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Robert Ivie

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Robert Lynn Ivie (born July 29, 1945, in Medford, Oregon) is an American academic known for his works on American public rhetoric concerning war and terrorism.[1]

Education and career

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Ivie obtained a Ph.D. in rhetoric and communication in 1972 from Washington State University. He taught at Gonzaga University from 1972-1974, at Idaho State University from 1974-1975, at Washington State University from 1975-1986 (where he was briefly chair of the communication department in 1983) and at Texas A&M University from 1986-1993. In 1993, he came to Indiana University where he was a professor of Rhetoric and Public Culture in the Department of Communication and Culture at Indiana University until he retired in May 2013.[2]

Books

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Ivie is the author or co-author of books including

  • Congress Declares War: Rhetoric, Leadership, and Partisanship in the Early Republic (with Ronald L. Hatzenbuehler, Kent State University Press, 1983)[3]
  • Cold War Rhetoric: Strategy, Metaphor, and Ideology (with Martin J. Medhurst, Philip Wander, and Robert L. Scott, Greenwood, 1990; 2nd ed., Michigan State University Press, 1997)[4]
  • Democracy and America's War on Terror (University of Alabama Press, 2005)[5]
  • Dissent From War (Kumarian Press, 2007)[6]
  • Hunt the Devil: A Demonology of US War Culture (with Oscar Giner, University of Alabama Press, 2015)[7]

References

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  1. ^ See, e.g., Achter (2010): "Few in communication and rhetorical studies today are better versed in war rhetoric than Robert L. Ivie."
  2. ^ "Profile", Robert L. Ivie, Indiana University, retrieved 2020-01-24
  3. ^ Reviews of Congress Declares War:
  4. ^ Reviews of Cold War Rhetoric:
  5. ^ Reviews of Democracy and America's War on Terror:
  6. ^ Review of Dissent From War:
  7. ^ Reviews of Hunt the Devil: