Citation Context
Cited by in this index (0)
No articles in this index cite this work.
References (46) · 22 in this index
-
Technical Communication Quarterly
-
The writing of scientific non-fiction: Contexts, choices and constraintsPre/Text
-
Technical Communication Quarterly
-
10.1109/IPCC.2014.7020350
-
Technical Communication Quarterly
Show all 46 →
-
10.2307/j.ctt5hjn6c
-
IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication
-
10.37514/TPC-B.2023.2104
-
Clarivate. (n.d.-a). Journal profile: Journal of business and technical communication. Journal Citation Repor…
-
Clarivate. (n.d.-b). Journal profile: Technical communication. Journal Citation Reports. https://jcr-clarivat…
-
Clarivate. (n.d.-c). Journal profile: Technical communication quarterly. Journal Citation Reports. https://jc…
-
Journal of Business and Technical Communication
-
Journal of Business and Technical Communication
-
College English as archiveCollege English
-
Technical Communication Quarterly
-
Rhetoric Review
-
Technical Communication Quarterly
-
10.3998/mpub.6719
-
10.1016/j.esp.2004.02.002
-
Journal of Business and Technical Communication
-
Inform or persuade? An analysis of technical communication textbooksTechnical Communication
-
10.1515/text.1.1994.14.3.401
-
Rhetoric Review
-
Technical Communication Quarterly
-
10.1016/j.esp.2003.06.001
-
10.1215/08992363-2144688
-
Distant readings of disciplinarity: Knowing and doing in composition/rhetoric dissertations
-
10.1080/00335638409383686
-
Conjectures on world literatureNew Left Review
-
Graphs, maps, trees: Abstract models for literary history
-
10.37514/WRI-B.2017.0124
-
10.1016/j.jeap.2018.08.002
-
College English
-
Technical Communication Quarterly
-
10.1177/1461445607087010
-
Technical Communication Quarterly
-
Journal of Business and Technical Communication
-
Technical Communication Quarterly
-
Technical Communication Quarterly
-
Technical Communication Quarterly
-
10.1093/acref/9780195392883.001.0001
-
Genre analysis
-
IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication
-
Human understanding: The collective use and evolution of concepts
-
Technical Communication Quarterly
-
Technical Communication Quarterly