Examines public discourse from the Progressive Era over the state’s right to regulate women’s bodies and their reproduction When Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes determined in 1927 that sterilization was a legitimate means of safeguarding the nation’s health, he was asserting the state’s right to regulate the production of the national body. His opinion represented a culmination of arguments about reproduction and immigration that had been circulating for years but that intensified during the Progressive Era. Arguments about reproductive and immigration practices surged to the foreground, and tectonic shifts in the conceptual schemes and practices of reproduction in the United States followed. Drawing on feminist historiography and genre studies, Corporal Rhetoric: Regulating Reproduction in the Progressive Era explores the rhetoric of medical research, new technologies, and material practices that shifted the idea of childbirth as an act of God or Nature to a medical procedure enacted by male physicians on the bodies of women made passive by both drugs and discourse. Barbara Schneider considers how efficiency, the hallmark of scientific management, was raised to a cardinal virtue by its inclusions in the powerful mediums of presidential speeches, national educational policies, and eugenics discourse to reclassify babies, long regarded as gifts, as either valuable assets or defective products. Schneider shows how the legal system drew upon medicine, scientific management, and the emerging discipline of sociology to restrict women’s labor in order to preserve reproductive capacity, categorized by Supreme Court opinions as a public good rather than a private capacity. Throughout, she ties the arguments developed during this era to current debates about mothering rhetorics, reproductive rights, immigration, and conceptions of the nation. By weaving together medical research reports, clinical practices, case studies, legal opinions and legislative acts, and the epistemology of scientific management, Schneider illuminates the network that women such as Margaret Sanger, Jane Addams, Lillian Gilbreth and multiple others negotiated as they sought to give women room to exercise their reproductive capacity. Through her analysis of the machinery of these discourses and the material uptake of their genres in the daily practices of reproductive bodies, Schneider offers a provisional theory of corporal rhetoric that begins to answer the call for a new material theory of the body.
Supplementing the volume are practical and theoretical approaches to the construction and analysis of rhetorical messages and brief and readable examples from popular culture, academic discourse, politics, and the verbal arts.
This groundbreaking volume makes a case for historical rhetoric as disbursed, formal and informal lessons in persuasion that are codified as crafts that mediate between what is known and unknown in particular rhetorical situations.
... rhetoric situates itself at the source of desire's expression . It thereby offers a means - perhaps the means for ... corporal thing . ' Good rhet- oric , like good living , steers you away from the body ; bad rhetoric draws you toward ...
Again in 1990 , the ascendancy of the gay - porn actor Joey Stefano was tied to an erotics of outing : Stefano became a celebrity in gay porn as an openly gay man when , paradoxically enough , the upper reaches of gay - porn celebrity ...
As Arlo Bates said in an introduction to Pearson's book , In actual practice the learner does not write first words , then sentences , then paragraphs , and defer the attempt to produce a complete theme until he has mastered these .
Freud's work was extended by his most famous pupil, Carl Jung, who broke with Freud in 1913 and then suffered a nervous breakdown when World War I fulfilled his apocalyptic dream. When he recovered, he developed his own theory of ...
See Martin J. Medhurst, “Eisenhower, Little Rock, and the Rhetoric of Crisis,” in The Modern Presidency and Crisis ... see Stephen Frantzich and John Sullivan, The C-SPAN Revolution (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1996), 39–40, ...
About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.com This book is a reproduction of an important historical work.
This collection of essays by distinguished international scholars from various disciplines addresses the widespread and growing interest in the nature and function of rhetoric, and in the rhetorical analysis of such human sciences as ...
... corporal passions which the mind experiences because of its union with the body is somewhat similar to the difference between the sense ideas perceived in the imagination and pure thought detached of all sensible impressions. Unlike the ...