Peace Script

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A01=Dominic J. Manthey
anti war arguments
anti-war
antiwar
antiwar activism
Author_Dominic J. Manthey
Category=CFG
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Category=NHK
citizenship
Civil War
class
conflict
conflict communication
conscientious objector
Copperhead movement
digital activism
discourse analysis
dissent
documentary film
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eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_history
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
gender
grassroots
grassroots activism
Henry Ford Peace Expedition
justify violence
language of peace
legal equity
masculinity
military conflict
military conflicts
Mothers' Movement
myths of peace
nonviolence
pamphlets
peace
peace advocacy
peace arguments
peace organizations
peace rhetoric
peace studies
peace talk
peaniks
political debate
prospects of war
protest
protest history
protest movements
race
resistance
revolutions
rhetoric
rhetorical studies
scripted peace
social justice
social movement organizations
speeches
United States
US History
us history of ideas
US military
vietnam
Vietnam War
violence
voting rights
war
war discourse
whiteness
World War II

Product details

  • ISBN 9780817362188
  • Weight: 368g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Aug 2025
  • Publisher: The University of Alabama Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Exposes how appeals to civility, harmony, and nonaggression can unwittingly underpin exclusionary assumptions about race, gender, and class

Offering an innovative critique of peace rhetoric throughout US history, The Peace Script: Framing Violence in US Anti-War Dissent reexamines the language of dissent with lessons for our era defined by digital activism and fierce political debates. Dominic J. Manthey explores the peace arguments of various movements, including the Copperhead Movement during the Civil War, the Anti-Imperialist League's stance against US colonialism, Henry Ford's Peace Ship expedition during World War I, the Mothers' Movement during World War II, and the Vietnam Veterans against the War. Each chapter reveals how these movements, while advocating for peace, often upheld or encouraged racial, gender, and class inequalities.

Manthey navigates the complex terrain of grassroots activism by blending rhetorical criticism and historical insight to tell readers about the "peace script" that has echoed across America's many wars. Through archival materials and case studies, The Peace Script reveals how anti-war movements craft compelling narratives that dramatize society through heroes, antagonists, and transformative ideals.

Redefining the struggle for peace as not only a fight against warfare but also a battle over space, identity, and the right to live with dignity, The Peace Script is essential for scholars of history, rhetoric, and social justice. Manthey provides a crucial perspective on the intersection of race, memory and power, offering urgent insights into how these legacies continue to shape society today.

Dominic J. Manthey is assistant professor of communication studies at the University of South Dakota. His peer-reviewed scholarship has appeared in Journal for the History of Rhetoric, Rhetoric Society Quarterly, and Rhetoric & Public Affairs.

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