Kairos: A Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, and Pedagogy

15 articles
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January 2020

  1. Don’t Read the Comments: Women’s Rhetorical Strategies in the Comments Sections of News Articles
    Abstract

    The comments sections below online news articles are popularly regarded as hostile—but many scholars see comments sections as spaces that expand democratic discourse. This webtext complicates the tension between these two interpretations of the comments sections by examining women’s rhetorical strategies in response to gendered hostility that accompany articles covering feminism and women’s issues.

  2. 'Stronger Together': Open Pedagogy, Digital Scholarship, and Hillary Clinton's Rhetorical Appeal
    Abstract

    Open Pedagogy relies on tools and collaboration to facilitate public discourse. Student projects are linked throughout the narrative, which were also collaboratively composed. As we will demonstrate, the inclusion of digital tools enabled students to engage with the rhetoric on a level appropriate for the times, creating our own kairotic moment.

  3. What Reddit Has to Teach Us About Discourse Communities
    Abstract

    This webtext provides one way to teach students how to enter a new discourse community; allowing them to then use what they’ve learned to enter new discourse communities after leaving their composition classes. The purpose is not to teach students a specific discourse so much as to teach them how to recognize and enter new discourse communities on their own.

January 2018

  1. A Review of Political Literacy in Composition and Rhetoric: Defending Academic Discourse against Postmodern Pluralism by Donald Lazere

August 2017

  1. Augmented Vélorutionaries: Digital Rhetoric, Memorials, and Public Discourse
    Abstract

    Ghost bikes function as MEmorials, or a public acknowledgement of the unspoken costs of petrocultural values. However, ghost bikes are temporary monuments: they are often stolen or taken down by public authorities within just a few days or weeks after their installation. We created the mobile augmented reality experience “Death Drive(r)s: Ghost Bike (Monu)mentality” to visualize MEmorials of ghost bikes digitally.

January 2011

  1. Review of Who Owns School? Authority, Students, and Online Discourse by Kelly Ritter

January 2009

  1. Review of Our Space: Resisting Corporate Control of Culture , by Christine Harold
    Abstract

    To readers interested in exploring the ways that the tools of marketing can be used against the dominant discourse and for the common good,OurSpaceoffers a dense theoretical context for culture jamming in digital and physical spaces, as well as practical examples of turning branding on its head.

August 2008

  1. Fifth Canon Consciousness: Classical and Electric Rhetorics--An Interview with Kathleen Welch
    Abstract

    Kathleen E. Welch, author ofElectric Rhetoric: Classical Rhetoric, Oralism, and a New LiteracyandThe Contemporary Reception of Classical Rhetoric: Appropriations of Ancient Discourse, is the Samuel Roberts Noble Family Foundation Presidential Professor of English at the University of Oklahoma.

August 2004

  1. Writing in the Sciences: Exploring Conventions of Scientific Discourse 2/E (Penrose and Katz)

May 2002

  1. Shifting the Triangle: Critical Thinking Through the Mediation of Forensic and Media Discourse

January 2001

  1. Critical Discourse in a Student Listserv: Collaboration, Conflict, and Electronic Multivocality
  2. Conversation and Community: Discourse in a Social MUD (Cherny)

August 1997

  1. On Gender and Electronic Discourse
  2. Passing Theory in Action: The Discourse Between Hypertext and Paralogic Hermeneutics
  3. Hypertext Reflections: Exploring the Rhetoric, Poetics, and Pragmatics of Hypertext