“With inimitable creativity, Hawhee shows that climate change is not immune to comprehension but rather open to wildly curious rhetorical fashioning. She provides a fully embodied account of rhetoric and climate, time and temperature, showing that such supposed abstractions are actually glimmering sensations that blend feeling and knowing in the most intimate ways. This book is a gift.”
— John Durham Peters, Yale University
“The unfolding climate crisis poses unprecedented challenges that require not only new scientific diagnostics but also a new social imaginary that reassesses dominant values, ways of knowing, and collective aspirations. One can hope we are all ready to heed this book’s call to reimagine communication—and the world.”
— Phaedra C. Pezzullo, University of Colorado Boulder
“A Sense of Urgency compels us to acknowledge that the magnitude of climate change courses through everything—including facts and feelings, information and sensations. Hawhee demonstrates just how intense rhetoric must become to meet these unprecedented challenges. Working with an extinct glacier, youth activists, a multisensory art installation, and more, Hawhee helps us once again consider an approach to rhetoric that we could not before fathom, but now must.”
— Casey Boyle, University of Texas at Austin
“A Sense of Urgency presents four detailed analyses of emerging rhetorical responses to the impact of climate change. . . . But the introduction and conclusion go beyond the case studies by arguing that contemporary environmental concerns now exert pressure on rhetorical scholarship itself.”
— Inside Higher Ed
"Written with crisp, compelling prose, A Sense of Urgency argues for rhetoric as an art of intensification that is itself intensifying as rhetors grapple with the urgency of rhetorical action in the face of climate change. Hawhee develops a rich suite of rhetorical concepts suited for studying rhetoric as an art of intensification, deftly deploying terms such as “magnitude, presence, and witnessing” (4) to interpret case studies such as “flattening the curve” public health campaigns, public art installations, and Congressional hearings led by BIPOC youth activists."
— Rhetoric Society of America