Cover: Sovereign, Settler, Leaker, Lie: Forms of the Secret in US Political Rhetoric by Atilla Hallsby, featuring an unsettilng art exhibit of six black rotary telephones connected to thin black poles in a large, empty, fluorescent-lit office.

Sovereign, Settler, Leaker, Lie

Forms of the Secret in US Political Rhetoric

Atilla Hallsby

280 pp. 6 x 9
2 b&w illustrations
7 diagrams
3 tables

EXPECTED Pub Date: February, 2026

Subjects: Rhetoric & Communication
American Studies
Cultural Studies

Series: New Directions in Rhetoric and Materiality

Preorder Hardcover $99.95   ISBN: 978-0-8142-1605-7
Preorder Paperback $34.95   ISBN: 978-0-8142-5972-6

“Much work on the secret skirts over its rhetorical form and associated tropes, but Hallsby has written a rigorous, capacious, and highly engaging account that situates the secret historically and culturally. Essential reading for those interested in the politics and aesthetics of secrecy.” —Clare Birchall, author of Radical Secrecy: The Ends of Transparency in Datafied America

Sovereign, Settler, Leaker, Lie generatively brings rhetorical studies into conversation with surveillance studies to offer important expansions and correctives to the study of secrecy. Drawing on a rich historical archive, Hallsby powerfully illustrates the secret’s material impacts and entanglements with racial, sexual, colonial, and gendered violences.”” —Mia Fischer, author of Terrorizing Gender: Transgender Visibility and the Surveillance Practices of the U.S. Security State

“Presented from a psychoanalytic perspective that refuses to collapse into binaries of suspicion and faith, Sovereign, Settler, Leaker, Lie is both reassuring for its ability to ‘name’ contemporary rhetorical dynamics and sobering because, as Freud once put it, we are not masters of our own house.” —Joshua Gunn, author of Political Perversion: Rhetorical Aberration in the Time of Trumpeteering

“Smart, playful, and theoretically sophisticated, Sovereign, Settler, Leaker, Lie introduces us to the hard truths of secrecy in American politics. A one-of-a-kind book.” —Joshua Reeves, coauthor of The Prison House of the Circuit: Politics of Control from Analog to Digital

“This analytically sophisticated book offers a captivating exploration of the often-destructive role of political secrets in society. Whether found in conspiracy theories, national security leaks, or fabrications supporting war, Atilla Hallsby shows how secrets powerfully shape collective knowledge and legitimize forms of violence.” —Torin Monahan, author of Crisis Vision: Race and the Cultural Production of Surveillance

In Sovereign, Settler, Leaker, Lie, Atilla Hallsby argues that secrets play a pivotal role in organizing political discourse in the United States. Hallsby takes up contemporary case studies—ranging from the Valerie Plame scandal during the George W. Bush presidency, to the use of Saul Alinsky’s name as a partisan codeword for politicizing Obama’s Blackness, to Chelsea Manning’s public naming and outing—to show how dramatic revelations increasingly fail to produce meaningful change and instead reproduce entrenched racial, gendered, and colonial hierarchies.

The core feature of these interlinked moments of crisis is the secret: a rhetorical patterning of political life organized by specific forms, each one lending a familiar shape to the shadows of American empire. These forms, theorized here as tropes, connect decades of secrets, linking the George W. Bush administration’s War on Terror to the Trump-era reemergence of “deep state” conspiracy theories. As an extension of secrecy and surveillance studies, and with the aim of attaining a more accountable and just form of US governmentality, Sovereign, Settler, Leaker, Lie explains how still-unfolding political realities in the United States emerged, transformed, and regenerate.

Atilla Hallsby is Assistant Professor of Rhetoric and Communication Studies at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities. He is the author of Reading Rhetorical Theory: Speech, Representation, and Power.

Contents

List of Illustrations
Preface     This Page Left Intentionally Blank

Introduction     The Secret’s Forms
Chapter 1     The Secret Episteme: A Genealogy of Political Crisis
Chapter 2     The Secret in and of Discourse: Hidden Depths and Open Surfaces
Chapter 3     The Scandal: George W. Bush and the Exposure of Valerie Plame Wilson
Chapter 4     The Dog Whistle: Weaponizing Saul Alinsky in the Obama Years
Chapter 5     The Leak: Sexual Caricature and the National Security State
Chapter 6     The Detective: Settler Subjects and Neocolonial Warfare
Chapter 7     Twisted Endings: The Secret in and of the Deep State

Acknowledgments
Bibliography
Index

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