Atlantic Journal of Communication, Vol. 27 Issue 4, 2019
Original Article
1. Advocating a preferred legislative style while constituting a bipartisan collective identity: Women senators’ strategic use of constitutive and polarizing rhetoric. --Angela M. McGowan-Kirsch
2. To intervene: a transcending and reorienting goal for public speaking. --Susan K. Opt
3. Constitutive characters: the “Great I Am” is actually “We Are”. --M. Elizabeth Thorpe & Bryan Picciotto
4. The power of anger: How emotions predict information seeking and sharing after a presidential election. --Jennifer Hoewe & Scott Parrott
5. Decolonizing conservationist hero narratives: a critical genealogy of William T. Hornaday and colonial conservation rhetorics. --Marouf Arif Hasian-Jr & S. Marek Muller
1. Advocating a preferred legislative style while constituting a bipartisan collective identity: Women senators’ strategic use of constitutive and polarizing rhetoric. --Angela M. McGowan-Kirsch
2. To intervene: a transcending and reorienting goal for public speaking. --Susan K. Opt
3. Constitutive characters: the “Great I Am” is actually “We Are”. --M. Elizabeth Thorpe & Bryan Picciotto
4. The power of anger: How emotions predict information seeking and sharing after a presidential election. --Jennifer Hoewe & Scott Parrott
5. Decolonizing conservationist hero narratives: a critical genealogy of William T. Hornaday and colonial conservation rhetorics. --Marouf Arif Hasian-Jr & S. Marek Muller
McGowan-Kirsch, Angela M. - Personal Name
Opt, Susan K. - Personal Name
Thorpe, M. Elizabeth - Personal Name
Hoewe, Jennifer - Personal Name
Hasian-Jr, Marouf Arif - Personal Name
Opt, Susan K. - Personal Name
Thorpe, M. Elizabeth - Personal Name
Hoewe, Jennifer - Personal Name
Hasian-Jr, Marouf Arif - Personal Name
Vol. 27 Issue 4, 2019
1545-6889
e-Journal PIK
Inggris
The College of New Jersey
2019
New Jersey
65 hlm
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