In Rhetoric and Evasion: A Typology of Blame Avoidance Strategies, political communication is laid bare. Drawing from Christopher Hood's seminal work The Blame Game and enriched by contemporary analysis, this book explores how politicians and institutions expertly dodge responsibility while maintaining the appearance of accountability.
From strategic apologies that say nothing to policies designed to hide failure, this book unveils the rhetorical, structural, and symbolic tools used to manipulate public perception. It categorizes these evasions into three core strategies-presentational, agency, and policy-and dissects them with clarity and precision. Each chapter provides real-world insight into how language is used not to inform, but to obscure; not to lead, but to deflect.
This book is more than a critique. It is a toolkit for decoding the speeches, statements, and policies that shape public life. Ideal for students, educators, journalists, and citizens alike, Rhetoric and Evasion teaches readers to read between the lines, trace the patterns of power, and demand more from political discourse.
As democracies struggle with cynicism, media saturation, and institutional fatigue, understanding the architecture of blame avoidance becomes essential. This book equips readers to see what is often hidden in plain sight-the erosion of responsibility beneath the surface of political performance.