juan helps us understand the affordances and limitations of border tunnels’ depictions in reality television, newscasts, action films, video games, and speculative design projects. We reflect on the role of popular films that appear in the book, such as the Fast and Furious franchise, video games like Call of Juarez: The Cartel , and the reality television series Border Wars in constructing what Juan calls the “racial infrastructures of the border.” This timely conversation helps us rethink our relationship with popular media and culture, drawing out the seemingly invisible role of border tunnels in shaping our understanding of the borderlands. Works referenced in this episode Agudelo, E. (2008). A Practice in Excavating and Envisioning Ambos Nogales . Borderwall as Architecture. Fojas, C. (2021). Border Optics: Surveillance Cultures of the US-Mexico Frontier . New York University Press. Fickle, T. (2019). The Race Card: From Gaming Technologies to Model Minorities . New York University Press. Howarth, D. (2016). Beautifying the Border Proposal Replaces US–Mexico Fence with Landscaping . Dezeen . Hernández, K. (2010). Migra! A History of the U.S. Border Patrol . University of California Press. Knight, K. & Llamas-Rodriguez, J. Migrant Steps Project . Llamas-Rodriguez, J. (2023). Border Tunnels: A Media Theory of the U.S.–Mexico Underground . University of Minnesota Press. Llamas-Rodriguez, J. (2017). The Datalogical Drug Mule . Feminist Media Histories , 3 (3), 9-29. Llamas-Rodriguez, J. (2021). First-Person Shooters, Tunnel Warfare, and the Racial Infrastructures of the US–Mexico Border . Lateral , 10 (2). Llamas-Rodriguez, J. (2022). Ruinous Speculation, Tunnel Environments, and the Sustainable Infrastructures of the Border . Social Text , 40 (4), 97-123. Llamas-Rodriguez, J. (2021). “ The Sewer Transnationalists .” One Shot: A Journal of Critical Games and Play , 2. Mattern, S. (2018). Scaffolding, Hard and Soft: Media Infrastructures as Critical and Generative Structures. The Routledge Companion to Media Studies and Digital Humanities , edited by Jentery Sayers. Routledge. Parks, L. (2015). “ Stuff You Can Kick”: Toward a Theory of Media Infrastructures . Between Humanities and the Digital , edited by Patrik Svensson and David Theo Goldberg. The MIT Press. Patterson, C. (2020). Open World Empire: Race, Erotics, and the Global Rise of Video Games . New York University Press. An accessible transcript of this episode can be viewed here: https://otter.ai/u/xK1Y3uUOPeEXGBnErGd6_8eszXM…
Welcome to Player FM!
Player FM is scanning the web for high-quality podcasts for you to enjoy right now. It's the best podcast app and works on Android, iPhone, and the web. Signup to sync subscriptions across devices.