Prof. Gerald Thomas Goodnight
University of Southern California, USA
Professor
Email: gtg@usc.edu
Qualifications
1977 Ph.D., University of Kansas
1974 M.A., University of Houston
1971 B.S., University of Houston, Political science
Publications (selected)
-
2011 "From the Great Depression to the Great Recession--The 1932 Hayek-Keynes Debate: A Study in Economic Uncertainty, Contingency, and Criticism, POROI Journal (with David B. Hingstman).
-
2011 “Drug advertising and clinical practice: establishing topics of evaluation,” Proceedings of the ISSA Conference on Argumentation (with Kara Gilbert Monash University, Australia). In Press.
-
2011 "Rhetorical Consciousness and the Telemachus," Festscrift for David Zarefsky, University of Michigan Press. In Press.
-
2011 “A Doctor’s Ethos Enhancing Maneuvers in Medical Consultation,” in Festschrift for Frans Van Eemeren, Springer (with Roosmaryn Pilgram, University of Amsterdam). In Press.
-
2010 "Rhetoric, Risk, and Markets: The Dot-Com Bubble," Quarterly Journal of Speech 96: 115-140 (with Sandy Green). Lead Article
-
2010 The Metapolitics of the 2002 Iraq Debate: Public Policy and the Network Imaginary” Rhetoric and Public Affairs 13: 65-94, Spring 2010.
-
2010 “Rhetoric, Reflection and Emancipation: Habermas and Farrell on Critical Studies of Communication in Erik Doxtader, ed. Inventing the Potential of Rhetorical Culture: The Work and Legacy of Thomas B. Farrell Penn St University Press, 2009. (Came out in 2010 from 2009 journal issue)
-
2010 “Work, Wealth, and Worry: The Benefits of Communication Study for Economic Literacy,” Communication Currents 5:6. (with Sandy Green).
-
2009 “The Presidential Debates of 2004: Contested Moments in the Democratic Experiment” (with Majdik and Kephart), Controversia 6: 13-38.
-
2009 "Review of the Bourgeois Public Sphere," Online the title reads: “The Bourgeois Virtues: Ethics for an Age of Commerce” Quarterly Journal of Speech 95: 346-351, Fall 2009.
-
2008 "China and the United States in a Time of Global Environmental Crisis," Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies 5 (2008): 416-421. (with Jinfang Liu)
-
2008 "The Duties of Advocacy: Argumentation Under Conditions of Disparity, Asymmetry, and Difference," in van Eemeren and Garsen, eds., Pondering on Problems of Argumentation Springer.
-
2008 "Counterfactual Argumentation & Rhetorical Advocacy," Proceedings of the Third Bi-Annual Conference on Argumentation, Tokyo Japan.
-
2008 "Rhetoric, Reflection and Emancipation: Farrell and Habermas on the Critical Studies of Communication," Philosophy & Rhetoric 41 (2008): 421-439.
-
2008 "Strategic Maneuvering in Direct to Consumer Drug Advertising: A Study in Argumentation Theory and New Institutional Theory," Argumentation 22: 359-371.
-
2008 “Forensics as Scholarship: Testing Zarefsky’s Hypothesis in the Digital Age.” (With Gordan Mitchell) Argumentation and Advocacy 45: 80-97.
-
2008 Kerry vs. Bush, The 2008 Presidential Debates, Controversia 2008. (with Zoltan Majdik and John Kephardt).
-
2007 Communication and the Humanities: A White Paper Sponsored by the National Communication Association. NCA.
-
2006 “Shared Power, Foreign Policy, and Haiti, 1994: Public Memories of War and Race.” Rhetoric and Public Affairs 9.7 (Winter, 2006): 601-634. (with Kathryn Olson).
-
2006 “Strategic Doctrine, Public Debate, and the Terror War” in Hitting First: Prevent Force in U.S. Security Strategy, 93-114. William W. Keller and Gordon Mitchell, ed. University of Pittsburgh Press. [Initially published on Ridgway Center for Security Studies
-
2006 “When Reasons Matter Most: Pragma-dialectics and the Problem of Informed Consent.” Considering Pragma-Dialectics. Agnes van Rees and Peter Houtlooser, eds. Erlbaum.
-
2006 “Smoking Guns, Cherry-Picking & Stove-Piping: On Critical Metaphors, Discourse Events and Argumentation Games.” Proceedings of the 13th Alta Conference on Argumentation. Patti Riley (ed.).
-
2006. "The Engagements of Communication: Jurgen Habermas on Discourse, Critical Reason, and Controversy." in Perspectives on Philosophy of Communication. Pat Arneson (ed). West Lafyette, IN: Perdue University Press, 112-142.
-
2005. "Rhetoric and Political Economy at the Aesthetic Nexus: A Study of Archbishop Whately." (with David Hingstman) In Rhetorical Agendas. Patricia Bizell (ed.) Mahwah, NJ: Ehrlbaum, 137-145.
-
2005 “Science and Technology Controversy: A Rationale of Inquiry,” Argumentation and Advocacy. v. 42: 26-29.