Angela M. Haas

4 articles
Illinois State University

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Who Reads Haas

Angela M. Haas's work travels primarily in Technical Communication (56% of indexed citations) · 167 total indexed citations from 6 clusters.

By cluster

  • Technical Communication — 95
  • Composition & Writing Studies — 21
  • Digital & Multimodal — 19
  • Rhetoric — 16
  • Other / unclustered — 11
  • Community Literacy — 5

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. Interfacing Cultural Rhetorics: A History and a Call
    Abstract

    This essay responds to recent exigencies that ask scholars to honor histories of cultural rhetorics, engage in responsible and responsive cultural rhetorics conversations, and generate productive openings for future inquiry and practice. First, the authors open by paying homage to scholarship and programs that have made cultural rhetorics a disciplinary home. Next, they consider the varied ways in which “culture” and “rhetoric” interface in cultural rhetorics scholarship. The authors provide case studies of how cultural rhetorics inquiry shapes their scholarship across areas of rhetoric, composition, and technical communication. Finally, they close by discussing the ethics of doing cultural rhetorics work.

    doi:10.1080/07350198.2018.1424470
  2. Seeing and Knowing the Womb: A Technofeminist Reframing of Fetal Ultrasound toward a Decolonization of Our Bodies
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2016.11.004
  3. Race, Rhetoric, and Technology: A Case Study of Decolonial Technical Communication Theory, Methodology, and Pedagogy
    Abstract

    This article engages disciplinary (and interdisciplinary) conversations at the intersections of race, rhetoric, technology, and technical communication and offers a case study of curriculum development that supports disciplinary inquiry at these complex interstices. Specifically, informed by a decolonial framework, this article discusses the status of cultural and critical race studies in technical communication scholarship; tentative definitions of race, rhetoric, and technology; the cultural usability research conducted and located accountability in the process of designing a graduate course that studies rhetorics of race and technology; and the implications of this inquiry for the discipline, field, and practices of technical communication.

    doi:10.1177/1050651912439539
  4. doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2010.06.002