Speech, script, and performance: towards a public poetics of the political speechwriter's role
Clark, Tom (2011) Speech, script, and performance: towards a public poetics of the political speechwriter's role. Prism Online Journal, 8 (1). pp. 1-9. ISSN 1448-4404
Abstract
This article brings together and contextualises some ostensibly disparate ‘readings’ of political speeches from Australia and the United States, both good examples and not-so-good examples, to examine a characteristic that prevails in all public communication, and which is especially noticeable in politics. That characteristic is the nexus between the poetic and the political in all public language. In this case, it is grounded in a distinction between political speakers-as-performers and the advisors who script many of their performances for them. The dynamics of this relationship are critical influences on the more publicly explicit relationship between speakers and their audiences. Consequently, these dynamics are critical to our understanding of political discourse, and of public communication more broadly.
Item type | Article |
URI | https://vuir.vu.edu.au/id/eprint/9179 |
Official URL | http://www.prismjournal.org/fileadmin/8_1/Clark.pd... |
Subjects | Historical > Faculty/School/Research Centre/Department > School of Communication and the Arts Historical > FOR Classification > 1904 Performing Arts and Creative Writing Historical > SEO Classification > 9502 Communication |
Keywords | ResPubID23731, political speeches, nexus, political discourse, speakers-as-performers |
Download/View statistics | View download statistics for this item |