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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Doug Cloud,Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.200kg ISBN: 9781032486673ISBN 10: 1032486678 Pages: 162 Publication Date: 29 September 2023 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsDoug Cloud has written a funny, personal, scholarly, and provocative exploration of the implications and consequences of imagining ""human rights activism"" in terms of choices and options we have in conversations. - Trisha Roberts-Miller, Professor Emeritus, Department of Rhetoric and Writing This is a ground-breaking introduction to the art of advocacy for students and activists—one that turns the discussion of human rights, identity, racism, gender, rhetoric, and education into a decision to take personal action. But how—in the face of aggressively competing intellectual, ideological, and political stances, each telling us what we ""should do""? Instead, Arguing Identity and Human Rights invites the reader to think through the built-in ""tensions"" and potential outcomes a given choice involves as we shape our own approach to difference, agency, language, critique, or social change. - Linda Flower Cloud offers us a courageous, much-needed, and disarmingly personal guide to how we might think about our rhetorical options when we argue for human rights. Unlike other advice books on social justice advocacy, which tell readers what to think and what to do, Cloud trusts his readers to use their hearts and their brains to make strategic and humane rhetorical decisions that best fit them and their very human situations. This empowering book is for anyone who wants to take a truly rhetorical approach to arguing for equity and inclusion in a complex and complicated world. - Martin Camper, Director of the Center for the Humanities, Associate Professor of Writing, Loyola University Maryland, Author of Arguing over Texts: The Rhetoric of Interpretation Doug Cloud has written a funny, personal, scholarly, and provocative exploration of the implications and consequences of imagining human rights activism in terms of choices and options we have in conversations. - Trisha Roberts-Miller, Professor Emeritus, Department of Rhetoric and Writing This is a ground-breaking introduction to the art of advocacy for students and activists-one that turns the discussion of human rights, identity, racism, gender, rhetoric, and education into a decision to take personal action. But how-in the face of aggressively competing intellectual, ideological, and political stances, each telling us what we should do ? Instead, Arguing Identity and Human Rights invites the reader to think through the built-in tensions and potential outcomes a given choice involves as we shape our own approach to difference, agency, language, critique, or social change. - Linda Flower Cloud offers us a courageous, much-needed, and disarmingly personal guide to how we might think about our rhetorical options when we argue for human rights. Unlike other advice books on social justice advocacy, which tell readers what to think and what to do, Cloud trusts his readers to use their hearts and their brains to make strategic and humane rhetorical decisions that best fit them and their very human situations. This empowering book is for anyone who wants to take a truly rhetorical approach to arguing for equity and inclusion in a complex and complicated world. - Martin Camper, Director of the Center for the Humanities, Associate Professor of Writing, Loyola University Maryland, Author of Arguing over Texts: The Rhetoric of Interpretation "Doug Cloud has written a funny, personal, scholarly, and provocative exploration of the implications and consequences of imagining ""human rights activism"" in terms of choices and options we have in conversations. - Trisha Roberts-Miller, Professor Emeritus, Department of Rhetoric and Writing This is a ground-breaking introduction to the art of advocacy for students and activists—one that turns the discussion of human rights, identity, racism, gender, rhetoric, and education into a decision to take personal action. But how—in the face of aggressively competing intellectual, ideological, and political stances, each telling us what we ""should do""? Instead, Arguing Identity and Human Rights invites the reader to think through the built-in ""tensions"" and potential outcomes a given choice involves as we shape our own approach to difference, agency, language, critique, or social change. - Linda Flower Cloud offers us a courageous, much-needed, and disarmingly personal guide to how we might think about our rhetorical options when we argue for human rights. Unlike other advice books on social justice advocacy, which tell readers what to think and what to do, Cloud trusts his readers to use their hearts and their brains to make strategic and humane rhetorical decisions that best fit them and their very human situations. This empowering book is for anyone who wants to take a truly rhetorical approach to arguing for equity and inclusion in a complex and complicated world. - Martin Camper, Director of the Center for the Humanities, Associate Professor of Writing, Loyola University Maryland, Author of Arguing over Texts: The Rhetoric of Interpretation" Author InformationDoug Cloud is an Associate Professor in the Department of English at Colorado State University, USA Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |