In:Words of Crisis as Words of Power: The jeremiad in American presidential speeches
Marta Neüff
[Discourse Approaches to Politics, Society and Culture 77] 2018
► pp. 17–51
Chapter 2The rhetorical presidency, presidential crisis rhetoric, and the American jeremiad
Published online: 24 May 2018
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.77.c2
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.77.c2
Article outline
- 2.1The rhetorical presidency
- 2.1.1Presidential power to persuade
- 2.1.2Traditional and modern presidency
- 2.2Presidential crisis rhetoric
- 2.2.1Presidential crisis rhetoric as a genre
- Media framing of crisis
- 2.2.2Narrating crisis: Metaphors, myths, and intertextuality
- 2.2.3Metaphor and crisis: How do metaphors function?
- 2.2.4Othering
- 2.2.1Presidential crisis rhetoric as a genre
- 2.3The American jeremiad
- 2.3.1The American jeremiad: America’s first distinct genre
- 2.3.2Biblical vs. American jeremiad: The mythology of mission
- 2.3.3The myth of American exceptionalism as root of the civil-religious jeremiad
- 2.3.4Civil religion and presidential rhetoric in times of crisis
- 2.3.5How do jeremiads function? Constructing a narrative between hope and fear
- 2.3.6Conclusions and working definitions: Modern jeremiads and jeremiadic speech
Notes
