Dwight D. Eisenhower & Lyndon B. Johnson

See: Eisenhower & Johnson Bibs

Medhurst, M. J . (1994). Reconceptualizing rhetorical history: Eisenhower's Farewell Address. Quarterly Journal of Speech, 80, 195-218.

Medhurst, M. J. (1994). Eisenhower's war of words: Rhetoric and leadership. East Lansing, MI: Michigan State University Press.

Scott, R. L. (1995). Eisenhower's farewell address: Response to Medhurst. Quarterly Journal of Speech, 81, 496-501.

Zagacki, K. S. (1995). Eisenhower and the rhetoric of postwar Korea. Southern Communication Journal, 60, 233-245.


Bass, J. D. (1985). The appeal to efficacy as narrative closure: Lyndon Johnson and the Dominican crisis, 1965. Southern Speech Communication Journal, 50, 366-381.

Hart, R. R., & Jamieson, K. E. (1996). Lyndon Johnson and the problem of politics: A study in conversation. In M. J. Medhurst (Ed.), Beyond the rhetorical presidency (pp. 77-103). College Station, TX: Texas A&M University Press.

Pauley, G. E. (1997). Presidential rhetoric and interest group politics: Lyndon B. Johnson and the Civil Right Act of 1964. Southern Communication Journal, 63, 1-19.

Sigelman, L. (1980). The Commander in Chief and the public: Mass response to Johnson's March 31, 1968 bombing halt speech. Journal of political and military sociology, 8, 1-14.

Turner, K. J. (1985). Lyndon Johnson's dual war: Vietnam and the press. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Witherspoon, P. D. (1987). "Let us continue:" The rhetorical initiation of Lyndon Johnson's presidency. Presidential Studies Quarterly, 17, 531-539.

Zarefsky, D. (1983). Civil rights; civil conflict: Presidential communication crisis. Central States Speech Journal, 34, 59-66.