Dànielle Nicole Devoss

33 articles · 3 books

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  1. Community Literacy as Justice Entrepreneurship: Envisioning the Progressive Potential of Entrepreneurship in a Post-Covid Field
    Abstract

    Compositionists are committed to social justice in classrooms, in academia, and in our communities, but we must also respond creatively and strategically to the structural consequences of precarity capitalism, even more urgently so in the wake of Covid-19. Precarity has shaped both composition studies’ and community literacy’s histories, and compositionists have often had little choice but to develop entrepreneurial responses to austere conditions. In this article, we advocate owning up to this history so that we can more intentionally direct entrepreneurial practices toward social justice, noting that people across numerous communities have worked along these lines for some time. Justice-oriented entrepreneurship is especially relevant for community literacy practitioners. To contextualize this argument, we examine how scholars in community literacy and technical and professional communication have conceptualized entrepreneurship as an analytically useful frame and/or employed entrepreneurial practices themselves. We then unpack the work and values of justice entrepreneurship, highlighting traditions of communalist Black entrepreneurs who have fought for economic and political self-determination. Next, we offer a model of justice entrepreneurship practiced by Youth Enrichment Services, a Pittsburgh-based non-profit that has demonstrated community-responsive, entrepreneurial flexibility in confronting Covid. We conclude by considering the future of justice entrepreneurship in a society simultaneously trending toward further crises of precarity and, contradictorily, new opportunities for progressive experimentation.

  2. Introduction to the Special Issue: Data Visualization in Composition Studies
  3. Dissensus, Resistance, and Ideology: Design Thinking as a Rhetorical Methodology
    Abstract

    Design thinking—at times described as a mind-set, practice, process, method, methodology, tool, heuristic, and more—is a productive, iterative approach used to engage divergent thinking. Often made up of stages incorporating empathy, definition, ideation, prototyping, and testing, design thinking provides a framework for identifying and approaching problems. Design thinking, however, generally lacks a critical–rhetorical–methodological structure that makes room for what Rebecca Burnett called “substantive conflict,” or “conflict that deals with critical issues of content and rhetorical elements.” This article situates design thinking across the professional and academic spaces in which it is heralded and implemented in order to explore how it can be used in collaborative contexts to support substantive, productive dissensus. The authors lean on the ways in which they engage in design thinking in their different roles to situate the good, the bad, and the ugly of design thinking. They conclude by suggesting a rhetorical methodology for cultivating design thinking that facilitates dissensus, addresses resistance, and considers ideological variables.

    doi:10.1177/1050651919854063
  4. Introduction by the Guest Editors
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2018.11.007
  5. Writing in an Age of Surveillance, Privacy, & Net Neutrality
    Abstract

    The Web is big business, and our online communications and interactions and the data they leave behind are commodified by big business. Large-scale data aggregators, natural language systems that code and collect billions of posts, and tracking systems that follow our every click have fundamentally changed the spaces and places in which we compose, create, interact, research, and teach.

  6. Letter from the Guest Editors
    doi:10.1016/s8755-4615(15)00045-6
  7. Digital Writing Assessment & Evaluation
    Abstract

    Writing has changed due to the affordances of digital technologies, and writing assessment has changed as well. As writing programs integrate more digital writing work, students, teachers, and administrators face the rewards and challenges of assessing and evaluating multimodal and networked writing projects. Whether classroom-based or program-level; whether in first-year writing, technical communication, or writing-across-the-curriculum; whether formative or summative; and whether for purposes of placement, grading, self-study, or external reporting, digital writing complicates the processes and practices of assessment.

  8. Heidi McKee and Dànielle Nicole DeVoss
  9. Charles Moran and Anne Herrington
  10. Colleen A. Reilly and Anthony T. Atkins
  11. Susan H. Delagrange, Ben McCorkle, and Catherine C. Braun
  12. Elyse Eidman-Aadahl, Kristine Blair, Danielle Nicole DeVoss, Will Hochman, Lanette Jimerson, Chuck Jurich, Sandy Murphy, Becky Rupert, Carl Whithaus, and Joe Wood
  13. Kathleen Blake Yancey, Stephen J. McElroy, and Elizabeth Powers
  14. Meredith W. Zoetewey, W. Michele Simmons, and Jeffrey T. Grabill
  15. Beth Brunk-Chavez and Judith Fourzan-Rice
  16. Tiffany Bourelle, Sherry Rankins-Robertson, Andrew Bourelle, and Duane Roen
  17. Karen Langbehn, Megan McIntyre, and Joe Moxley
  18. Anne Zanzucchi and Michael Truong
  19. Edward White
  20. Intellectual Property in College English— and English Studies
    Abstract

    In this review, I look back to the first issue of College English, and then across the years to trace the ways in which Intellectual Property (and this distinction from intellectual property is important) has been addressed by authors in the pages of the journal. I distinguish two periods of time marked by different approaches to IP issues, and conclude the review by drawing across the literature to situate implications, recommendations, and conclusions for the field to consider.

    doi:10.58680/ce201323566
  21. Teaching with Technology: Remediating the Teaching Philosophy Statement
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2011.12.002
  22. Introduction: Copyright, Culture, Creativity, and the Commons
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2010.06.003
  23. MicroReviews :: Matters of TYPE
    Abstract

    The Microreview feature is intended to present a series of condensed reviews of online work by an invited scholar. By providing an informed perspective chosen by the reviewer, readers can not only find out about this type of online work, but begin to understand how the online work may be relevant to their own scholarly and teaching practices.

  24. Hacking Spaces: Place as Interface
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2009.09.003
  25. About Face: Mapping Our Institutional Presence
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2009.05.003
  26. Technological Ecologies & Sustainability
    Abstract

    Together, computerized writing environments (e.g., physical spaces, hardware, software, and networks) and the humans who use and support such technologies comprise complex ecologies of interaction. As with any ecology, a human-computer techno-ecological system needs to be planned, fostered, designed, sustained, and assessed to create a vibrant culture of support at the individual, programmatic, institutional, and even national and international level. Local and larger infrastructures of composing are critical to digital writing practices and processes. In academia, specifically, all writing is increasingly computer-mediated; all writing is digital.

  27. Developing Sustainable Research Networks in Graduate Education
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2008.11.001
  28. Composing for Recomposition: Rhetorical Velocity and Delivery
    Abstract

    We propose that new concepts are needed to discuss increasingly common rhetorical practices that are not closely aligned with the ways in which rhetorical delivery has historically been situated. We are specifically interested in situations where composers anticipate and strategize future third-party remixing of their compositions—composing for strategic recomposition—as part of a larger and complex rhetorical strategy that plays out across physical and digital spaces.

  29. Media Convergence: Grand Theft Audio: Negotiating Copyright as Composers
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2007.09.002
  30. Why Napster matters to writing: Filesharing as a new ethic of digital delivery
    Abstract

    This article discusses the Napster phenomenon and its cultural significance, traces some of the threads of the current “copyright crisis,” and connects these cultural and legal dynamics to show how the current filesharing context of digital environments pertains to issues affecting writing teachers. The article (1) urges writing teachers to view the Napster moment—and the writing practice at the center of it, filesharing—in terms of the rhetorical and economic dynamics of digital publishing and in the context of public battles about copyright and intellectual property and (2) argues that digital filesharing forms the basis for an emergent ethic of digital delivery, an ethic that should lead composition teachers to rethink pedagogical approaches and to revise plagiarism policies to recognize the value of filesharing and to acknowledge Fair Use as an ethic for digital composition.

    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2006.02.001
  31. Infrastructure and Composing: The When of New-Media Writing
    Abstract

    New-media writing exerts pressure in ways that writing instruction typically has not. In this article, we map the infrastructural dynamics that support—or disrupt—newmedia writing instruction, drawing from a multimedia writing course taught at our institution. An infrastructural framework provides a robust tool for writing teachers to navigate and negotiate the institutional complexities that shape new-media writing and offers composers a path through which to navigate the systems within and across which they work. Further, an infrastructural framework focused on the when of newmedia composing creates space for reflection and change within institutional structures and networks.

    doi:10.58680/ccc20054011
  32. Erratum to “Encouraging and supporting electronic communication across the curriculum (ECAC) through a university and K–12 partnership”
    doi:10.1016/s8755-4615(03)00013-6
  33. Encouraging and supporting electronic communication across the curriculum (ECAC) through a university and K–12 partnership
    doi:10.1016/s8755-4615(02)00138-x

Books in Pinakes (3)