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Prior to this text, little has been done to analyze Malcolm X's speeches. Author Robert Terrill explores the key texts from the African-American protest, those delivered while he was a minister for the Nation of Islam and afterwards. This volume shows that the changing potential of Malcolm's rhetoric lies, in part, in its iconoclastic refusal to be constrained by definitive boundaries.

Produktbeschreibung
Prior to this text, little has been done to analyze Malcolm X's speeches. Author Robert Terrill explores the key texts from the African-American protest, those delivered while he was a minister for the Nation of Islam and afterwards. This volume shows that the changing potential of Malcolm's rhetoric lies, in part, in its iconoclastic refusal to be constrained by definitive boundaries.
Autorenporträt
Robert E. Terrill is Associate Professor in the department of Communication & Culture, and adjunct faculty in the American Studies program, at Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana. In 2005, Terrill received the $10,000 Kohrs-Campbell Prize in Rhetorical Criticism. He was named 2003 Teacher of the Year by Lambda Pi Eta, Communication Studies Honor Society. In 2002, he received the Indiana University Teaching Excellence Recognition Award (TERA). His essays analyzing speeches and films have appeared in The Quarterly Journal of Speech, Critical Studies in Media Communication, and other journals. He has served on the editorial board of several academic journals.