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- Digital Price: $5.00 USD (All sales final)
- Rhetoric & Public Affairs
- Michigan State University Press
- Article
- Laboring to Belong: Differentiation, Spatial Relocation, and the Ironic Presence of (Un)Documented Immigrants in the United Farm Workers “Take Our Jobs” Campaign Volume 21, Number 3, Fall 2018, pp. 447-480
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 13 articles in total
- A Revolution in Tropes: Alloiostrophic Rhetoric ed. by Jane S. Sutton, Mari Lee Mifsud (review)
- The Southern Manifesto: Massive Resistance and the Fight to Preserve Segregation by John Kyle Day (review)
- Secret Habits: Catholic Literacy Education for Women in the Early Nineteenth Century by Carol Mattingly (review)
- Tongue of Fire: Emma Goldman, Public Womanhood, and the Sex Question by Donna M. Kowal (review)
- Representing Ebola: Culture, Law, and Public Discourse about the 2013–2015 West African Ebola Outbreak by Marouf A. Hasian Jr. (review)
- The Rhetorics of US Immigration: Identity, Community, Otherness ed. by Johanna Hartelius (review)
- Violent Subjects and Rhetorical Cartography in the Age of the Terror Wars by Heather Ashley Hayes (review)
- The Public Image: Photography and Civic Spectatorship by Robert Hariman, John Louis Lucaites (review)
- Points of Difference in the Study of More-than-Human Rhetorical Ontologies
- Driving the Three-Horse Team of Government: Kairos in FDR’s Judiciary Fireside Chat
- Laboring to Belong: Differentiation, Spatial Relocation, and the Ironic Presence of (Un)Documented Immigrants in the United Farm Workers “Take Our Jobs” Campaign
- The Judicial Character of Late Liberal Prudence: Paul v. Davis
- Abraham Lincoln’s Second Annual Message to Congress and Public Policy Advocacy for African Colonization
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