Enhancing the tellability of death-row exoneree narratives: Exploring the role of rhetoric

Individuals make sense of experience through telling stories they hope others will hear. To establish an interpretive connection with their audience, narrators must tell stories that are tellable, conceptualized as engaging but not too socially or emotionally challenging. We analyze the narratives o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Punishment & society 2023-01, Vol.25 (1), p.122-140
Hauptverfasser: Rajah, Valli, Thomas, Christopher, Shlosberg, Amy, Chu, Sarah P
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container_title Punishment & society
container_volume 25
creator Rajah, Valli
Thomas, Christopher
Shlosberg, Amy
Chu, Sarah P
description Individuals make sense of experience through telling stories they hope others will hear. To establish an interpretive connection with their audience, narrators must tell stories that are tellable, conceptualized as engaging but not too socially or emotionally challenging. We analyze the narratives of death-sentenced exoneree activists. When depicting their wrongful convictions, we find exoneree activists convey accepted critiques of criminal justice system processing through familiar tropes that reinforce shared understanding with their audience. When representing their unique suffering and conveying a more critical perspective, exonerees marshal sarcasm, metaphor, and litotes. These rhetorical devices convey irony that encourages listeners to question their assumptions, thereby, enhancing audience receptivity to exonerees’ perspectives. We consider the broader significance of figurative language in narrative representations of justice-system involvement.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/14624745211016304
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source SAGE Complete A-Z List; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Activism
Activists
Audiences
Capital punishment
Convictions
Criminal justice
Criminal justice system
Criminology
Death & dying
False arrests & convictions
Irony
Listeners
Metaphor
Narratives
Receptivity
Rhetoric
Sarcasm
title Enhancing the tellability of death-row exoneree narratives: Exploring the role of rhetoric
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