Civil Rights Rhetoric and the American Presidency

James Arnt Aune editor Enrique D Rigsby editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Texas A & M University Press

Published:30th Jul '06

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Civil Rights Rhetoric and the American Presidency cover

For a century and a half the words of Presidents have framed, expressed, and sometimes challenged the civil rights policies of America. The eleven essays in this book examine the ways in which American presidents and their administrations have defined the meaning of civil rights from Rutherford B. Hayes to William Jefferson Clinton. Using a variety of methodologies, the book's contributors examine: the depressing tale of how the Southern Redeemer presidents from Hayes to McKinley abandoned the promise of civil rights and reestablished the racial class system; the eugenics of Calvin Coolidge's race rhetoric; the creative rhetorical invention of Eleanor Roosevelt and Harry Truman that laid the foundation for a positive reconstitution of the American community; the much-debated civil rights legacy of John E Kennedy's administration; and the efforts by conservative presidents to redefine the civil rights legacy in their own terms. The book's closing chapter analyzes President Clinton's 1997-98 Race Initiative and its failure, drawing conclusions about the role of presidential rhetoric in the near future of civil rights. Whether for individual enlightenment or for course use, readers will find the book opens new paths for exploring a central American dilemma.

There is not a comparable collection out there, and it includes some very, very fine pieces of scholarship. - John Murphy, University of Georgia

ISBN: 9781585444403

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 797g

352 pages