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The Complicated Memory of Obama’s ‘Middle Ground’ Rhetoric of Colorblindedness versus the reality of ‘Stand Your Ground’ policing: The Silent Return of ‘Race’ in the aftermath of Treyvon Martin’s Shooting in the USA’s Zones of Exception and Non-Being

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dc.contributor.author Masemola, Kgomotso
dc.date.accessioned 2015-03-30T11:55:03Z
dc.date.available 2015-03-30T11:55:03Z
dc.date.issued 2014
dc.identifier.citation Masemola, Kgomotso 2014. The Complicated Memory of Obama’s ‘Middle Ground’ Rhetoric of Colorblindedness versus the reality of ‘Stand Your Ground’ policing: The Silent Return of ‘Race’ in the aftermath of Treyvon Martin’s Shooting in the USA’s Zones of Exception and Non-Being, African Journal for Rhetoric, Vol 6, 54-72 en
dc.identifier.issn 1998-2054
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/18435
dc.description.abstract This paper charts the complications arising out of the rhetorical markers of ‘Middle Ground’ colorblindedness in the unitary fervour attending Barack Obama’s 2004 Democratic National Convention Speech, wherein the E pluribus unum dictum was planted into both memory and public consciousness through rhetorical features such as Parallelism and Anaphora, both of which resonate with the vision of one diverse American family. Yet, this paper argues, his cautionary response in the aftermath of the Treyvon Martin shooting, attests to a shift to a rhetorical flourish hinged on the Aristotelian antilogiai principle that puts race ‘under erasure’ through the rhetorical device of variation, whereby he allows public memory to reimagine Treyvon Martin as not only a younger version of Barack Obama but also Treyvon as his son. The paper concludes that between the orotund anaphora of hope and the cautionary diction of despair carried by variation lies hidden the partition of America’s cosmetic color-blindedness that paradoxically plays out in profiled, if fatal, racial spectacle of the clash between the ‘middle ground’ rhetoric and gruesome ‘stand your ground’ policing. The said clash, in styled rhetoric and historical content, renders America as both the country of dreams for all and a zone of exception and non-being for young, black males. en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher African Association for Rhetoric en
dc.subject Barack Obama en
dc.subject Parallelism en
dc.subject Anaphora en
dc.subject Treyvon Martin en
dc.subject antilogiai en
dc.subject public memory en
dc.subject racism en
dc.subject Presidential rhetoric en
dc.title The Complicated Memory of Obama’s ‘Middle Ground’ Rhetoric of Colorblindedness versus the reality of ‘Stand Your Ground’ policing: The Silent Return of ‘Race’ in the aftermath of Treyvon Martin’s Shooting in the USA’s Zones of Exception and Non-Being en
dc.type Article en


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