Navigating boundaries : the rhetoric of women governors

Author(s)

    • Marshall, Brenda DeVore
    • Mayhead, Molly A.

Bibliographic Information

Navigating boundaries : the rhetoric of women governors

edited by Brenda DeVore Marshall and Molly A. Mayhead

(Praeger series in political communication)

Praeger, 2000

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [125]-140) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Marshall, Mayhead, and their contributors explore the discourse women use to negotiate political boundaries. The analysis, based on the study of five governors-Nellie Tayloe Ross, Martha Layne Collins, Ann Richards, Barbara Roberts, and Christine Todd Whitman-illustrates that women bring issues of caring, empowerment, family, and inclusivity to the office. These issues contrast sharply with traditional male-centered ideologies and give renewed vigor to a revised moral point of view in contemporary politics. The essays also demonstrate that women governors must still work within the traditional societal constructs for women. Yet, at the same time, they need to create new paradigms that redefine women's roles and exemplify that woman's place is in the private sphere and the public political arena. The work examines the common obstacles these women faced despite differences in era, political affiliation, geographic location, and ideologies. Simply by being elected, each woman operated within a public/private sphere duality she struggled to overcome. Each woman recognized that she needed to craft appropriate rhetorical strategies to succeed in office while not abandoning the unique values and perspectives she brought to the statehouse. The essays contend that women serving in the governorship resculpt the face of the office, restructure the political landscape, and redefine women's roles. The volume will be of particular value to students and scholars dealing with issues of public address and rhetorical criticism, women's communication, political communication, and women in politics.

Table of Contents

Introduction The Changing Face of the Governorship Marginalizing Metaphors of the Feminine Portrait of a "Governor Lady": An Examination of Nellie Tayloe Ross's Autobiographical Political Advocacy "For Kentucky": The Shared Vision of Governor Martha Layne Collins The Fusion of Populist and Feminine Styles in the Rhetoric of Ann Richards Re-visioning and Re-framing Political Boundaries: Barbara Roberts' Response to Oregon's Budget Crisis Christine Todd Whitman and the Ideology of the New Jersey Governorship Conclusion Works Cited Index

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