Jane S. Sutton

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Jane S. SuttonCurriculum VitaeThe Pennsylvania State University1031 Edgecomb AvenueYork, PA 17403717-771-4160 (office)717-771-8404 (FAX)717-870-3939JSS@psu.eduEducationPh.D., University of Colorado, Boulder, December 1984CommunicationDissertation: A Phenomenological Pre-structure in Interpreting Aristotle’s RhetoricM.A., Western State College, Gunnison, CO, June 1980Communication ArtsB.A., Western State College, Gunnison, CO, June 1974Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, 1970-1973Major: Speech and DramaMinor: English LiteratureCertificate, French language, literature, and culture, Lycée Anna d’Noialles, Evian, France 1969Professional History2011-presentProfessor, The Pennsylvania State University, YorkAffiliate Faculty, Center for Democratic Deliberation,Member of Graduate Faculty1993-2010Associate Professor, The Pennsylvania State University, York1985-1992Assistant Professor, The Pennsylvania State University, York1984 (Aug.-Dec.) Instructor, The Pennsylvania State University, York1981-1984Graduate Teaching Fellow, University of Colorado, Boulder1975-1980Teacher, Speech and Debate Coach, Olathe High School, Olathe, CO1978-1980Department Head, English, Olathe High School, Olathe, CO1974-1975Teacher, Delta High School, Delta, CO, speech and EnglishSpecial Areas of Scholarly InterestRhetorical theory, Classical rhetoric, Sophistical rhetoric, Feminism and Rhetoric, Critical and cultural1

Jane S. Suttonstudies, Rhetorical historiographyAwards and HonorsBonnie Ritter Book Award in Feminist/Women Studies in Communication, National CommunicationAssociation, 2011.Nominated NCA Diamond Anniversary Book Award, 2011, 2012.Nominated Outstanding Book Award, Organization for the “Study of Communication, Language, andGender,” “House of my Sojourn: Rhetoric, Women, and the Question of Authority,” 2011.Poster session, Out of Rhetoric: Shaping Future Directions of the History, Theory, and Practice ofRhetoric, Eastern Communication Association, Pittsburgh, PA, April 27-30, 1995. AwardedFirst Place.“The Rose B. Johnson SCJ Article Award, Second Place, Southern Communication Journal, Vols. 5658, “The Taming of Polos/Polis: Rhetoric as an Achievement without Woman,” 1993.“Top Three Students Papers,” Mass Communication Division, Speech Communication AssociationConvention, Washington, D.C., 1983.American Legion Teaching Award, Olathe High School, 1977 Montrose County RE1-J Colorado.Grants and FellowshipsAwarded York Advisory Board Grant, Penn State York, 2015-2016. Initial Research. Lillie DevereuxBlake Papers Missouri History Museum Archives and the Jefferson National ExpansionMemorial, St. Louis, Missouri.Awarded Institute for the Arts and Humanistic Studies Individual Faculty Grant, The PennsylvaniaState University, ‘The Road to the Long House: Matilda Joslyn Gage and the Quest for SocialJustice,’ January-June 2013. Course release and initial research Matilda J. Gage Scrapbook,Library of Congress, Washington DC.Awarded York Advisory Board Grant, Penn State York, 2011-2012. Initial Research. Matilda J. GagePapers South Dakota State Archives, Pierre, South Dakota.Awarded World Campus VLN 2000 (Video Learning Network) and course development of CAS100C, 2013.Awarded Teaching Development Grant. Commonwealth College, The Pennsylvania State University,2004/2005 to support design of a web-based graphic for CAS 201 GH Rhetorical Theory.Awarded Teaching Development Grant. Commonwealth College, The Pennsylvania State University,2002/2003 to support the instructional methodologies to innovate CAS 201 GH RhetoricalTheory.Awarded College of Liberal Arts Travel Support, The Pennsylvania State University Global TravelFund for travel to Thirteenth International Conference on Greek Philosophy, Rhodes, Greece,Aug. 18-25, 2001.Awarded Travel Support Commonwealth College, The Pennsylvania State University, CommonwealthCollege matching travel funds to Thirteenth International Conference on Greek Philosophy,2

Jane S. SuttonRhodes, Greece, Aug. 18-25, 2001.Awarded York Advisory Board Grant, Penn State York, to obtain Thesaurus Linguae Graecae,computer hardware, and software, March, 1998 ( 1150.00). TLG assisted research for severaljournal articles and books.Awarded CLAT Project Empower, The Pennsylvania State University, Commonwealth College tosupport development of CAS 100A and CAS 100B using active collaborative learningintegrated with technology, 1996.Awarded Institute for the Arts and Humanistic Studies, Penn State’s Summer Seminar in Theory andCulture, “Working with Bakhtin Today,” to support the teaching of Bakhtin in generaleducation course CAS 201 GH Rhetorical Theory, 1995.Awarded Faculty Research Development Grant, College of Liberal Arts, The Pennsylvania StateUniversity for research on gender and Aristotle, Summer, 1993.Awarded Faculty Research Development Grant, College of Liberal Arts, The Pennsylvania StateUniversity for research on rhetorical tradition and Aristotle, Summer, 1991.Awarded Research Development Grant, College of Liberal Arts, The Pennsylvania State University,for Faculty Interchange with University Park for research on gender and rhetorical tradition,1990 ( 1800.00).Awarded York Advisory Board Grant, Penn State York, to obtain nonpublic copy of a dissertation(Harvard University, 1961) on early Greek rhetoric for reading and consultation purposes, 1987( 253.00).Invited TalksSutton, Jane S. and Mari Lee Mifsud “Inventing Rhetoric Otherwise: Imagining and EnactingAlloiostrophic Rhetoric,” Sponsor: Rhetoric Society of America Convention, Minneapolis, MN, May31-June 3, 2018 (Attachment included).Sutton, Jane S. “Interview with Inspiring Woman—Dr. Jane Sutton.” By Women United ChairReesy Neff, BB& T. United Way of York County, Women United (May 18 2017).“Unwrapping: A Tribute to Mari Lee Mifsud’s Rhetoric and the Gift,” Sponsor: AmericanSociety for the History of Rhetoric, National Communication Association Convention, Philadelphia,PA, November 11, 2016.“A Tribute to Dr. Jane Blankenship,” Sponsor: NCA First Vice President, NationalCommunication Association Convention, Las Vegas, NV, November 21, 2015.“Embracing Scholarship of Past Winners of the Bonnie Ritter Book Award,” NationalCommunication Association Convention, Las Vegas, NV, November 20, 2015.“Haunted by a Peacock: Discovering Rhetoric in Untimely Ways, Modern LanguageAssociation Convention, Chicago, IL, January 11, 2014.“Womentoring: The Intellectual Imagination of the Bonnie Ritter Award Recipients,” NationalSpecial ISSU MLA Communication Association Convention, Chicago, IL, November 22, 2014.“Haunted by a Peacock: Discovering Rhetoric in Untimely Ways,” National CommunicationAssociation Convention, Washington, DC, November 22, 2013.3

Jane S. Sutton“Exploring the House of My Sojourn: Rhetoric, Women, and the Question of Authority,”National Communication Association Convention, New Orleans, LA, November 20, 2011.“The Voice of Mentorship,” National Communication Association Convention, New Orleans,LA, November 18, 2011.The State of the Art of the Study of Rhetoric, Eastern Communication Association, Baltimore, MD,April 23, 2010.Fall Commencement Address, The Pennsylvania State University, York, December 19, 2009.Eulogy for Janice Hocker Rushing, Giffels Auditorium, Old Main, University of Arkansas,Fayetteville, Arkansas, March 26, 2004.Receiving Janice’s Gift to Rhetoric. Spotlight on Scholarship in Honor of Janice Hocker Rushing.Paper presented at National Communication Association, Chicago, IL, Nov. 1-14, 2004,Fall Legislators on Campus Address to Pennsylvania Legislators, Penn State York, 1995.Readings of Thomas Farrell’s Norms of a Rhetorical Culture, Speech Communication Association,New Orleans, LA, November 19-22, 1994.Dedication Speech, Penn State York’s Computer and Bookstore Building, Penn State York, June 1991.PUBLICATIONSBooksSutton, Jane S. and Mari Lee Mifsud, A Revolution in Tropes: Alloiostrophic Rhetoric, Lanham, MD,New York, London: Lexington Books, 2015.Sutton, Jane S., The House of My Sojourn: Rhetoric, Women, and the Question of Authority.Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press, 2010.Published Reviews of A Revolution in Tropes: Alloiostrophic Rhetoric and The House of My Sojourn:Rhetoric, Women, and the Question of Authority.Dykeman, T.B. “A Revolution in Tropes: Alloiostrophic Rhetoric.” Choice, November, 2015. HighlyRecommended.Dow, Bonnie J. “Review of the House of My Sojourn: Rhetoric, Women, and the Question ofAuthority.” Quarterly Journal of Speech 99.2 (2013): 242-46.Halpern, Faye. “The House of My Sojourn: Rhetoric, Women, and the Question of Authority(review).” Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers 29.2 (2012): 343-346. ProjectMUSE. Web. 28 Nov. 2012. http://muse.jhu.edu/ .Anderson, Karrin Vasby. “The House of the House of My Sojourn: Rhetoric, Women, and theQuestion of Authority (review).” Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 15.1 (2012): 183-187.Radko, Tom. “Choice’s Compilation of Significant University Press Titles for Undergraduates.”Journal of Scholars Publishing 43.1 (2011): 14-38.Dykeman, T.B. “The House of My Sojourn: Rhetoric, Women, and the Question of Authority.” Choice,4

Jane S. SuttonMay, 2011. Highly Recommended.Journal ArticlesSutton, Jane S. “Marketing Businesses and the Idea of Womanhood on Sewing Machine Trade Cardsin York, Pa.” York County Heritage Trust Journal (forthcoming 2018).Sutton, Jane S. “Sewing Machine Trade Cards: Selling the Idea of Womanhood and the Home.” YorkCounty Heritage Trust Journal (forthcoming 2018).Sutton, Jane S. “Haunted by a Peacock: Discovering Rhetoric in Untimely Ways.” Rhetoric SocietyQuarterly 44.3 (2014): 256-270.Sutton, Jane S. “Space in Tropes, an Opaque but Visible Relationship.” Review of Communication,12.1 (2012): 30-43.Sutton, Jane S. and Mari Lee Mifsud. “Toward an Alloiostrophic Rhetoric.” Advances in the Historyof Rhetoric, 15 (2012): 222-233.Sutton, Jane S. “Teaching Rhetoric in the Commonwealth via the Bill Moyers Journal: Kathleen HallJamieson.” The Pennsylvania Scholars Series (2012): 33-43.Sutton, Jane S. “York in Relation to the Other Revolution: Frances Wright, Women’s Rights.” YorkCounty Heritage Trust Journal, September 2010, 14-21.Sutton, Jane S. and Nkanyiso Mpofu. “Figuring Reconciliation: Dancing With the Enemy.” WindsorYearbook of Access to Justice, 25.2 (2007), 291-311.Sutton, Jane S. “Intersections: Woman, Rhetoric and Domination.” The American Journal ofSemiotics, 22 (2006), 129-146.Sutton, Jane S. “Weaving and Unweaving Public Woman: Contingencies of Oppositional Discourse.”Atlantic Journal of Communication, 14 (2006), 141-155.Sutton, Jane S. “Figuring Forth the Gift of Janice Hocker Rushing.” Southern CommunicationJournal, 71 (2006), 127-135.Mifsud, Mari Lee, Jane S. Sutton, and Lindsey Fox. “Configurations: Encountering AncientAthenian Spaces of Rhetoric, Democracy, and Woman.” Journal of International Women’sStudies, 7 (2005), 36-52.Sutton, Jane and Mari Lee Mifsud. “Figuring Rhetoric: From Antistrophe to Apostrophe throughCastastrophe.” Rhetoric Society Quarterly, 32:4 (2002), 29-49.Sutton, Jane S. “Rhetoric and the Peacock: An Antiphonic Spectacle of Preconceptual LinguisticEquipment for an Art of Rhetoric.” The Canadian Journal of Rhetorical Studies/La RevueCanadienne D’Etudes Rhétoriques, 4 (1994), 123-42.Sutton, Jane S. “The Taming of the Polos/Polis: Rhetoric as an Achievement without Woman.”Southern Speech Communication Journal, 57 (1992), 97-119.Sutton, Jane S. “Rereading Sophistical Arguments: A Political Intervention.” Argumentation, 5 (1991),141-157.Sutton, Jane. “Antiphon’s On the Chorus Boy: The Practice of Practical Truth.” Pretext: A Journalof Rhetorical Theory, 10 (1989), 100-106.5

Jane S. SuttonSutton, Jane S. “The Death of Rhetoric and its Rebirth in Philosophy.” Translated by Stina Hansson as“Retorikens död-och dess pånyttfödelse,” Tidskrift för Littaturvetenskap, 3 (1987), 8-19.Sutton, Jane S. “The Death of Rhetoric and its Rebirth in Philosophy.” Rhetorica, 4 (1986), 203-26.Chapters in Books, including reprintsSutton, Jane S. and Mari Lee Mifsud. “Introduction: A Revolution in Tropes.” In A Revolution inTropes: Alloiostrophic Rhetoric. Lanham, MD, New York, London: Lexington Books, 2015,xi-xxvii.Sutton, Jane S. and Mari Lee Mifsud. “Figuring Out/In Rhetoric: From Antistrophē to Alloiostrophē.In A Revolution in Tropes: Alloiostrophic Rhetoric. Lanham, MD, New York, London:Lexington Books, 2015, 1-18.Sutton, Jane S. “The Earth Is Not at Rest and Neither Should Be Rhetoric.” In A Revolution in Tropes:Alloiostrophic Rhetoric. Lanham, MD, New York, London: Lexington Books, 2015, 19-46.Sutton, Jane S. “A Chōra Afterword, by Way of a Fragment and a Riddle.” In A Revolution in Tropes:Alloiostrophic Rhetoric. Lanham, MD, New York, London: Lexington Books, 2015, 97-108.Sutton, Jane S. “Structuring the Narrative for the Canon of Rhetoric: The Principles of TraditionalRhetorical Historiography (an essay) with the Dead’s Differend (a collage).” In WritingHistories of Rhetoric. 1st ed., Victor Vitanza, (ed.), Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois UniversityPress, 2014, 156-179. (reprint).Sutton, Jane S. “Rhetoric’s Nose: What Will Rhetorical Historiography Do with It?” In Re/TheorizingWriting Histories of Rhetoric. Michelle Ballif, (ed.). Carbondale: Southern Illinois UniversityPress, 2013, 128-138.Eicher-Catt, Deborah and Jane S. Sutton. “A Communicology of the Oval Office as Figural Rhetoric:Women, the Presidency, and a Politics of the Body.” In Communicology: The New Scienceof Embodied Discourse. Deborah Eicher-Catt and Isaac E. Catt (eds.), Madison, NJ: FairleighDickinson University Press, 2010, 200-234.Sutton, Jane S. “Weaving and Unweaving the Rights of Public Woman: The Case of TelephoneOperators at the Turn of the Twentieth Century.” In Oppositional Discourses andDemocracies. Michael Huspek, (ed.) New York: Routledge, 2010, 118-131.Sutton, Jane S. and Suzanne C. Shaffer. “Could Communication Be the Next OutsourcedCommodity? Fostering Communicative Competencies in a Global World.” In Teaching Ideasfor the Basic Course, Vol. 11. Barbara Hugenberg and Lawrence W. Hugenberg (eds.),Dubuque, IA: Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company, 2007, 165-171.Sutton, Jane S. and Shawn T. Foley. “Techne Graphic and Legacy Resources.” Online Learning IdeaBook: 95 Ways to Enhance Technology-Based and Blended Learning, Patti Shank (ed.), SanFrancisco: Jossey-Bass/Pfeiffer, a publishing unit of John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2007, 292-294.Sutton, Jane S. and Nkanyiso Mpofu. “Rhetoric and the Delivery of Democracy: Cartoons andEmpire.” In Glyn Rimmington, (ed.). Empire or Interdependence: Proceedings of aMultidisciplinary, International Conference on the Post-Cold War World. CD-ROM (pp. 147161). Wichita, Kansas: Friends University, 2005.6

Jane S. SuttonSutton, Jane S. “Hippias of Elis.” In Classical Rhetorics and Rhetoricians: Critical Studies andSources. Michelle Ballif and Michael G. Moran (eds.). Westport, CT: Greenwood PublishingCompany, Inc., 2004, 199-203.Sutton, Jane S. and Shawn T. Foley. “Instructional Methodologies to Innovate an Introductory Courseon Rhetorical Theory.” In Proceedings. Michael R. Simonson (ed.). CD-ROM. Disk 2Instruction Volume. Association for Educational Communications and Technology, 2004.Sutton, Jane S. “On the Structure of Rhetoric in Aristotle: The Space of Speech, Self and Other.” InThe Philosophy of Communication Vol. II. Konstantine Boudouris and Takis Poulakos (eds.),International Center for Greek Philosophy and Culture, Athens, Greece: Ionia Publications,2002, 204-212.Sutton, Jane S. “Kairos.” In Encyclopedia of Rhetoric, Thomas O. Sloane and Thomas Farrell, (ed.),Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001, 413-417.Sutton, Jane S. “The Taming of the Polos/Polis: Rhetoric as an Achievement without Woman.” InContemporary Rhetorical Theory: A Reader. John Louis Lucaites, Celeste Michelle Condit,and Sally Caudill (eds.), New York: Guilford Press, 1999, 101-126. (Reprint)Sutton, Jane S. “Structuring the Narrative for the Canon of Rhetoric: The Principles of TraditionalRhetorical Historiography (an essay) with the Dead’s Differend (a collage).” In WritingHistories of Rhetoric. Victor Vitanza, (ed.), Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois UniversityPress, 1994, 156-179.Sutton, Jane S. “Rhetoric of the Possible: Time and Self in Mazursky’s Tempest.” In A RhetoricalAnalysis of Popular American Film, Marc T. Newman (ed.), Dubuque, Iowa: Kendall HuntPublishing Company, 1993, 91-116.Sutton, Jane S. “The Marginalization of Sophistical Rhetoric and the Loss of History.” In Rethinkingthe History of Rhetoric: Multidisciplinary Essays on the Rhetorical Tradition. Takis Poulakos,(ed.), Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1993, 75-90.Book Reviews and Review EssaysSutton, Jane. Review of Negation, Subjectivity, and the History of Rhetoric by Victor J. Vitanza,Philosophy and Rhetoric, 32 (1999), 180-184.Sutton, Jane. Review of Reclaiming Rhetorica by Andrea Lunsford, (ed.), Quarterly Journal ofSpeech, 82 (1996), 300-302.Sutton, Jane. Review of The Great Sophists in Periclean Athens by Jacqueline de Romilly. RhetoricReview, 12 (1993), 190-194.Sutton, Jane. Review of The Sophists, by Harold Barrett. Quarterly Journal of Speech, 75 (1989),507.EditorshipsReviewer, Philosophy and Rhetoric, 2017.Reviewer, Advances in the History of Rhetoric, 2016.7

Jane S. SuttonReviewer, Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012, 2015.Reviewer, Baylor University Press, 2014.Reviewer, Sage Publications, 1995.Reviewer, Communication Theory, 2004.Reviewer, Rhetoric Society Quarterly, 2007.Editorial Board, Advances in the History of Rhetoric, 2000-present.Editorial Board, York County Heritage Journal, 2013-present.Editorial Board, PreText: A Journal of Rhetorical Theory, 1992-ongoing.Editorial Board, Western Journal of Communication, 2012.Papers Presented at Professional MeetingsA. International: Competitively Selected PapersThe Exception, Contingency, and the Other. A Metaphorical Analysis. Canadian Society for theStudy of Rhetoric, June 2-4, 2010.Alloiostrophic Rhetoric and Global Discourse on HIV/AIDS. With Mari Lee Mifsud, MumbiMwange, and Lindsey Fox. Rhetorical Citizenship and Public Deliberation, University ofCopenhagen, Denmark, October 9-10, 2008.The Figural Reality of Deliberative Democracy: From Enclosure to Emancipation, with Mari LeeMifsud. Union for Democratic Communications Conference, Simon Fraser University(Vancouver Campus), Vancouver, British Columbia, October 25-28, 2007.Figuring Reconciliation: Dancing with the Enemy. With Nkanyiso Mpofu. Figures of Democracy.Concordia University, Montreal, Canada, October 21-22, 2005.Rhetoric and the Delivery of Democracy: Cartoons as Empire. Empire or Interdependence: AnInternational and Multi-disciplinary Conference on the Post-Cold War, Friends University,Wichita, Kansas, April 1-3, 2005.On the Structure of Rhetoric in Aristotle: The Space of Speech, Self, and Other. ThirteenthInternational Conference on Greek Philosophy, Rhodes, Greece, August 18-25, 2001.Hermes’ Sadness: Rhetoric and the Force of the Feminine. International Feminism(s) and Rhetoric(s)Conference: From Boundaries to Borderlands. Department of English, Oregon StateUniversity, Corvallis, Oregon, August 28-30, 1997.Rhetoric and the Peacock: An Antiphonic Spectacle of Preconceptual Linguistic Equipment for an Artof Rhetoric. Carleton University Centre for Rhetorical Studies, Colloquium on History ofRhetoric from Ancient Greece to Twentieth Century, Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario,Canada, April 8-9, 1994.Unconscious Assumptions in the Method of Rhetoric. Biennial Conference of the InternationalSociety for the History of Rhetoric, Turin, Italy, July 21-24, 1993.The Scope of Legal Discourse in Late-Fifth Century Athens. With Takis Poulakos. EighthConference of the International Society for the History of Rhetoric, The Johns Hopkins8

Jane S. SuttonUniversity, Baltimore, MD, September 25-29, 1991.The Twentieth Century Turn in the Sophistic Movement, Seventh Conferenc

Sutton, Jane S. “Teaching Rhetoric in the Commonwealth via the Bill Moyers Journal: Kathleen Hall Jamieson.” The Pennsylvania Scholars Series (2012): 33-43. Sutton, Jane S. “York in Relation to the Other Revolution: Frances Wright, Women’s Rights.” York County Heritage Trust Journal, September 2010, 14-21. Sutton, Jane S. and Nkanyiso .

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