On withholding political voice: An analysis of the political vocabulary of a “nonpolitical” speech community
- 1 February 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Quarterly Journal of Speech
- Vol. 77 (1), 1-19
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00335639109383939
Abstract
This analysis attempts to identify and explain some underlying rationales for the withholding of citizen voice from the democratic political arena. Of special interest are the ways in which such rationales are located in speakers’ everyday political words and meanings. For support, this analysis examines the political vocabulary of lumber‐industrial workers who claim to know virtually nothing about politics and to detest what little they do know about it. Contrary to scholars who commonly treat those who withhold their voice from the democratic political arena as individual cases, this analysis of the workers’ vocabulary of politics shows the withholding of voice to be an active choice grounded in community‐based meanings that are discursively produced in ongoing interactions within the speech community.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Perceived Representativess and Voting: An Assessment of the Impact of “Choices” vs. “Echoes”American Political Science Review, 1985
- Getting Out the Vote: Participation in Gubernatorial ElectionsAmerican Political Science Review, 1983
- Public knowledge and ideological argumentationCommunication Monographs, 1983
- “What we need is communication”: “Communication” as a cultural category in some American speechCommunication Monographs, 1981
- Why Do People Vote? Because They Are RegisteredAmerican Politics Quarterly, 1981
- Why Is Turnout Down?Public Opinion Quarterly, 1979
- Knowledge, consensus, and rhetorical theoryQuarterly Journal of Speech, 1976
- Speaking “like a man” in Teamsterville: Culture patterns of role enactment in an urban neighborhoodQuarterly Journal of Speech, 1975
- Participation and Democratic TheoryPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1970
- Language, Logic, and CultureAmerican Sociological Review, 1939