Checkout
- Digital Price: $5.00 USD (All sales final)
- Rhetoric & Public Affairs
- Michigan State University Press
- Article
- The Post-9/11 Public Sphere: Citizen Talk about the 2004 Presidential Debates Volume 8, Number 4, Winter 2005, pp. 617-638
To further meet your research needs, the complete digital issue from this journal is also available for purchase for $25.00 USD.
This issue contains 17 articles in total
- Introduction: Campaign 2004: Looking to the Past for Ideological Certainty in a Period of National Anxiety
- Liberalism's Last Hurrah: The Presidential Campaign of 1964 (review)
- Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Transformation of the Supreme Court (review)
- Shooting Kennedy: JFK and the Culture of Images (review)
- America Unbound: The Bush Revolution in Foreign Policy (review)
- Gender and Candidate Communication: VideoStyle, WebStyle, NewsStyle (review)
- Why the Electoral College Is Bad for America (review)
- Campaign Posturing, Military Decision Making, and Administrative Amnesias
- The Role of Vietnam in the 2004 Presidential Election
- Collective Memory and the Candidates' Wives in the 2004 Presidential Campaign
- Of Mobs and Machines: Remembering the 2000 Florida Recount in 2004
- To Form a More Perfect Union: Bill Clinton and the Art of Deliberation
- One Nation (Pretty Darn) Divisible: National Identity in the 2004 Conventions
- The Post-9/11 Public Sphere: Citizen Talk about the 2004 Presidential Debates
- Politics and the Single Woman: The "Sex and the City Voter" in Campaign 2004
- Barack Obama's Address to the 2004 Democratic National Convention: Trauma, Compromise, Consilience, and the (Im)possibility of Racial Reconciliation
- "You Know Where I Stand": Moral Framing of the War on Terrorism and the Iraq War in the 2004 Presidential Campaign
In order to purchase digital content, you must be logged into your MyMUSE account.
For questions, please see Purchasing MUSE Content