| Biography
Davin Grindstaff
(Ph.D., The Pennsylvania State University, 2000) is a Lecturer
and Director of the Basic Speech Course, which is featured
as an institutional option in the Georgia State University’s
core curriculum. Grindstaff’s research is focused
in rhetorical studies, with particular attention to identity
construction/reconstruction and queer theory. His forthcoming
book, Rhetorical Secrets: Mapping Gay Identity and Queer
Resistance in Contemporary America (Alabama 2005), maps
how discourses surrounding gay identity constrain and enable
political emancipation and social justice claims. He recently
co-authored an essay, “The Corpus of Daniel Pearl,”
with K. Deluca, which appeared in Critical Studies in Media
Communication. His essays have also appeared in the The
Journal of Homosexuality and in several volumes of the NCA
Alta Argumentation Conference proceedings. He is at work
on a book focused on the legal discourses surrounding same-sex
marriage controversy. Grindstaff has won a top paper award
from the Lesbian/Gay Communication Studies Division of the
National Communication Association and runner-up honors
for the Kenneth Burke Prize in Rhetoric.
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