Civil Rights From the Civil War to WWII:
A Rhetorical Bibliography
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Braden, Waldo W., and Harold Mixon. | "Epideictic Speaking in the Post-Civil War South and the Southern Experience." Southern Communication Journal 54 (1988): 40-57. |
Harlan, Louis R. |
Booker T. Washington: The Wizard of Tuskegee. New York: Oxford University Press, 1983. |
Harris, Thomas E., & Patrick C. Kennicott. |
"Booker T. Washington: A Study of Conciliatory Rhetoric." Southern Communication Journal 37 (1971): 47–59. |
Haskins, William A. |
"Rhetorical Vision of Equality: Analysis of the Rhetoric of the Southern Black Press during Reconstruction." Communication Quarterly 29 1981): 116–122. |
Heath, Robert L. |
"A Time for Silence: Booker T. Washington in Atlanta." Quarterly Journal of Speech 64 (1978): 385–399. |
Hine, Darlene Clark, ed. |
Ida B. Wells-Barnett: An Exploratory Study of an American Black Woman, 1893-1930. Black Women in United States History. Brooklyn: Carlson Publishing Inc, 1990. |
King, Andrew A. |
"Booker T. Washington and the Myth of Heroic Materialism." Quarterly Journal of Speech 60 (1974): 323–327. |
Logue, Cal M. | "The Rhetorical Appeals of Whites to Blacks during Reconstruction." Communication Monographs 54 (1977): 241-251. |
"Rhetorical Ridicule of Reconstruction Blacks." Quarterly Journal of Speech 62 (1976): 400-409. | |
Logue, Cal M., and Thurmon Garner. |
"Shifts in Rhetorical Status of Blacks after Freedom."Southern Communication Journal 54 (1988): 1–39. |
Ware, B. L., and Wil A. Linkugel. |
"The Rhetorical Persona: Marcus Garvey as Black Moses." Communication Monographs 49 (1982): 50–62. |