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Persuasion on Trial: An Exercise for Understanding the Benefits of Studying Persuasion
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2013)
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Beyond Expectations: The Influence of Food Servers’ Nonverbal Behavior in Service Interactions.
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2013)
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Persuasion, Social Influence, and Compliance Gaining
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2013)
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Communicating Immediacy Throughout a Service Encounter: The Effect of Addressing Customers by Name on Gratuities Given to Food Servers
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2013)
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The Name Pharm: Understanding the Power of Labels Through a Role-Playing Exercise
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2013)
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Responses to an Opponent’s Nonverbal Behavior in a Televised Debate: Audience Perceptions of Credibility and Likeability
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2013)
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Instructor's Manual to Accompany Persuasion, Social Influence, and Compliance Gaining
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2013)
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Does a Customer by Any Other Name Tip the Same?: The Effect of Forms of Address and Customers’ Age on Gratuities Given to Food Servers in the United States
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2013)
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The Flipper Debate: Teaching Intercultural Communication through Simulated Conflict
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2012)
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Does a Customer by Any Other Name Tip the Same?: The Effect of Forms of Address and Customers’ Age on Gratuities Given to Food Servers in the United States
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2012)
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Persuasion by Way of Example: Does Including Gratuity Guidelines on Customers’ Checks Affect Tipping Behavior in Restaurants?
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2011)
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The Role of Background Behavior in Televised Debates: Does Displaying Nonverbal Agreement and/or Disagreement Benefit Either Debater?
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2010)
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Start Making Sense! Introducing Students to Karl Weick’s Principles of Organizational Communication
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2010)
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Nonsmoker’s Perceptions of Male and Female Cigarette Smokers’ Credibility, Likeability, Attractiveness, Considerateness, Cleanliness, and Healthiness
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2010)
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Compliments and Purchasing Behavior in Telephone Sales Interactions
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2010)
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The Effect of Generalized Compliments, Sex of Server, and Size of Dining Party on Tipping Behavior in Restaurants
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2010)
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17 |
Aggressive Communication in Political Contexts
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2010)
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Abstract:
One of the delightfully niggling snags you encounter when writing a chapter about politically aggressive communication, especially close to an election, is that new examples of antagonistic political ploys keep flooding in, demanding to unseat those that have already found their way into introductory paragraphs.To be sure, there is no shortage of political aggression. In 2008, for example, potential voters saw the Republican presidential nominee, John McCain, ribbed on account of his age, his lack of computer literacy, his temper, his erratic behavior, and for the number of houses he owned (or did not know he owned).Meanwhile, his opponent, Barack Obama, was compared to celebrity tarts(Paris Hilton and Britney Spears), rumored to be a Muslim, accused of advocating sex education for kindergartners, palling around with domestic terrorists, attending a church with a radical anti-American minister, and insinuating thatSarah Palin, Alaska’s governor and McCainy’s running mate, was “a pig with lipstick.”
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Keyword:
aggression; Arts and Humanities; communication; politics
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URL: https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/lpsc_facpub/87
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Strategies for Responding to Background Nonverbal Disparagement in Televised Political Debates: Effects on Audience Perceptions of Argument Skill and Appropriateness
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2010)
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Strategies for Responding to an Opponent's Nonverbal Disagreement in Televised Political Debates and their Effect on Audience Perceptions of Credibility and Likeability
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2009)
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Credibility and Public Diplomacy
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In: Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies Faculty Publications (2009)
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