Affiliation:
1. Department of English, Appalachian State University
Abstract
ABSTRACT
This article builds on the scholarship on violence at the nexus of rhetoric, philosophy, decoloniality, and human rights discourse to theorize what it calls a rhetoric of everyday violence. Moving beyond the focus on the politics of representation in slow violence, it brings a transnational feminist rhetorical analytic and a focus on the politics of recognition to illegible temporal violence, arguing that a rhetoric of everyday violence can help recalibrate human rights discourse to recognize temporal and gendered violence as human rights violations.
Publisher
The Pennsylvania State University Press
Reference30 articles.
1. “Representing Slow Violence and Resistance: On Hiding and Seeing.”;ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies,2019