Ada Hubrig

6 articles

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Who Reads Hubrig

Ada Hubrig's work travels primarily in Technical Communication (100% of indexed citations) · 3 indexed citations.

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  • Technical Communication — 3

Counts include only citations from indexed journals that deposit reference lists with CrossRef. Authors whose readers publish primarily in venues without reference deposits will appear less central than they are. See coverage notes →

  1. Saying the Quiet Part Out Loud: Using CRT to Name the Intersections of Texas’s Legislative Harm
    doi:10.58680/ce2024872168
  2. Rhetorics of Overcoming: Rewriting Narratives of Disability and Accessibility in Writing Studies, by Allison Harper Hitt
  3. An Unglamorous Queercrip Account of Failure in the Writing Lincoln Initiative
    Abstract

    Drawing on their embodied experiences as queer disabled graduate students directing a student-founded, student-led community literacy program, this article foregrounds queercrip embodied experiences to reinterpret normative notions of failure in community literacy programs. Using our own experiences as queer disabled graduate students directing the community literacy program, queer and disability theory, and community literacy studies scholarship, the authors unpack their own stories of failure and argue, through queercrip readings of that failure, that failure should be seen as generative, as relational, and as bound by institutional perspective.

    doi:10.59236/rjv23i1pp56-90
  4. Beyond (Favor) Access: Constellating Communities through Collective Access
    Abstract

    Drawing on disability studies analysis of institutional narratives of disability by composition and rhetoric scholars, this article theorizes “favor access.” Favor access gestures toward inclusion, but is steeped in the capitalist, colonialist logic of academic institutions in service of ultimately extractive, dehumanizing agendas. Instead of favor access, the article points to collective access as articulated by disability justice activists. As opposed to favor access, collective access rejects institutional logics and values community and collaboration rather than academia’s emphasis on individualism and competition. This article considers sites where collective access is happening in composition classrooms and in the field of composition and rhetoric.

    doi:10.58680/ccc202332670
  5. Guest Editors' Introduction
    Abstract

    In this guest editors' introduction to Community Literacy Journal's special issue on access, the guest editors call for greater attention to access work as community literacy, pushing for the field to tend to issues of intersectionality, reciprocity,

    doi:10.25148/clj.17.1.010642
  6. Care Work Through Course Design: Shifting the Labor of Resilience