Haig bosmajian biography definition

  • Haig bosmajian biography definition
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    Haig bosmajian biography definition

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  • Haig bosmajian biography definition and example
  • Haig Bosmajian

    Haig Aram Bosmajian (March 26, 1928- June 17, 2014) was an author, lecturer, and professor, who received the 1983 Orwell Award for his book The Language of Oppression (1974).[1][2] Haig Bosmajian received a PhD in 1960 from Stanford University.

    His work has explored rhetoric and the freedom of speech.[2] Bosmajian was professor emeritus at the University of Washington,[3] in the Speech/Communications Department, where he taught since 1965.

    He was married for 57 years to Hamida Bosmajian, also a published author and a professor at nearby Seattle University.[2][3]

    Haig and Hamida Bosmajian wrote the textbook, The Rhetoric of the Civil Rights Movement (1969), which has been published as a student textbook to analyze strategies of rhetoric.

    [4]

    Works

    Selected works by Haig Bosmajian include:

    • Anita Whitney, Louis Brandeis, and the First Amendment[5]
    • Burning Books (March 20