See also: Jeremiad Jeremiah Jere Jerel Jerez Jeremih Jeremy
1. Jeremiadic RhetoricThe idea was adapted by the African-American Jeremiadic Discourse Rhetoric.And the African-American jeremiad is a rhetorical device which surface from a perceived oppression and degradation of every echelon of Black social, political, economic and cultural life played a vital role in the development of anti-slavery rhetoric of Boston's African-American community which was …
Jeremiadic, Jeremiad
2. The Jeremiadic tradition in American discourse
Jeremiadic
3. Walker, A free Negro born in Wilmington, North Carolina in 1796, although enjoyed a little more "freedom" than the rest of his colored brethren in bondage took on the role of a Jeremiadic speaker and writer to his people
Jeremiadic
4. Rhetorical ritual know as the American jeremiad.I Wilson Jeremiah Moses, in his recent book, Black Messiahs and Uncle Toms: Social and Literary Manipulations of a Religious Myth,2 has linked this appreciation of the centrality of Jeremiadic rhetoric in American culture to the study of similar black
Jeremiad, Jeremiah, Jeremiadic
5. A Jeremiadic reading of Uncle Tom’s Cabin and The Scarlet Letter provides a valuable commentary on American rhetoric and identity, but it also says a great deal about the power of motherhood within a jeremiad system
Jeremiadic, Jeremiad
6. Popular Jeremiadic form is the rhetorical structure preachers enlisted to eradicate sin from the community
Jeremiadic
7. For a general discussion of prophetic rhetoric and the Jeremiadic persona, see: o James Darsey, The Prophetic Tradition and Radical Rhetoric in America (New York: New York University Press, 1997
Jeremiadic, James
8. SUGGESTING Jeremiadic APPROACH AS AN ALTERNATIVE FOR LANGUAGE TEACHING IN THE LIGHT CURRICULUM 2013 By Mister Gidion Maru CELT 2014, UNIKA Soegijayaprana Introduction The National Ministry of Education and Culture, Muh Nuh, in one of the articles in Harian Kompas, Kamis, 7 Maret 2013 in his explanation related to the application of 2013 Curriculum asserted that …
Jeremiadic
9. The associative and dissociative, divisive and unifying strategies immanent in Douglass’s oratory are most evident when he used a secular form of the American Jeremiadic form to craft a messianic vision for Blacks and the United States, generally.
Jeremiadic
10. These texts also exemplify the tragedy of superimposing the Jeremiadic framework on texts, contexts, and figures that do not support it
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11. Jeremiadic Rhetoric has been said to be a distinguishing construction that exchanged with cultures and governments to aid in shaping of an idyllic society
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12. In his post‐presidential discourse, Ronald Reagan did not assume a typical Jeremiadic posture, warning that America was straying from conservative dogma
Jeremiadic
13. In the moralistic texts of Jeremiadic discourse, authors lament the condition of society, utilizing prophecy as a means of predicting its demise
Jeremiadic
14. This study delves beneath the socio-religious and cultural exterior of the American Jeremiadic tradition to unveil the complexities of African American Jeremiadic rhetoric in antebellum America.
Jeremiadic
15. In the moralistic texts of Jeremiadic discourse, authors lament the condition of society, utilizing prophecy as a means of predicting its demise
Jeremiadic
16. This study delves beneath the socio-religious and cultural exterior of the American Jeremiadic tradition to unveil the complexities of African American Jeremiadic rhetoric in antebellum America.
Jeremiadic
17. Stewart’s Jeremiadic discourse called for the deterioration of American racism and sexism and provided an agency that constituted a form of resistance
Jeremiadic
18. His formulation followed the classic Jeremiadic tradition by sublimating the country’s vice into virtue
Jeremiadic
19. Native American Jeremiadic Discourse Emerged in the Early Republic
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20. A distinctive discourse exchanging with cultures and governments to aide in the shaping of a tranquil society, Jeremiadic rhetoric has always been intrinsically deep-rooted throughout the advancement of civilizations, especially those who were victims of oppression.
Jeremiadic
21. Jeremiadic pasakojimai "Jeremiadic logika yra kultūriniu požiūriu priimtinas motyvacijos būdas, leidžiantis organizuoti pasirinktų žmonių patalpas, dieviškas sankcijas ir galutinę sėkmę į pasakojimo formą, atpažįstamą kaip jeremija.
Jeremiadic, Jeremija
22. The essay concludes with a discussion of the tensions between the conservative mandate in the Jeremiadic form and the possibilities for social transformation
Jeremiadic
23. (2008) Epilogue What the Left Might Learn from the Jeremiadic Tradition
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24. It seems simplistic to suggest that Ames is witnessing, but just like the spiritual, "There Is a Balm in Gilead," Ames dips into his own civilization and unites with all the other fiery wicks to glow together in a spiritual incandescence of Jeremiadic drama--a perpetual destruction and reconstruction, with all the mystery of its inexplicable
Just, Jeremiadic
25. Jeremiadic tradition as they criticized apartheid’s despotic structure, called for a remaking or restructuring of South African democracy and lamented the injustices of their countrymen
Jeremiadic
26. Mandela’s and Biko’s command of Jeremiadic discourse symbolized the jeremiad’s zenith in twentieth century South African remonstration against apartheid.
Jeremiadic, Jeremiad
27. Jeremiadic Rhetoric Jeremiadic Rhetoric has been said to be a distinguishing construction that exchanged with cultures and governments to aid in shaping of an idyllic society
Jeremiadic
28. He defended his words as “Jeremiadic, referring to the Old Testament prophet
Jeremiadic
29. Jeremiadic tradition is more dramatically demonstrated in tbe complete fiery sermons deHvered in TUCC than on the video sound bites by sensational-izing journaHsts and newscasters
Jeremiadic, Journahsts
30. "Experimenting Jeremiadic Approach as an Alternative for TEFL in Meeting the Demand of the 2013 Curriculum." Proceeding
Jeremiadic
31. Nevertheless, the research will concentrate on her interest in the mounting climate change that shows up clearly in a number of Jeremiadic poems due to anthropocentric violations against Nature.
Jeremiadic
32. Others read it as continuous with the American Jeremiadic tradition, even as this tradition is seen as being tied to a hierarchical and elite based vision of leadership.12 This second approach is troubling precisely because it is suscep-tible to the criticisms of custodial …
Jeremiadic
33. The President and the Preacher On the African-American Jeremiadic Tradition Because of his cool, calm, ostensibly detached speech performances and persona, some folks, especially African Americans of his post-Civil Rights generation, call President Barack Obama, “No drama Obama.” Many African Americans of the pre-Civil Rights generation even see him as such despite his…
Jeremiadic
34. Numerous scholars have explored the Jeremiadic genre, which is a rhetorical form derived from Puritan speakers of the 17th and 18th centuries
Jeremiadic
35. Although I plan to contextualize briefly my argument in Jeremiadic and swamp studies, it is the scope of this article to focus on the marginalized preachers of the text as new Jeremiahs: Dred, the Old Testament prophet and insurrectionist; Milly, the New Testament Christian; Harry, the Moses-figure; and Clayton, the burgeoning abolitionist.
Jeremiadic, Jeremiahs
36. Thus the war with Spain led such Americans as William James, Josiah Royce, and William Graham Sumner to denounce, in full Jeremiadic …
James, Josiah, Jeremiadic
37. Paul Minifee, Rhetoric of Doom and Redemption: Reverend Jermain Loguen's Jeremiadic Speech Against the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, Advances in the History of Rhetoric, 10.1080/15362426.2012.746752, 16, 1, (29-57), (2013).
Jermain, Jeremiadic
38. The Jeremiadic sermon is named after the Biblical prophet Jeremiah in recognition of his particular mode of prophecy focused on social justice and has three main parts
Jeremiadic, Jeremiah, Justice
JEREMIADIC
Adjective: jeremiadic. Pronunciation: jer-eh-MY-ad The term is derived from the Old Testamentprophet Jeremiah, author of the Book of Jeremiahand the Book of Lamentations. The Book of Jeremiah details the prophesied downfall of the Kingdom of Judahas a consequence of breaking the covenant with God.
Definition of jeremiad : a prolonged lamentation or complaint also : a cautionary or angry harangue the warnings became jeremiads against the folly of overemphasis on science and technology at the expense of man's subjective and emotional life — Ada Louise Huxtable Synonyms Did You Know? More Example Sentences Learn More about jeremiad
A jeremiad is a speechor literary work expressing a bitter lament or a righteous prophecy of doom. Adjective: jeremiadic. Pronunciation: jer-eh-MY-ad The term is derived from the Old Testamentprophet Jeremiah, author of the Book of Jeremiahand the Book of Lamentations.
At the same time as it diagnosed delinquency, therefore, the jeremiad professed optimism and faith. On the one hand, we are accused of uttering jeremiads; on the other hand, of preaching smooth doctrines. Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0