May 7 2026

Rhetoric Day at Great Cities Institute

May 7, 2026

12:30 PM - 2:15 PM

Location

GCI, 4th Floor, CUPPAH

Address

412 S. Peoria, Suite 400, Chicago, Select

Rhetoric Day at the Great Cities Institute is a dynamic colloquium that brings together emerging scholars and established thinkers to explore rhetoric not simply as persuasion, but as a force that shapes identity, law, and political life.

 

Taking place this Thursday, May 7, 2026, from 12:30 PM to 2:15 PM at 412 S. Peoria Street, Suite 400 in Chicago, the event offers an opportunity to engage critically with how historical and contemporary forces continue to shape our political and social world. By examining rhetoric across different moments in history, the colloquium invites participants to reconsider what we define as today’s “crises” and to recognize them as part of longer, ongoing patterns.

 

The program features a compelling lineup of presenters whose work spans rhetoric, political theory, history, and critical social analysis:

 

Jennifer Torres, PhD Candidate

Jennifer Torres examines how collective identities are formed through language and discourse. Her presentation focuses on constitutive rhetoric, exploring how American and Mexican American identities were shaped in the late 19th century through historical tensions, social conditions, and public narratives. Her work highlights how groups come to understand themselves, and are understood by others, through rhetorical processes.

 

Frida Sanchez Vega, PhD Candidate

Frida Sanchez Vega’s research engages questions of law, power, and the nation-state. Drawing on the concept of nomos—law as both rule and social order—her presentation explores how legal systems are embedded in nation-state formation and how they can produce division, exclusion, and structural harm toward both citizens and non-citizens.

 

James Sharpe, PhD Candidate

James Sharpe investigates modern political life through the lens of philosophical thought, particularly the work of Hannah Arendt. His presentation draws on Arendt’s concept of “process” in the modern age to examine how contemporary political life is defined by constant change, intensified by technological and economic shifts, and what this means for political action today.

 

Ralph Cintron, Professor Emeritus

Dr. Ralph Cintron brings a senior scholarly perspective to the event, connecting classical political philosophy with present-day ideologies. His talk revisits Immanuel Kant’s Perpetual Peace to explore enduring tensions within Enlightenment thought and how these tensions continue to shape modern political divisions and resurgent forms of authoritarianism.

 

Together, these presenters offer a rich, interdisciplinary exploration of rhetoric’s enduring influence across historical and contemporary contexts. We hope you will be able to join us this Thursday.

 

RSVP

Contact

Great Cities Institute

Date posted

May 5, 2026

Date updated

May 5, 2026