Human Rights Rhetoric of Recognition

Through her reading of the editors' introduction and ensuing four essays, Hesford approaches human rights as a discourse of public persuasion that envisions certain scenes of sociopolitical recognition, normative notions of subject formation, and paradoxical particularities. She joins contribut...

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Veröffentlicht in:Rhetoric Society quarterly 2011-05, Vol.41 (3), p.282-289
1. Verfasser: Hesford, Wendy S.
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description Through her reading of the editors' introduction and ensuing four essays, Hesford approaches human rights as a discourse of public persuasion that envisions certain scenes of sociopolitical recognition, normative notions of subject formation, and paradoxical particularities. She joins contributors in their interrogation of the normative scenes of sociopolitical recognition on which the human rights paradox of exclusive universalism rests. Yet, she also maintains that in our efforts to construe a more inclusive human rights history that we are mindful of distinctions between the rhetorical tactics of individuals and social movements and differences of geopolitical scale and scope.
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identifier ISSN: 0277-3945
ispartof Rhetoric Society quarterly, 2011-05, Vol.41 (3), p.282-289
issn 0277-3945
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source JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Civil rights
Classical rhetoric
Discourse analysis
Human rights
Human rights movements
Narratives
Natural rights
Persuasion
Political rhetoric
Politics
Recognition
Rhetoric
Rhetorical criticism
Social activism
Social movements
title Human Rights Rhetoric of Recognition
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