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The Illustrated Four Freedoms: FDR, Rockwell, and the Margins of the Rhetorical Presidency
Author(s) -
Kimble James J.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
presidential studies quarterly
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.337
H-Index - 5
eISSN - 1741-5705
pISSN - 0360-4918
DOI - 10.1111/psq.12170
Subject(s) - presidency , rhetorical question , publicity , political science , law , ideal (ethics) , history , art , literature , politics
This article examines the rhetorical failure and eventual resurrection of Franklin D. Roosevelt's (FDR's) Four Freedoms and the implications of this transformation for conceptualizing the rhetorical presidency. By charting the phrase's initial flop and the related troubles of the administration's official Four Freedoms pamphlet, the essay argues that FDR's ideal was restrained by the government's reliance on a diegetic approach to propaganda. The appearance of Norman Rockwell's Four Freedoms series in [Roosevelt, Franklin D, 1943], in contrast, embraced a mimetic approach. I conclude that Rockwell's paintings and their attendant publicity blitz dramatized and personalized the president's Four Freedoms, fostering a surge of identification on the home front and ultimately launching the ideal on its ascendant course into rhetorical history.