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Gary C. Woodward is an American author and retired professor. He is a contributor to the field of political communication and has also written on rhetoric and mass communication.[1]
Born in Denver, Colorado, he earned degrees in communication and rhetorical theory from California State University at Sacramento and University of Pittsburgh. He has taught in England and in the United States.[1]
Woodward is professor emeritus of rhetorical theory at The College of New Jersey,[when?] where he taught classes in theories of persuasion, argumentation and debate, and philosophy of communication. He has served as the Department of Communication Studies chairperson.[2] He helped to pioneer the modern definition of political communication and distinguish the field as separate from political science or mass media.[3]
He is the co-author, along with Robert E. Denton, Jr., of two textbooks: Political Communication in America (first edition 1985, third edition 1999) and Persuasion and Influence in American Life (first edition 1988, eighth edition 2019). These books are widely used in communication courses at the undergraduate and graduate level,[4][5] and cited in academic books and journals.[6] Woodward is also the sole author of several scholarly works on subjects including rhetorical theories, communications philosophy, political media and listening as a means of communication.[7][8]
Woodward's research has been supported by awards from the National Endowment of the Humanities, the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library, the Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library, CBS, and C-SPAN.[9] He has published guest columns as an expert on communications topics for the Trenton Times and NJ.com.[10] He has been a member of the National Communication Association, Eastern Communication Association, New Jersey Council for the Humanities, and The Rhetoric Society of America.[11]
Woodward has authored the following:[12]
Woodward was a fellow of the US National Endowment for the Humanities in 1980. He served in leadership positions at the National Communication Association and Eastern Communication Association, and has been a speaker and panel chair at their conferences.[13]
When first published in 1986, Political Communication in America was highlighted in American Political Science Review,[14] Presidential Studies Quarterly,[15] Western Political Quarterly,[16] and Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly.[17] Political Communication in America was selected in 1988 by the Department of Education Office of Educational Research and Improvement as one of 30 important books on "Governmental-Political Communication."[18] It continues to be cited in scholarly work over 35 years later.[19] Persuasion and Influence in American Life was closely examined in a meta-analysis published by Communication Education as an effective textbook for teaching persuasion techniques.[20]
The Idea of Identification (2003) was reviewed by The Southern Communication Journal.[21] The Perfect Response: Studies of The Rhetorical Personality (2010), was reviewed in Mass Communication and Society.[22] The Rhetoric of Intention in Human Affairs (2013) was reviewed by the Kenneth Burke Society.[23] The Sonic Imperative: Sound in the Age of Screens (2021), was highlighted by a presentation to the Sarnoff Collection, a museum dedicated to RCA chairman David Sarnoff's life.[24][25][26]
Woodward lives in Lambertville, New Jersey.[9]