The Declaration of Independence : A New Genre in Political Discourse or Mixed Genres in an Unlikely Medium?

ECU Author/Contributor (non-ECU co-authors, if there are any, appear on document)
Trisha Capansky (Creator)
Institution
East Carolina University (ECU )
Web Site: http://www.ecu.edu/lib/
Advisor
E. Thomson Shields

Abstract: The dissertation shows how mismatched content/medium relationships can supersede the responses of traditional pairings when the medium dominates the discursive power of the discourse. The dissertation in part looks at a historical case study to help us understand some modern uses where mismatched pairings have been used to enhance audience attention. I begin with an overview of related theories that pertain to genre inception development and demise. Next I describe an historic occasion where a mismatched content/medium pairing was to some extent responsible for reshaping geo-political relations: Modern concepts of democracy rest within the genre of a political communication that originated from the writing of the Declaration of Independence in 1776. Looking at the Declaration of Independence alongside the British government's response to it in John Lind's lengthy pamphlet An Answer to the Declaration of the American Congress I discuss normative uses of genres during the eighteenth century to show how the success of the Dunlap Broadside version of the Declaration of Independence the official version ordered by the Second Continental Congress is a product of a larger message that is implied by the broadside in conjunction with its content of revolutionary thinking. The dissertation concludes with modern-day examples where mismatched content/medium pairings are being used in strategies to increase public awareness of messages that were originally introduced through traditional pairings. 

Additional Information

Publication
Dissertation
Date: 2011
Keywords
History, Colonial Discourse, Content/Medium Relationships, Genre/Audience Relationships, History, Media Studies
Subjects
Communication--Political aspects
Mass media genres
Communication in politics
Discourse analysis, Literary
United States. Declaration of Independence
Lind, John, 1737-1781. Answer to the Declaration of the American Congress

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