Amber Buck

7 articles
University of Alabama

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Who Reads Buck

Amber Buck's work travels primarily in Digital & Multimodal (51% of indexed citations) · 29 total indexed citations from 4 clusters.

By cluster

  • Digital & Multimodal — 15
  • Technical Communication — 6
  • Rhetoric — 4
  • Composition & Writing Studies — 4

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. Generosity in computers and writing: Doing what Gail, Halcyon, Johndan, and Bill Taught Us
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2024.102889
  2. Redrawing the Maps: Digital Literacy Practices of Grassroots Activists
    Abstract

    This research used a participant observer method to describe and analyze the digital literacy practices of one grassroots community group that organized around the issue of municipal city council redistricting. The group proposed and advocated for city council district lines that reflected the minority-majority makeup of the city's population. The group effectively crafted different genres, including informational Google Docs, maps, form letters, petitions, social media graphics, press releases, and public speeches to advocate for their position. This research argues for the study of activists' digital literacy practices and the role of digital technology in activist efforts.

    doi:10.1145/3563890.3713046
  3. Redrawing the Maps: Digital Literacy Practices of Grassroots Activists
    Abstract

    This research used a participant observer method to describe and analyze the digital literacy practices of one grassroots community group that organized around the issue of municipal city council redistricting. The group proposed and advocated for city council district lines that reflected the minority-majority makeup of the city's population. The group effectively crafted different genres, including informational Google Docs, maps, form letters, petitions, social media graphics, press releases, and public speeches to advocate for their position. This research argues for the study of activists' digital literacy practices and the role of digital technology in activist efforts.

    doi:10.1145/3655727.3655730
  4. Introduction: Approaches to Rhetoric in a Post-Truth Age: Pedagogies, Activism, and Platforms
  5. A Review of Status Update: Celebrity, Publicity, & Branding in the Social Media Age by Alice E. Marwick
  6. Crafting Online Spaces: Identity and Materiality — An Interview with Hannah Bellwoar
  7. Examining Digital Literacy Practices on Social Network Sites
    Abstract

    Young adults represent the most avid users of social network sites, and they are also the most concerned with their online identity management, according the Pew Internet and American Life Project (Lenhart, Purcell, Smith, & Zickuhr, 2010; Madden, 2012). These practices represent important literate activity today, as individuals who are writing online learn to negotiate interfaces, user agreements, and personal data, as well as rhetorical situations. Examining the social, technological, and structural factors that influence digital literacy practices in online environments is crucial to understanding the impact of these sites on writing practices. Applying Brooke’s (2009) concept of an “ecology of practice” to writing in digital environments, this article examines the digital literacy practices of one undergraduate student through his self-presentation strategies. In considering the roles that social network sites play in individuals’ literacy and identity practices, writing researchers and educators can better understand the literacy practices that students engage in outside of the classroom and the experiences they bring to their academic writing.

    doi:10.58680/rte201220670