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2018
Volume 67, Issue 5
  • ISSN: 0010-0994
  • E-ISSN: 2161-8178

Abstract

Through an examination of the work of the nineteenth-century American rhetorician Henry Noble Day the author suggests that the causal relationship usually identified between economic formations and genres such as exposition is not a purely one-way process. Day’s rhetorics, he argues, were not only shaped by the economies of Taylorism but also were themselves engaged in a sociohistorical process of class formation, suggesting that such a study of the connections among managerialism, current-traditional rhetoric, and class formation raises important questions for our own work today.

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/content/journals/10.58680/ce20054086
2005-05-01
2025-07-08
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  • Article Type: Research Article
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