American Orators Before 1900: Critical Studies and SourcesBernard K. Duffy, Halford Ross Ryan Greenwood Press, 1987 - 481 páginas "The editors offer 55 case studies of orators, each chapter consisting of from three and one-half to more than nine pages of text followed by a brief section entitled 'Informational Source' that includes short bibliographic summaries and important research sources intended particularly `for those beginning to investigate an orator's rhetoric.' Entries close with a short chronology of major speeches. . . . Duffy and Ryan's hope that their book will 'prove useful' should be fulfilled quickly, for American Orators Before 1900 is the most extensive reference collection on its topic. By introducing all 55 rhetors in situ and illuminating such an array of rhetorical peculiarities, universals, power, triumphs, and influences on the past and present, this book becomes indispensable to college and large municipal libraries." Quarterly Journal of Speech. |
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Página 286
... Senate , " for example , he urged the delegates to restrict the Senate's power over expenditures . " Should the [ Senate ] ... have the power of giving away the peo- ple's money they might soon forget the source from which they received ...
... Senate , " for example , he urged the delegates to restrict the Senate's power over expenditures . " Should the [ Senate ] ... have the power of giving away the peo- ple's money they might soon forget the source from which they received ...
Página 378
... Senate . When Toombs moved from the House of Representatives to the Senate in 1854 , the giants of the Senate , such as Calhoun , Webster , and Clay , were gone either as a result of death or electoral defeat . Thompson notes in Robert ...
... Senate . When Toombs moved from the House of Representatives to the Senate in 1854 , the giants of the Senate , such as Calhoun , Webster , and Clay , were gone either as a result of death or electoral defeat . Thompson notes in Robert ...
Página 423
... Senate was Democrat , 42 percent Whig , and 3 percent Free Soil . The Senate was divided evenly between slave and free state senators , as was each party . But the issue was more complicated than that because some senators from border ...
... Senate was Democrat , 42 percent Whig , and 3 percent Free Soil . The Senate was divided evenly between slave and free state senators , as was each party . But the issue was more complicated than that because some senators from border ...
Contenido
John Quincy Adams | 7 |
Fisher Ames | 22 |
Henry Ward Beecher | 35 |
Derechos de autor | |
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American Orators Before 1900: Critical Studies and Sources Bernard K. Duffy,Halford Ross Ryan Vista de fragmentos - 1987 |
Términos y frases comunes
abolitionist Adams Adams's American Public Address antislavery appeal argued arguments audience Beecher Benton Boston Calhoun career CHRONOLOGY OF MAJOR church Clay Collected Speeches Collections and Collected colonies compromise Congress Constitution convention debate delivered Democratic Dickinson Douglas Edited Elizabeth Cady Stanton eloquence Emerson England federal Finney Georgia Giddings Grady Henry Henry Ward Beecher Inaugural INFORMATION SOURCES Research Ingersoll issue Jackson Jefferson John John Adams John Quincy Adams Lamar lecture liberty Library Lincoln MAJOR SPEECHES Mark Twain Massachusetts Moody orator oratory Otis Parker Philadelphia Phillips political preaching president public address Randolph Republican rhetorical Robert Toombs secession Selected Biographies Selected Critical Studies sermons slavery slaves Society Sojourner Truth source codes SOURCES Research Collections speaker speaking Speech Communication SPEECHES See Research spoke Stephens suffrage Sumner Talmage Theodore Parker Toombs U.S. House U.S. Senate Union Virginia vols vote Washington Webster Wendell Phillips Whig William woman women Yancey York