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Journal ArticleDOI

Reconciliation--A Rhetorical Concept/ion.

Erik Doxtader
- 01 Nov 2003 - 
- Vol. 89, Iss: 4, pp 267-292
TLDR
In this article, the authors argue that reconciliation is a rhetorical concept, a performance and norm of rhetorical practice that transcends violence less than it turns its historical justification toward mutual oppositions that call for the character (ethos) of understanding.
Abstract
What is reconciliation? A source of historical puzzlement and contemporary controversy over how to make history, this question asks after those words which constitute a beginning (again), that moment in which endless cycles of conflict give way to the hope for “unity in difference.” Concerned with the dynamics of its operation, the present essay contends that reconciliation is a rhetorical concept, a performance and norm of rhetorical practice that transcends violence less than it turns its historical justification toward mutual oppositions that call for(th) the character (ethos) of understanding. A challenge to both the logic and politics of identity, an opposing and relating of that which is held to be exclusive, reconciliation is thus difficult to define. From a reading of the concept's history, I investigate this definitional puzzle through consideration of how the substance of reconciliation appears within its potential, the capacity to open a time for expression, invent the grounds for speech-action...

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Citations
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Book

A Moral Theory of Political Reconciliation

TL;DR: In this article, the rule of law, political trust, political reconciliation, and political reconciliation are discussed in the context of political reconciliation and political trust in international criminal trials, respectively.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fighting Terror by Rite of Redemption and Reconciliation

TL;DR: The authors examines the Bush administration's rhetoric of evil in the war on terror and invasion of Iraq by reframing the question of national security into one of a chosen people's recurring quest for redemption.
Journal ArticleDOI

Apologizing for the past for a better future: collective apologies in the United States, Australia, and Canada

TL;DR: This paper examined the rhetorical phenomenon of collective apology and found that the purpose of collective apologies is to repair relationships damaged by historical wrongdoing, and that rhetors use the rhetorical strategies of remembrance, mortification, and corrective action.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pro(re-)claiming Loss: A Performance Pilgrimage in Search of Malintzin Tenépal

TL;DR: In this paper, a performance ethnography examines the author's pilgrimage to Mexico City in search of Malintzin Tenepal, and the essay seeks to contribute to the Chicana feminist project of reclaiming the narrative or voice of tenepal by means of auto-ethnographic narrative, as opposed to more standard prose or poetic forms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reconciliation: Building a Bridge from Complicity to Coherence in the Rhetoric of Race Relations

TL;DR: In the United States, race inequality and antagonism are alive and well, as attested most recently by the controversy over African American voter access in Florida in the 2000 presidential election and by the recent lawsuits seeking reparations for slaves' descendents as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Book

The burden of memory, the muse of forgiveness

Wole Soyinka
TL;DR: Soyinka's The Burden of Memory as mentioned in this paper explores the principle duty and "near intolerable burden" of memory to bear the record of injustice and challenges notions of simple forgiveness, of confession and absolution, as strategies for social healing.
Journal ArticleDOI

After the TRC : reflections on truth and reconciliation in South Africa

TL;DR: A collection of essays by international and local commentators on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) is presented in this article, with a range of perspectives on whether the TRC met its objectives of truth and reconciliation.
Journal ArticleDOI

The rhetoric of justice: strategies of reconciliation and revenge in the restoration of Athenian democracy in 403 BC

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine from a comparative perspective the first historically documented case of transitional justice: the restoration of the Athenian democracy in 403 BC, in particular the rhetoric of amnesty, justice, reconciliation and revenge and the discursive strategies informing the prosecutions and litigation which followed the transition.