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G. Thomas Goodnight

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G. Thomas Goodnight is an American argumentation and rhetorical scholar.

He is a professor and director of doctoral studies in the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Southern California. He has published essays in Communication Monographs, Communication Theory, Journal of the American Forensic Association, Quarterly Journal of Speech, and Argumentation. He has lectured in France, Belgium, Germany, Italy, Yugoslavia, and the Netherlands. His seminal contribution to the field of argumentation theory lies in his approach to "spheres of argument," an idea that has sparked many scholarly studies. Before joining USC full-time in 2004, Goodnight taught undergraduate and graduate courses in Northwestern University's Communication Studies department in contemporary rhetorical theory, criticism, theory of argumentation, and the public sphere. His current research interests include deliberation and postwar society, science communication, argument and aesthetics, public discourse studies, and communicative reason in controversy.

Professor Goodnight has been named by the American Forensics Association as one of the top 5 scholars in argumentation in the twentieth century.[1]

References

  1. ^ Peterson's graduate programs in the humanities, arts, & social sciences, 2006, p. 922