"Fahrenheit 9/11": A case study in counternarrative
by Samuels, Phillip, M.A., UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, 2007, 125 pages; 1453296

Abstract:

This thesis does a rhetorical analysis of Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11 to understand its failure to achieve its goal of a George W. Bush defeat in the 2004 election. To do this I outline a theory of counternarrative which relies on argument theory to understand the resolution of competing narratives. I begin by creating a nuanced theory of counternarrative which relies on informal logic and Ralph Johnson's dialectical tier. Then I look at the construction of Bush's official narrative from his public speeches beginning on September 20, 2001 through the invasion of Iraq. After detailing Bush's narrative I analyze the moments of argumentative clash between it and Fahrenheit 9/11. I conclude that the failure of Moore's counternarrative was inevitable due to its poor argument construction and omission of the dialectical tier.

 
AdviserBeth Manolescu
SchoolUNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SourceMAI/ 46-06, p. , Aug 2008
Source TypeThesis
SubjectsPolitical Science; Rhetoric; Film studies
Publication Number1453296
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