DocumentCode
2405316
Title
The giant that ate El Paso Electric [discourse usage]
Author
Baake, Kenneth R.
Author_Institution
El Paso Herald-Post, TX, USA
fYear
1997
fDate
22-25 Oct 1997
Firstpage
91
Lastpage
100
Abstract
This paper is a narrative examining how the types of discourse used by the El Paso Electric Co. since the company founding in 1901 have reflected periods of relative calm and also have anticipated periods of tumultuous change. I use annual reports from the company supplemented with notes from my 10 years reporting on its activities for a daily newspaper to show how El Paso Electric´s rhetorical output has evolved to meet multiple exigencies. These include fuel shortages, rapid growth in demand, a nuclear power adventure, bankruptcy and the current threat of deregulation. At times, the company has responded to these situations by employing all three types of Aristotelian rhetoric: epideictic, forensic and deliberative. My study also considers shifts in El Paso Electric´s rhetoric from that reflecting a modernist faith in the predictive powers of science to a post-modern awareness that scientific design alone cannot ensure success
Keywords
electricity supply industry; professional communication; Aristotelian rhetoric; El Paso Electric Co.; annual reports; bankruptcy; daily newspaper; deliberative rhetoric; deregulation; discourse types; epideictic rhetoric; exigencies; forensic rhetoric; fuel shortages; nuclear power; post-modernism; rapid demand growth; rhetorical output; scientific design; Cities and towns; Costs; Forensics; Fuels; Nuclear power generation; Regulators; Resists; Rhetoric; Roads; Solids;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Professional Communication Conference, 1997. IPCC '97 Proceedings. Crossroads in Communication., 1997 IEEE International
Conference_Location
Salt Lake City, UT
Print_ISBN
0-7803-4184-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IPCC.1997.637034
Filename
637034
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