Rhetoric, Politics & Culture is hosted on the following platforms.

Journal Information

  • ISSN: 2693-7522
  • eISSN: 2693-7549
  • Frequency: Biannual

Description

Rhetoric, Politics, and Culture (RPC) embraces a pluralistic approach to rhetorical scholarship. The journal is open to a variety of methodological approaches, from close textual and/or historical analysis to critical/cultural, ethnographic, performative, artistic, and/or theoretical work. The journal invites scholarship on rhetorics of marginalization, structure, materiality, and power; politics, advocacy, and activism; and beyond. Foremost to its mission is featuring perspectives that question in/justice, in/equity, power, and democracy and that attend to interlocking structures of power within their geopolitical and historical contexts. This journal also invites rhetorical scholarship that archives, documents, theorizes, or participates in forms of individual and collective public interventions, advocacy, activism, and resistance to such structures.

Submissions Now Open! See call here.

Sponsoring Members

RPC Sponsoring Members

Rhetoric, Politics & Culture and MSU Press would like to thank the following departments, institutions, and individuals for their generous support of RPC’s launch.

Total donations to date: $52,089

Each year, on this page, we will list the total annual expense incurred by the press to produce the journal. Production costs include author honorariums, copyediting, typesetting, online hosting, and subscription management.

Note: Due to Michigan’s stay-at-home order, our offices are closed and there have been some delays in receiving mail, including any donations recently sent by check. As such, the following list may not be completely up-to-date. We will continue to update it as more information becomes available.

Up to $1,000

Communication Studies, Creighton University

Department of Communication, University of Pittsburgh

Department of Communication, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Department of Communication Studies, Gustavus Adolphus College

Department of Communication Studies, Southern Illinois University Carbondale

Department of Communication Studies, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Department of Writing Studies, Rhetoric, and Composition, Syracuse University

National Communication Association

Texas A&M University

University of Georgia

University of Minnesota

University of Montana

University of Washington

Up to $3,000

Colorado State University

Department of Communication & Film, University of Memphis 

Department of Communication & Rhetorical Studies, Syracuse University

Department of Communication Studies, Northwestern University

Department of Communication Studies, University of Kansas

Northeastern University

University of Texas at Austin

University of Wisconsin-Madison

More than $3,000

Bryan Crable, Waterhouse Family Institute, Villanova University

Department of Communication Arts & Sciences, Penn State University

Department of Communication Studies, The University of Iowa

Hugh Downs School of Human Communication, Arizona State University

Other Sponsors (submitted online via MSU University Advancement)

Karrin V. Anderson

Scott Anderson

Rebecca Avalos

Lisa M. Corrigan

Vanessa Beasley

Jeffrey A. Bennett

Caitlin Bruce

Karma R. Chávez

Antonio De Velasco

Rosa Eberly

Amanda N. Edgar

Annee Fisher

Christina R. Foust

Marita Gronnvoll

Leslie A. Hahner

Jenna N. Hanchey

Roderick P. Hart

Megan F. Hartline

Annie Hill

Charlotte Hogg

Matthew Houdek

Jo Hsu

Brandon Inabinet

Seth Kahn

Diane M. Keeling

Casey R. Kelly

Ashley N. Mack

Megan McIntyre

Ryan Neville-Shepard

Christa J. Olson

Catherine H. Palczewski

Valerie Renegar

Eva M. Reyes

Elaine B. Richardson

Abraham Romney

Bradley A. Serber

Claire Sisco-King

Leland G. Spencer

Leah Sprain

Nathan Stormer

Mary Stuckey

Franklin Stuckey

Armond Towns

Sarah J. Tracy

Pamela VanHaitsma

Lynne M. Webb

Anna Young

Fundraising and Organizing Team

We would like to acknowledge and thank the organizing and fundraising efforts of these individuals, without whom RPC would not be possible.

Karma R. Chávez

Lisa Corrigan

Annie Hill

Lisa Flores

Andre Johnson

Jiyeon Kang

Bryan McCann

Ersula Ore

Candice Rai

Mary Stuckey

Armond Towns

Anjali Vats

Submission Information

Submissions to Rhetoric, Politics & Culture are accepted through our online portal. Users must register as authors in order to submit. Guidelines and instructions can be found here.

Editorial Policies

Rhetoric, Politics, & Culture invites original scholarship that examines rhetoric as a phenomenon rooted in relations of power. Essays may work within a variety of intellectual traditions addressing matters of rhetorical theory, history, criticism, and pedagogy. We also invite manuscripts engaging in archival analysis. Submissions should attend to the co-constitutive relationship between politics and culture in a variety of historical, geographic, and media contexts. Because this journal is the progeny of antiracist activism in rhetorical studies and cognate fields, we are committed to publishing intersectional and reflexive work that attends to its role in disciplinary histories. Successful submissions will engage in mindful citational practices and contribute to the conversations that gave rise to Rhetoric, Politics, and Culture.

We also invite individuals to submit review essays. In addition to book reviews, we encourage reviews of films, events, exhibitions, installations, digital projects, podcasts, and live performances that advance knowledge in rhetorical studies. From time to time, we will also invite themed reviews.

Lastly, Rhetoric, Politics, & Culture will regularly publish a forum section consisting of shorter essays addressing a common theme in rhetorical scholarship.

Section Policies

Articles

  • This section will focus on original articles and/or archival analyses
  • 10,000 word limit
  • Submissions should follow the guidelines of Chicago Manual of Style 17th edition, endnote-style citations

Forums

RPC's forum section will be on special topics and curated by guest editors. Please only submit invited manuscripts to the system. If you have a forum proposal, please contact the RPC editorial office.

Rhetoric in Review

The review section will not only include book reviews, we encourage reviews of films, events, exhibitions, installations, digital projects, podcasts, and live performances that advance knowledge in rhetorical studies.

Reviews may also appear as conversational engagements with several authors responding to several new books around a common theme. If you have a proposal for such a project, please contact the editors.

Review pieces generally have a 4,000-word limit, but this can be discussed with the editors.

MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION

RPC follows the Chicago Manual of Style, 17th ed., and uses endnote-style citations. Refer to the to the RPC Style Sheet to prepare your manuscript for submission.

STYLE SHEET

IMAGES AND DERIVATIVE MATERIALS

  • It is the author’s obligation and responsibility to determine and satisfy copyright and/or other use restrictions prior to submitting materials to MSU Press for publication.
  • Images must be submitted as supplementary, clearly-labeled files at time of submission.
  • All images must be minimum 300 dpi at planned publication size.
  • Citations, permissions, and captions are required upon submission for all images.
  • We cannot publish such materials without an accompanying signed permissions letter.

Editorial Board

Editors

Carmen Kynard is the Lillian Radford Chair in Rhetoric and Composition and professor of English at Texas Christian University. She traces her research and teaching at “Education, Liberation, and Black Radical Traditions” (http://carmenkynard.org).

Bryan J. McCann is associate professor in the department of Communication Studies at Louisiana State University. His publications include The Mark of Criminality: Rhetoric, Race, and Gangsta Rap in the War-on-Crime Era (University of Alabama Press, 2017).

Executive Committee

Karma R. Chávez, University of Texas-Austin
Andre E. Johnson, University of Memphis
Vani Kannan, Lehman College
Jacqueline Jones Royster, Georgia Institute of Technology
Khirsten L. Scott, University of Pittsburgh
Anjali Vats, Boston College

Editorial Board

Sara P. Alvarez, Queen's College, CUNY
Steven Alvarez, St. John's University
Robert Asen, University of Wisconsin-Madison
April Baker-Bell, Michigan State University
Robin Boylorn, University of Alabama
Bernadette Marie Calafell, Gonzaga University
Kundai Chirindo, Lewis & Clark College
Jasmine Nichole Cobb, Duke University
Lisa M. Corrigan, University of Arkansas
Bryan Crable, Villanova University
Todd Craig, Medgar Evers College, CUNY
Lisa A. Flores, University of Colorado Boulder
Jenna N. Hanchey, University of Nevada, Reno
Jiyeon Kang, University of Iowa
Abraham Khan, Penn State University
Ashley Noel Mack, Louisiana State University
Louis Maraj, University of Pittsburgh
Aja Martinez, University of North Texas
Kyle T. Mays, University of California, Los Angeles
Tiara R. Na'puti, University of Colorado Boulder
Ersula Ore, Arizona State University
Eric Darnell Pritchard, SUNY Buffalo
Elaine Richardson, Ohio State University
Yanira Rodríguez, West Chester University
Armond R. Towns, University of Richmond
Amy J. Wan, Queen's College, CUNY

RPC Statement on Antiblackness and Antiracism

Rhetoric, Politics & Culture Statement on Antiblackness and Antiracism

At a time when Black people and their allies fill city streets across the US in response to antiblack violence from the state and other institutions, rhetoricians must reflect on what we might meaningfully bring to the table. Many in our field have always had a great deal to say about the role of rhetoric in affirming the value of Black lives and struggling against the myriad social forces that would snuff it out. As teachers and theorists of rhetoric today, a moment such as this certainly calls for our collective work to be more consequential.

Although Rhetoric, Politics & Culture did not arise from a collective effort to confront white supremacy at the level of law enforcement or public policy, our story is one of the racism that permeates our profession. While a letter penned by Dr. Martin Medhurst, and another collectively written by almost all National Communication Association Distinguished Scholars, sparked the activism that gave rise to this enterprise, these problems are not new. The overwhelming whiteness of our field’s journals, award recipients, tenured ranks, graduate programs, conference participation, and syllabi testify to the agonizing fact that rhetoric’s whiteness is an inherent feature. The Black Radical Tradition, from Carter G. Woodson to Sylvia Wynter, reminds us that schooling, disciplinary knowledge, and the structure of the academy are rooted in the theories and processes that create and sustain antiblackness. Our field’s origins are also in white supremacy and the logics that make Black people such as Ahmaud Arbery, George Floyd, Tony McDade, Breonna Taylor, and legions of others vulnerable to premature death also sustain the norms of rigor, merit, and distinction that permeate rhetorical studies.

For these reasons, we are less interested in identifying what rhetorical theory and criticism might bring to bear on the current explosion of activist discourse in response to Black death than we are in reflecting on how rhetorical scholars ourselves can respond to the antiblackness that finds expression in our professional and quotidian practices. Instead of describing others’ activist rhetoric, we wish to center intersectional antiracist deconstructions of the ways we do our work in the field. To this end, we recommit Rhetoric, Politics & Culture to its antiracist mission and call on our colleagues to join us in continuing to address the following:

  • Disrupt rhetoric’s canonical politics and citational practices to include Black voices in ways that challenge and refine our norms of intellectual inquiry.
  • Promote scholarship that engages Blackness and all other positionalities through an intersectional lens.
  • Name and confront antiblack and other violent professional practices that even the self-fashioned progressives among us tolerate and perpetrate. These include, but are not limited to:
    • Engaging in harassment, gaslighting, and other aggressive practices that entrench the marginalization of Black and other minoritized individuals.
    • Relying on overwhelmingly white professional networks to recruit faculty and students.
    • Using norms of evaluation that center white knowledge practices and marginalize Black and other minority epistemologies.
    • Weaponizing review and promotion processes to punish outspoken Black and other minoritized colleagues.
    • Dismissing the critiques of Black graduate students and defending and ignoring the rampant white violence, from faculty and other graduate students, in our graduate programs.

This is obviously an incomplete list and we invite our colleagues to build upon it. Our most fundamental commitment in drafting this statement is to strengthen the structures of accountability that call upon this journal to contribute, in whatever modest ways it can, to disrupting the hegemony of whiteness in rhetorical studies. Doing so requires that we think not only of what critical tools we have to offer those who confront antiblackness in public life, but also take stock in the material consequences of the antiblackness that shapes our profession.

RPC Statement on Antiblackness and Antiracism (PDF Download)