“I Said What I Said”—Black Women and Argumentative Politeness Norms

This paper seeks to complicate two primary norms within argumentation theory: 1) engaging with one’s interlocutors in a ‘pleasant’ tone and 2) speaking directly to one’s target audience/interlocutor. Moreover, I urge argumentation theorists to explore various cultures’ argumentative norms and practi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Informal logic 2021-01, Vol.41 (1), p.17-39
1. Verfasser: Henning, Tempest M.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This paper seeks to complicate two primary norms within argumentation theory: 1) engaging with one’s interlocutors in a ‘pleasant’ tone and 2) speaking directly to one’s target audience/interlocutor. Moreover, I urge argumentation theorists to explore various cultures’ argumentative norms and practices when attempting to formulate more universal theories regarding argumentation. Ultimately, I aim to show that the two previously mentioned norms within argumentation obscure and misrepresent many argumentative practices within African American Vernacular English—or Ebonics, specifically the art of signifying.
ISSN:0824-2577
2293-734X
DOI:10.22329/il.v41i1.6687