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Law Rhetoric And Irony In The Formation Of Canadian Civil Culture Maurice Charland

  • SKU: BELL-5149664
Law Rhetoric And Irony In The Formation Of Canadian Civil Culture Maurice Charland
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Law Rhetoric And Irony In The Formation Of Canadian Civil Culture Maurice Charland instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Toronto Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 20.4 MB
Pages: 432
Author: Maurice Charland, Michael Dorland
ISBN: 9780802042835, 080204283X
Language: English
Year: 2002

Product desciption

Law Rhetoric And Irony In The Formation Of Canadian Civil Culture Maurice Charland by Maurice Charland, Michael Dorland 9780802042835, 080204283X instant download after payment.

In Rhetoric, Irony, and Law in the Formation of Canadian Civil Culture, Michael Dorland and Maurice Charland examine how, over the roughly 400-year period since the encounter of First Peoples with Europeans in North America, rhetorical or discursive fields took form in politics and constitution-making, in the formation of a public sphere, and in education and language. The study looks at how these fields changed over time within the French regime, the British regime, and in Canada since 1867, and how they converged through trial and error into a Canadian civil culture.

The authors establish a triangulation of fields of discourse formed by law (as a technical discourse system), rhetoric (as a public discourse system), and irony (as a means of accessing the public realm as the key pillars upon which a civil culture in Canada took form) in order to scrutinize the process of creating a civil culture. By presenting case studies ranging from the legal implications of the transition from French to English law to the continued importance of the Louis Riel case and trial, the authors provide detailed analyses of how communication practices form a common institutional culture.

As scholars of communication and rhetoric, Dorland and Charland have written a challenging examination of the history of Canadian governance and the central role played by legal and other discourses in the formation of civil culture.

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