Ned O'Gorman

A Condensed Vita
 
{a full-length version is available for downloading here}

 

Ned O'Gorman
Assistant Professor, Department of Speech Communication
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Education

Ph.D., 2005 Communication Arts & Sciences, Penn State University .
M.A., 1998 English, The University of Tennessee .
B.A., 1994 Economics and English, Saint Louis University .
A.A., 1992 General Studies, St. Louis Community College .

Academic Appointments

2005-present, Assistant Professor, Department of Communication, University of Illinois.

2005-present, Core Faculty, Center for Writing Studies, University of Illinois.

Publications

Forthcoming 2009, "'The one word the Kremlin Fears': C.D. Jackson, Cold War 'Liberation,' and American Political-Economic Adventurism," Rhetoric and Public Affairs.

2008 Short Essay, "Three Cheers for Democratic Style! (Okay, maybe just two)," Rhetoric and Public Affairs, 11.3, 450-453.

2008 Essay, "Eisenhower and the American Sublime," Quarterly Journal of Speech, 94.1, 44-72.

2006 Essay, “The Political Sublime, An Oxymoron,” Millennium Journal of International Studies, 34.3, 889-915.

2006 Short Essay, “Disaster, Democracy, and the Problem of the Sublime,” Media Development, 2006/4.

2005 Essay, “‘Telling the Truth:' Dietrich Bonhoeffer's Rhetorical Discourse Ethic,” Journal of Communication and Religion, 28.2, 224-248.

2005 Essay, “Aristotle's Phantasia in the Rhetoric : Lexis, Appearance, and the Epideictic Function of Discourse,” Philosophy and Rhetoric , Vol. 38, No. 1, 16-40.

2004 Essay, “Longinus's Sublime Rhetoric, or How Rhetoric Came into Its Own,” Rhetoric Society Quarterly , Vol. 24, No. 2., pp. 71-89.

2005 Book Review, The Viability of the Rhetorical Tradition edited by Richard Graff, Arthur Walzer, and Janet Atwill, Rhetoric Society Quarterly.

2003 Book Review, Logic and the Art of Memory by Paolo Rossi, Philosophy and Rhetoric, Vol. 36, No. 3.