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Contents
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v Contents Acknowledgments vii Foreword: Difficult Dialogues: Intersectionality as Lived Experience ix Marsha Houston Introduction: Standing at the Intersections of Feminisms, Intersectionality, and Communication Studies 1 Cindy L. Griffin and Karma R. Chávez PART I: Entering the Intersection 1. Mammies and Matriarchs: Feminine Style and Signifyin(g) in Carol Moseley Braun’s 2003–2004 Campaign for the Presidency 35 Shanara Rose Reid- Brinkley 2. The Intersectional Style of Free Love Rhetoric 59 Kate Zittlow Rogness 3. (Im)mobile Metaphors: Toward an Intersectional Rhetorical History 78 Carly S. Woods 4. Placing Sex/Gender at the Forefront: Feminisms, Intersectionality, and Communication Studies 97 Sara Hayden and D. Lynn O’Brien Hallstein PART II: Audiences and Audiencing 5. Intersecting Audiences: Public Commentary Concerning Audre Lorde’s Speech, “Uses of the Erotic: The Erotic as Power” 125 Lester C. Olson vi Contents 6. Constitutive Intersectionality and the Affect of Rhetorical Form 147 Leslie A. Hahner 7. Spheres of Influence: The Intersections of Feminism and Transnationalism in Betty Millard’s Woman Against Myth 169 Jennifer Keohane 8. Essentialism, Intersectionality and Recognition: A Feminist Rhetorical Approach to the Audience 189 Sara L. McKinnon Contributors 211 Index 215 ...