Dayle C. Hardy-Short, PhD
Professor
Environmental Rhetoric, Political Communication, Gender
Studies
School of Communication, Room 351
928-523-2311
Dayle.Hardy-Short@nau.edu
Research and teaching interests
My primary research currently focuses on two areas:
wildfires, especially the wildland-urban interface, and the wolf reintroduction
debate. Specifically, my co-author and I focus on public responses to wildfire
in the American West, including ways in which public policy arguments about
wildfire management are shaped; we are especially interested in the Yellowstone
fires of 1988, the Bitterroot fires of 2000, and the Arizona fires of 2002. We
also focus on the public debates surrounding reintroduction of wolves into the
American West wilderness areas, especially the greater Yellowstone and Glacier
ecosystems and the Arizona-New Mexico border areas. I am also working on
narrower research projects that focus on President Bush's response to the
Katrina disaster and anti-war rhetoric parallels between the Vietnam war and
Iraq war eras.
Courses offered
COM 101 Communication Analysis
COM 200 Communication Theory
CST 111 Fundamentals of Public Speaking
CST 201 Introduction to Research in Speech
CST 217 Argumentation and Debate
CST 300W Rhetorical Criticism
CST 311 Advanced Presentation Techniques
CST 321 Nonverbal Communication
CST 365 Communication in Contemporary Affairs
CST 424 Gender and Communication
CST 498C Senior Seminar
CST 503 Classroom Communication
CST 524 Gender and Communication,
COM 698 Seminar in Communication Theory
Representative research and creative activity:
Dayle C. Hardy-Short and C. Brant Short. “Fire, Death, and
Rebirth: A Metaphoric Analysis of the 1988 Yellowstone Fire Debate.” Western
Journal of Communication, vol. 59 (Spring 1995): 103-125.
Brant Short and Dayle C. Hardy-Short. “’Physicians of the
Forest’: A Rhetorical Critique of the Bush Healthy Forest Initiative.”
Electronic Green Journal, issue 19, ISSN: 1076-7975. December 2003, 14 pp.
egj.lib.uidaho.edu/egj19/short1.shtml
Dayle C. Hardy-Short. “The Rhetoric of Victimage: Women’s
Movement Leaders Respond to the Defeat of the ERA.” Communication and Sex-Role
Socialization, ed. Cynthia Berryman-Fink, Deborah Ballard-Reisch, and Lisa H.
Newman. New York: Garland, 1993. Pp. 209-231.
Education
PhD, Speech Communication, Indiana University, 1988
MA, Speech Communication, University of New Mexico, 1980
BA Interpersonal Communication, University of
Montana, 1976