Feminist rhetoric emerged as an identifiable scholarly project in the 1970s and 1980s, driven by a dual recognition: that the rhetorical tradition had been systematically built by and for men, excluding women's voices from both practice and theory; and that this exclusion was not incidental but structural — rooted in assumptions about gender, embodiment, reason, and public life that pervade Western culture. Recovering that exclusion, analyzing its mechanisms, and developing alternative rhetorical theories has transformed the discipline.
A set of theoretical and critical practices that examines how gender shapes rhetorical practice and theory; recovers women's rhetorical contributions that the tradition has ignored or minimized; and develops alternative frameworks that center marginalized experiences and challenge the assumed universality of classical models.
The Exclusion from the Tradition
The classical rhetorical tradition was explicitly constructed as a male domain. Aristotle's Politics excluded women from the political life that rhetoric served. Quintilian's ideal orator — the vir bonus, literally "good man" — was a sex-specific figure. The major institutional contexts of classical and Renaissance rhetoric — the forum, the assembly, the law court, the university — were closed to women.
This exclusion was not merely historical accident. It was theoretically grounded in a gendered epistemology: the association of reason with masculinity and emotion with femininity; the gendering of the public/private distinction (men in the public sphere of rhetoric, women in the private sphere of domesticity); and the equation of "proper" femininity with silence and reserve. Women who spoke publicly in male-dominated spaces were routinely characterized as transgressive, unfeminine, or shameless — the rhetorical equivalent of trespassing.
Recovering Women's Rhetorical History
One of feminist rhetoric's most important projects has been recovery — the archaeological work of finding and interpreting the rhetorical practices of women that the tradition ignored or suppressed. This recovery has revealed a far richer history of women's public speech than the classical canon acknowledges.
Challenging the Canon's Assumptions
Recovery work revealed not just excluded women but excluded forms of rhetoric. The classical canon privileged public, formal, oratorical discourse — speeches, legal arguments, political addresses. This privileging systematically devalued the rhetorical forms in which women had most frequently operated: letter-writing, diary-keeping, domestic conversation, religious testimony, community organizing.
Cheryl Glenn's foundational work Rhetoric Retold (1997) argued that the canon's exclusions reflect value judgments masquerading as neutral criteria of excellence. Recovering women's rhetoric requires not just adding women to an unchanged canon but questioning the criteria by which certain practices were canonized and others excluded.
Muted Group Theory and Rhetorical Access
Feminist rhetorical theory has drawn on muted group theory — developed by anthropologists Edwin and Shirley Ardener — to analyze the structural conditions of women's rhetorical exclusion. The theory argues that in hierarchically organized societies, dominant groups control the conceptual frameworks through which experience is named and communicated. Subordinate groups must translate their experience into dominant frameworks to be heard — a translation that is always lossy and often distorting.
Applied to rhetoric: women speaking in male-dominated public spaces have historically had to use a conceptual vocabulary developed by and for men to describe experiences that vocabulary was not built to describe. The experience of pregnancy, domestic labor, caregiving, sexual violence — none of these has a rich classical rhetorical tradition built around them, because the people who primarily experience them were excluded from the tradition's formation.
Alternative Rhetorical Models
Feminist rhetoricians have not only criticized the classical tradition but developed alternative models:
Invitational Rhetoric
Sonja Foss and Cindy Griffin proposed "invitational rhetoric" as an alternative to the persuasion model. Rather than aiming to change the audience's mind, invitational rhetoric aims to offer perspective — to present one's own view fully and invite the audience's genuine response, without the goal of winning agreement. The model draws on feminist ethics of care and prioritizes mutual understanding over strategic advantage.
Contiguity and Connection
Several feminist theorists have argued that classical rhetoric's agonistic, adversarial model — in which argument is structured as combat between opposed positions — reflects specifically masculine values. Alternative rhetorical practices emphasizing connection, collaboration, and shared inquiry have been proposed as both descriptively more accurate of how women often communicate and normatively more valuable as models of democratic deliberation.
Intersectionality and Feminist Rhetoric
Contemporary feminist rhetoric increasingly centers intersectionality — the framework developed by Kimberlé Crenshaw to analyze how race, class, gender, and other axes of identity interact rather than operate independently. For rhetoric, intersectionality means recognizing that no one experiences gender in isolation from race, class, sexuality, and disability — and that the rhetorical conditions facing, say, a white professional woman and a Black working-class woman are not simply additive but qualitatively different.
This intersectional turn has reshaped feminist rhetorical history, pushing beyond the recovery of middle-class white women's voices to engage the much richer and more complex tradition of rhetoric by women of color, immigrant women, disabled women, and queer women.
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