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Résumé

This dissertation project focuses on how the terms surrounding civic engagement are changing with a transition to the networked public sphere. I analyze how the rhetorical construction of engagement in networked communities is opening up space for deliberative rhetoric. The texts for analysis are two campaigns from the Harry Potter Alliance that are targeted at ending the genocide in Darfur and fighting against illiteracy. In order to better understand the changing rhetorical construction of civic engagement, I trace the traditional view of the concept through time and compare them against the terms being advanced in the case studies. I utilize cluster analysis and social semiotics to categorize and filter the language being used by the networked public of the Harry Potter Alliance. Each of the case studies validated the hypothesis that the terms of engagement are changing, altering the deliberative landscape to allow for more engagement to occur over a geographically separated space. Engagement is framed in ways that make getting involved easier and present civic issues as less monolithic. I conclude that the networked public sphere is offering novel opportunities for civic engagement capable of responding to problems rather than simply constricting public participation.

Détails

Titre
The Terms of Engagement: Rhetorical Constructions of Citizenship in the Networked Public Sphere
Auteur
Farmer, Darrel
Année
2015
Éditeur
ProQuest Dissertations Publishing
ISBN
978-1-321-69133-7
Type de source
Thèse ou mémoire
Langue de publication
English
ID de document ProQuest
1677468522
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.