Abstract

This study examines how changes in a key scientific genre supported anthropology’s early twentieth-century bid for scientific status. Combining spatial theories of genre with inflections from the register of economics, I develop the concept of rhetorical scarcity to characterize this genre change not as evolution but as manipulation that produces a manufactured situation of intense rhetorical constraint.

Journal
College Composition and Communication
Published
2012-02-01
DOI
10.58680/ccc201218446
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Open Access
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  1. Written Communication

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