Jason Edward Black

Assistant Professor of Communication Studies

Ph.D., University of Maryland, 2006

Dr. Black's teaching specialties include critical/cultural/rhetorical theories, public address, cultural criticism, and subaltern voices.  He conducts research primarily on the topics of American Indian rhetoric, African American discourse, and GLBT-Q discourses.

Recent Publications:
Black, J. E. (2007). Remembrances of removal: Native resistance to allotment and the unmasking of paternal benevolence. Southern Communication Journal, 72, 1-18.

Black, J. E. (2005). Symbolic suicide as mortification and transformation: The conciliatory yet resistant surrender of Maka-tai-mesh-ekia-kiak Black Hawk. Kenneth Burke Journal, 2, 1-19.

Black, J. E. (2002). The mascotting of Native America: Construction, commodity, and assimilation. American Indian Quarterly, 26, 605-622.