Skip to main content
Contribution to Book
From civilians to soldiers and back again: Domestic propaganda and the discourse of public reconstitution in the U.S. Treasury’s World War II bond campaign
Public address and moral judgment: Critical studies in ethical tensions (2009)
Abstract
Public Address and Moral Judgment offers a critical look at the ways in which public address can enact moral codes, articulate moral judgments, and manifest ethical tensions. Each chapter carefully examines specific examples of public address for their moral dimensions, exploring how public address functions to articulate and express the ethical tensions of its time and context. The contributors highlight important and often different ways that public address works to expose problematics in ethical tensions―problematics of language and imagery, metaphor and character, genre and definition. The authors are also mindful of the tenuous relationship that exists between rhetoric and morality, between situated public address and a society's ethical foundations.
     The essays in Public Address and Moral Judgment, on topics ranging from WWII propaganda to the civil rights rhetoric of President George H. W. Bush to the photographs from the Abu Ghraib prison, consider the powerful role of public discourse in the constitution of a moral code for the American people.
Keywords
  • United States,
  • Politics and Government,
  • Moral and ethical aspects,
  • Political Aspects,
  • Speeches,
  • addresses,
  • etc.,
  • American
Publication Date
2009
Editor
Shawn J Parry-Giles, and Trevor Parry-Giles
Publisher
Michigan State University Press
Series
Rhetoric and public affairs series
Citation Information
"From civilians to soldiers and back again: Domestic propaganda and the discourse of public reconstitution in the U.S. Treasury’s World War II bond campaign" East LansingPublic address and moral judgment: Critical studies in ethical tensions (2009) p. 127 - 160
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/james-kimble/18/