Education
Lucaites obtained a Doctor of Philosophy in 1984 from the University of Iowa, a Master of Arts in 1975 from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and a Bachelor of Arts in 1974 from Rutgers College.
Lucaites obtained a Doctor of Philosophy in 1984 from the University of Iowa, a Master of Arts in 1975 from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and a Bachelor of Arts in 1974 from Rutgers College.
In 1975 from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and a Bachelor of Arts in 1974 from Rutgers College. Lucaites worked as an Assistant Professor of Speech Communication at the University of Alabama from 1984-1987. In 1987, he joined the faculty at Indiana University where he is currently a professor of Rhetoric and Public Culture in the Department of Communication and Culture.
The project currently has three related trajectories.
The second emphasis focuses on the impact of visual rhetorics (especially photojurnalism and documentary photography) on the construction, dissemination, appropriation, and remembrance of the key principles of American liberal democracy.
Professor Lucaites"s research concerns the general relationship between rhetoric and social theory, and seeks to contribute in particular to the critique and reconstruction of liberalism in contemporary social, political, and cultural practices in the United States. The first emphasis focuses on the relationship between race and "American" identity and attends to the ways in which the concept of "race" is constructed and articulates with the prevailing ideological commitments of contemporary Anglo-American versions of the liberal project (eg, "equality," "property," "individualism," "merit," "public trust," etc). The third emphasis focuses on the fragmentation of liberalism in the United States at the end of the twentieth century in what is increasingly being referred to as postmodernity.