This is an impressive first book: well researched, carefully argued, and engagingly written. Hill posits technological rhetoric as an original, interdisciplinary perspective on Techns Paradox. Grounded in thorough readings of rhetorical critique as well as science and technology studies, his longitudinal study of machine rhetoric warrants attention both for the cases examinedfrom Malthus to the Unabomberand for the individual and collective insights the analysis yields.
David Henry, Sanford Berman Professor, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Merging insights from rhetoric, science, and technology studies, Ian Hill analyzes how weapons are simultaneously cast as harbingers of extermination and preservers of peace, revealing novelty and innovation in words about weapons across two centuries. Advocating Weapons, War, and Terrorism is crisply written, thought-provoking, and hauntingly important.
Lisa Keränen, author of Scientific Characters: Rhetoric, Politics, and Trust in Breast Cancer Research