Computers and Composition

75 articles
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rhetorical criticism ×

June 2026

  1. How Baldwin's voice moved Cambridge: Activation contours, mimesis, and a computational approach to rhetoric's sensorium
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2026.103006
  2. Legacies, commitments, and new challenges: The Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative interviews three generations of Computers and Composition editors
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2026.102999
  3. Navigating platform algorithms: Global south feminist activists’ rhetorical and composition practices in digital advocacy on social media
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2026.102994

March 2026

  1. Wicked modes in UX: Pedagogical considerations for data détournement
    Abstract

    User experience (UX) as both a vocation and a skillset is currently in the center of a wicked knot: emerging technologies such as generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) and large language models (LLMs) are (for the moment) widely accessible in unprecedented ways and are already heavily integrated into modern workplace practices and educational spaces. Further, workplace demands have led to a change in perception of the function and value of UX, and the field is facing new obstacles to hiring and research funding. Our article argues that a resituation of UX is needed: we-as instructors and administrators-need to focus on UX as an act of slow, embodied, and multimodal UX composition. To do this work, we offer the strategy of détournement as central to UX curriculum and preparing students for design work in a variety of rhetorical situations, expressed through our example assignments for instructors to implement within the college classroom.

    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2025.102977
  2. Shifting rhetorical agency in multimodal UX composition with AI: Sharing rhetorical authority with technologies
    Abstract

    Content personalization or tailoring content as per the needs of users has been a focus of technical communicators’ work since a very long time. Recently, algorithms have helped trace users’ characteristics such as devices they use, platforms they work on, local language spoken, etc. to personalize content through strategies like responsive content, automatic translation and so on. AI tools have extended algorithmic capabilities for personalization, but at the same time increased the randomness of personalized content. That is, algorithms produce different results for the same user at different times or different results for different users at the same time with the same prompt thus shifting the agency of both rhetors (or content creators) and the audience (or content users). While conventional technical communication pedagogy has focused on writing for users, and more recently on writing for algorithms which serve the users, today it is crucial to understand how technologies like AI impact knowledge consumption processes from a user experience perspective? And how can we teach content personalization and adaptive techniques in the increasingly digital spaces of audience interactions? These questions motivated our research. To follow the roles of algorithms and technical communicators closely, we analyzed three different case studies where algorithms are responsible for a high level of personalization beyond the decisions made by technical communicators. Our findings suggest that we must teach students to investigate concepts such as user personas in UX for understanding audiences, several methods of decision-making for content assets, and rhetorical ecology for a holistic view of content production to dissemination.

    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2025.102973

June 2025

  1. Rhetoric in action: A multimodal and rhetorical analysis of PETA and animal justice online advocacy
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2025.102924

March 2025

  1. Playing the digital dialectic game: Writing pedagogy with generative AI
    Abstract

    This article explores teaching writing with generative AI as critical play where students and teachers engage in an ethically dialectical and aleatory game with generative AI. I qualitatively surveyed 24 writing teachers about how they teach writing with generative AI as well as its advantages and disadvantages. I discovered that teachers used generative AI to teach about the ethics of generative AI's design and rhetorical use to avoid plagiarism. Teachers also critically played with generative AI to teach the writing process of invention, drafting, revision, and editing. Specifically, the critical, dialectical interplay of human and machine invents in aleatory and emergent ways, creating moments of epiphany for students and teachers within the writing process for invention, drafting, revision, and editing while the real time pace of generative AI democratizes education, making writing and teaching more accessible for them.

    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2025.102915

December 2024

  1. Unveiling the affective digital counterpublic: A rhetorical ecological analysis of the #JusticeForNaqib movement in Pakistan
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2024.102885
  2. A rhetorical consideration of the {XE “embedded”} index
    Abstract

    • Indexes are hylomorphic; they turn accidence into substance. • Indexes are authored, not merely produced. • The syntactic, alphabetic, and columnar form of indexes are rhetorically powerful. • Indexes are political because they destabilize hegemonic reading practices. This article, in the area of digital rhetoric, argues that the apparatus of the index is an authored text that bears all of the qualities of creative work. Its primary and distinguishing quality, moreover, is a hylomorphic one that bridges the temporal and material divide by taking the accidence in a text and naming it in substance. This dual nature is especially apparent in indexes that are produced by software, such as MS Word, that require the tagging of a main text to create what is called an “embedded index”; indexes of this sort exist both inside a main text and outside of it, in the tags and in the index list. Because the index both transforms (accidence to idea) and translates (from the main text to index list), the index has rhetorical force, interpreting a text for its readers. It does so as much by its content as by its formal qualities: syntactic, alphabetic, and columnar. Its persuasiveness in tandem with its intervention in the reading process, moreover, has social and political implications since the index can serve as both a means of rebellion and control for those who use and make them.

    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2024.102887
  3. “Wayfinding” through the AI wilderness: Mapping rhetorics of ChatGPT prompt writing on X (formerly Twitter) to promote critical AI literacies
    Abstract

    In this paper, we demonstrate how studying the rhetorics of ChatGPT prompt writing on social media can promote critical AI literacies. Prompt writing is the process of writing instructions for generative AI tools like ChatGPT to elicit desired outputs and there has been an upsurge of conversations about it on social media. To study this rhetorical activity, we build on four overlapping traditions of digital writing research in computers and composition that inform how we frame literacies, how we study social media rhetorics, how we engage iteratively and reflexively with methodologies and technologies, and how we blend computational methods with qualitative methods. Drawing on these four traditions, our paper shows our iterative research process through which we gathered and analyzed a dataset of 32,000 posts (formerly known as tweets) from X (formerly Twitter) about prompt writing posted between November 2022 to May 2023. We present five themes about these emerging AI literacy practices: (1) areas of communication impacted by prompt writing, (2) micro-literacy resources shared for prompt writing, (3) market rhetoric shaping prompt writing, (4) rhetorical characteristics of prompts, and (5) definitions of prompt writing. In discussing these themes and our methodologies, we highlight takeaways for digital writing teachers and researchers who are teaching and analyzing critical AI literacies.

    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2024.102882

September 2024

  1. On rhetorical distortion: Examining mutated hashtags in pro-an(orexi)a communities
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2024.102872
  2. “What it is exactly that circulates”: Affective value, re/production, and rhetorical exchange
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2024.102865

June 2024

  1. “Inside jokes and the funny things”: Belongingness in College Students’ Rhetorical Uses of Venmo
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2024.102845

March 2024

  1. Machine-in-the-loop writing: Optimizing the rhetorical load
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2024.102826

September 2023

  1. Technofeminism, Twitter, and the counterpublic rhetoric of @SheRatesDogs
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2023.102788

March 2023

  1. Slipping into the world: Platforms, scale, and branding in alumni's social media writing
    Abstract

    In this article, we draw on focus group interviews collected for the Wayfinding Project to explore how university alumni orient themselves as writers while participating in social media after graduation. By looking at alumni's self descriptions of their writing processes across public networks, we are able to trace pathways that recognize the rhetorical and communicative intentions of users, while also acknowledging the roles that serendipity, creativity, and the unexpected play in shaping these literate practices. Specifically, we point to how these alumni describe their experiences as they adapt to addressing audiences across different platforms and confront the “reach” of those platforms for engaging unexpected audiences. Several focus group participants use the term “branding” as a way to describe how they conceive of their writing across multiple social networks. These participants describe their public, networked writing as a form of managing their identities at the same time that they are “branding” themselves to manage the expectations of multiple audiences. In sum, our research shows us how the unexpected audiences generated through social media participation operate in tension with writers’ deliberate shaping of their messages and their self-presentation.

    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2023.102759
  2. Network-Emergent Rhetorical Invention
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2023.102758
  3. Podcasts in rhetoric and composition: A review of The Big Rhetorical Podcast and Pedagogue
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2023.102757

September 2022

  1. Embracing discord? The rhetorical consequences of gaming platforms as classrooms
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2022.102729
  2. The thing-power of Ring Fit Adventure as embodied play: Tracing new materialist rhetoric across physical and cultural borders
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2022.102726

June 2022

  1. #ShopSmall because #ArtAintFree: Instagram artists’ rhetorical identification with community values
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2022.102710

March 2022

  1. Book Review: Rhetorical Code Studies: Discovering Arguments in and Around Code, by Kevin Brock, University of Michigan Press, 2019
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2022.102697

December 2021

  1. Book Review: Rhetorical Delivery and Digital Technologies: Networks, Affect, Electracy, Sean Morey. Routledge (2016)
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2021.102678

September 2020

  1. Machining Topoi: Tracking Premising in Online Discussion Forums with Automated Rhetorical Move Analysis
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2020.102578
  2. Introduction to “Composing Algorithms: Writing (with) Rhetorical Machines”
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2020.102594
  3. Events in Flux: Software Architecture, Detractio, and the Rhetorical Infrastructure of Facebook
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2020.102584
  4. Acting with Algorithms: Feminist Propositions for Rhetorical Agency
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2020.102581

June 2020

  1. Rhetorical Exhaustion & the Ethics of Amplification
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2020.102568
  2. Gaming Reddit’s Algorithm: r/the_donald, Amplification, and the Rhetoric of Sorting
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2020.102572

December 2019

  1. Rhetorical Listening Pedagogy: Promoting Communication Across Cultural and Societal Groups with Video Narrative
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2019.102517
  2. Deliberative Drifting: A Rhetorical Field Method for Audience Studies on Social Media
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2019.102520

September 2019

  1. Reanimating the Answerable Body: Rhetorical Looking and the Digital Interface
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2019.05.007

June 2019

  1. From Opportunities to Outcomes: The Wikipedia-Based Writing Assignment
    Abstract

    Over the past decade, compositionists have made a number of claims about opportunities presented by Wikipedia for teaching writing. The encyclopedia allows for transparent observation of concepts and skills related to process, research, collaboration, and rhetoric. Beyond observation, Wikipedia allows for public writing with an authentic audience, which often results in increased motivation. Much of this early research has dealt in opportunities and possibilities: speculation about how Wikipedia sponsors particular pedagogies and learning outcomes, and there remains a need for more empirical evidence. This article presents select data from a recent large-scale study conducted by the Wiki Education Foundation that begins to meet this need, and that confirms and extends research from the computers and writing community. Key findings from this research include positive evaluations of Wikipedia-based assignments in general, as well as positive evaluations concerning the capacity of Wikipedia-based assignments to teach critical thinking skills, source evaluation and research, public writing, literature review and synthesis, and peer review. This study also adds significantly to our field's knowledge of how contextual factors related to the course and assignment affect students’ evaluation of a Wikipedia-based assignment. Finally, this article suggests key recommendations for teaching with Wikipedia based on these findings.

    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2019.01.008
  2. Experiments in Posthumanism: On Tactical Rhetorical Encounters between Drones and Human Body Heat
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2019.01.010
  3. Feminist Rhetorical Practices in Digital Spaces
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2019.01.004
  4. Resisting “Let’s Eat Grandma”: The Rhetorical Potential of Grammar Memes
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2019.02.001

March 2019

  1. How Not to be a Troll: Practicing Rhetorical Technofeminism in Online Comments
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2018.11.001

September 2018

  1. Beyond Student as User: Rhetoric, Multimodality, and User-Centered Design
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2018.05.008
  2. Integrating Usability Testing with Digital Rhetoric in OWI
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2018.05.009
  3. User-Centered Design In and Beyond the Classroom: Toward an Accountable Practice
    Abstract

    The authors, an instructor and students, describe our practice of user-centered design on three levels: in the design and structure of an advanced undergraduate course in which we all participated, in student projects designed during the course, and in our reflections on the course presented here. We argue that principles of user-centered design can and should be more than course concepts and assignments; they can be core practices of the course that hold both students and teachers accountable for the impacts of their rhetorical choices. We offer a model for other teacher-scholars looking to involve students in the design of their courses and in writing together about their work.

    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2018.05.003

September 2017

  1. Digital Social Media and Aggression: Memetic Rhetoric in 4chan’s Collective Identity
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2017.06.006

June 2017

  1. Haul, Parody, Remix: Mobilizing Feminist Rhetorical Criticism With Video
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2017.03.002
  2. Rhetorical Choices in Facebook Discourse: Constructing Voice and Persona
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2017.03.006

March 2017

  1. Composing for Sound: Sonic Rhetoric as Resonance
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2016.11.006

December 2016

  1. “Are the Instructors Going to Teach Us Anything?”: Conceptualizing Student and Teacher Roles in the “Rhetorical Composing” MOOC
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2016.08.002

September 2015

  1. Wikipedia's Politics of Exclusion: Gender, Epistemology, and Feminist Rhetorical (In)action
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2015.06.009

March 2015

  1. The Rhetorical Template
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2014.12.003
  2. The Rhetorical Question Concerning Glitch
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2015.01.003

December 2014

  1. Building the Capacity of Organizations for Rhetorical Action with New Media: An Approach to Service Learning
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2014.09.001

March 2014

  1. Writing and Assessing Procedural Rhetoric in Student-produced Video Games
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2013.12.003