Gavin P. Johnson

11 articles
Christian Brothers University ORCID: 0000-0001-5380-8829

Loading profile…

Publication Timeline

Co-Author Network

Research Topics

Who Reads Johnson

Gavin P. Johnson's work travels primarily in Digital & Multimodal (100% of indexed citations) · 1 indexed citations.

By cluster

  • Digital & Multimodal — 1

Top citing journals

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. (Re)Designing Privacy Literacy in the Age of Generative AI
    Abstract

    In this article, we propose (re)designing privacy literacy as an essential component of our digital lives in an age of Generative Artificial Intelligence (genAI). Our study emphasizes the layered digital, technical, rhetorical, and algorithmic literacies associated with design thinking and genAI to support theorizing privacy literacy. We introduce Design as an analytical element complementary to Woods and Wason's (2021) multi-pronged framework for analyzing Terms of Service (ToS) documents. Using a cluster of Adobe Generative AI ToS, we illustrate the necessity of including Design , which allows those invested in Communication Design (CD) and Technical and Professional Communication (TPC) to interrogate how or if design supports or undermines values related to user privacy, data ownership, and informed consent. We conclude by detailing how collective surveillance apathy regarding emergent data infrastructures signal a Post-Surveillance era in our global society and digital lives.

    doi:10.1145/3563890.3713052
  3. (Re)Designing Privacy Literacy in the Age of Generative AI
    Abstract

    In this article, we propose (re)designing privacy literacy as an essential component of our digital lives in an age of Generative Artificial Intelligence (genAI). Our study emphasizes the layered digital, technical, rhetorical, and algorithmic literacies associated with design thinking and genAI to support theorizing privacy literacy. We introduce Design as an analytical element complementary to Woods and Wason's (2021) multi-pronged framework for analyzing Terms of Service (ToS) documents. Using a cluster of Adobe Generative AI ToS, we illustrate the necessity of including Design , which allows those invested in Communication Design (CD) and Technical and Professional Communication (TPC) to interrogate how or if design supports or undermines values related to user privacy, data ownership, and informed consent. We conclude by detailing how collective surveillance apathy regarding emergent data infrastructures signal a Post-Surveillance era in our global society and digital lives.

    doi:10.1145/3655727.3655736
  4. Talking Back Through Rhetorical Surveillance Studies: Intersectional Feminist and Queer Approaches: Introduction
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2024.27.1.05
  5. Don’t Act Like You Forgot: Approaching Another Literacy “Crisis” by (Re)Considering What We Know about Teaching Writing with and
  6. Brokering Community-Engaged Writing Pedagogies: Instructors Imagining and Negotiating Race, Space, and Literacy
    Abstract

    Although much scholarship on community-engaged pedagogies attends to student negotiations of difference, little attention has been paid to how instructors navigate difference, particularly racial difference, across classroom and community spaces. In this article, we use the concept of brokering to examine how seven different instructors of a community-engaged writing course titled “The Literacy Narratives of Black Columbus” imagined the racialized spaces of the course and facilitated engagement between students and community members in those spaces. Drawing primarily on instructor interviews, we present three approaches instructors took to imagine and facilitate student and community engagement across racialized and spatialized boundaries. We found that instructor positionality influenced how they imagined and negotiated the roles of brokers who could facilitate connections between students and community members as well as provide students with cultural knowledge necessary for navigating the course’s racialized spaces. Ultimately, we argue that instructors, particularly in predominantly white institutions, must carefully consider race, space, place, and their own positionalities when planning and implementing community-engaged pedagogies.

    doi:10.21623/1.9.1.3
  7. New Histories and Theories of Writing with/through Technologies:
  8. Coalitional literacies of digital safety and solidarity: A white paper on nextGEN international listserv
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2021.102681
  9. Responding to the Investigative Pivots of Rhetoric Research
    Abstract

    In this essay, we offer the “investigative pivot” as a framework for teaching rhetoric researchers how to orient and withstand being re-/dis-/oriented by the research process. Investigative pivoting indexes how a researcher responds to material conditions under which they collect and analyze data. To illustrate investigative pivots, we present and analyze pivot narratives from four graduate student researchers. Drawing on the analytic power of E. Cram’s rhetoric of orientation, these pivot narratives detail how we negotiate infrastructural, ideological, and institutional influences on our research process. When adopted, the investigative pivot prompts researchers to anticipate, recognize, and respond to the material-discursive hurdles of life and learning that follow us into our research sites. Such a framework, we argue, facilitates simultaneous methodological and pedagogical opportunities for students, teachers, and researchers of rhetoric.

    doi:10.1080/02773945.2021.1972130
  10. Teaching Critical Analysis in Times of Peril: A Rhetorical Model of Social Change
  11. A Brief Dialogue with Members of the WPA-L Working Group and nextGEN Listserv