Richard Leeman
Richard Leeman
Professor, Department of Communication Studies
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Contact Me

Office: Fretwell 430B
Phone: 704.687.0075
Email: rwleeman@uncc.edu

Links

  • Department of Communication Studies

Home

https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=RNZroiFi2FU
RichWebEducation

  • B.S., Shippensburg State University, 1977
  • M.A., University of Maryland, 1982
  • Ph.D., University of Maryland, 1990

Areas of Interest

  • Rhetoric
  • Public Address
  • Political Communication
  • African American Oratory

Bio

Dr. Leeman has been a member of the faculty since 1989. He teaches undergraduate courses in Rhetorical Theory, Public Advocacy, and African American oratory, and graduate courses in Textual Analysis. He has authored, co-authored, or edited eight books:  To Reach the Nation;s Ear: A History of African American Public Speaking, The Teleological Discourse of Barack Obama, The Will of a People: Great Speeches by African Americans (with Bernard K. Duffy), The Rhetoric of Terrorism and Counterterrorism, “Do-Everything Reform:” The Oratory of Frances E. Willard, African-American Oratory: A BioCritical Sourcebook, American Voices: Encyclopedia of Contemporary Oratory (with Bernard K. Duffy) and The Art and Practice of Argumentation and Debate (with Bill Hill).   His published articles have appeared in journals such as Southern Communication Journal, Metaphor and Symbolic Activity, Argumentation and Advocacy, Howard Journal of Communication and Journal of Political Science. He is past editor of the Carolinas Communication Annual. He has been the recipient of the American Forensic Association’s Daniel M. Rohrer award for best Forensics article, Southern States Communication Association’s Top Paper in Rhetoric and Public Address award, the Carolinas’ Communication Association’s Ray Camp award for Most Outstanding Research Paper, and the Carolinas’ Communication Association’s Betty Jo Welch service award.  In 2017, he received the Southern States Communication Association’s Michael M. Osborn Teacher-Scholar Award.  From 2017 to 2019 he served as the President of the UNC Charlotte Faculty Council.

Research Projects

  • Currently researching and writing on the rhetoric of Frederick Douglass and Adam Clayton Powell, Jr.
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