Joseph Janangelo

10 articles
  1. Rendering the Idea of a Writing Program: A Look at Six Two-Year Colleges
    Abstract

    By offering an annotated image of a half-dozen two-year college writing “programs,” this essay seeks to raise awareness of the challenges facing those who promote, work in, work toward, or participate in the development of two-year college writing programs and to consider how the “idea” of a writing program plays out in shaping those challenges.

    doi:10.58680/tetyc201221846
  2. Life Writing Lite: Judy Garland and Reparative Rhetorics of Celebrity Life Writing
    Abstract

    Judy Garland’s correspondence with magazines and fans in the early 1950s serves as a case study of rhetorical strategies that might operate in celebrity life writing aimed at reparation and self-justification.

    doi:10.58680/ce201012424
  3. Site-Specific: Virtual Refinishing in Contemporary Rhetorical Practice
    Abstract

    Visual rhetoric fuels composition as rhetors refinish filmed moments to show others what they “see” in them. My work examines projects that model strategic discourse in public spaces. It offers ideas for achieving full and guarded disclosure when clarity is but one of several communicative goals.

    doi:10.58680/ccc20099473
  4. Rhetorical Refusals: Defying Readers' Expectations, John Schilb
    doi:10.1080/07350190802339366
  5. Review: Rethinking Style and Reversing Hierarchies
    Abstract

    Reviewed is The Economics of {Attention}: Style and Substance in the Age of Information by Richard A. Lanham.

    doi:10.58680/ce20075869
  6. Joseph Cornell and the Artistry of Composing Persuasive Hypertexts
    Abstract

    My aim is to suggest ways of using [Joseph] Cornell’s art in order to create an appreciation of the ways that textual coherence can manifest itself, and to discern a shaping strategy that may help us support students’ prefigurative literate activities.

    doi:10.58680/ccc19983172
  7. Resituating Writing: Constructing and Administering Writing Programs
    Abstract

    With this collection of essays, the concept of writing program administration as a significant expression of scholarship comes of age. Featuring the insights of many prominent composition scholars and writing program administrators, this book has a dual message. First is that writing programs represent a different presence in the academy, one that can pose a critique to accepted practices and elicit institutional change. Second is that WPAs can creatively use this different and liminal status to help writing programs resituate themselves at the center, rather than at the margins, of their institutions. Divided into three sections, the book's first features essays on defining the differences between writing programs and other, more familiar academic units; the ethical dimension of writing program administration; technology's place in writing programs; and the critical role of two-year institutions. In the second section, four veteran WPAs suggest ways to build liaisons with other members of the campus community. The book's final section reflects on how writing program administrators can imagine their work both to make it possible to accomplish and to make its differences understandable and appreciated by those who judge WPAs. Resituating Writing is a resource that will help composition specialists locate their scholarship and teaching within broad political and intellectual frameworks. It provides persuasive evidence of the unique scope of the WPA's work for other administrators whose decisions affect writing programs. And it is particularly relevant for graduate students as they prepare for their own future responsibilities as teachers and administrators.

    doi:10.2307/358612
  8. Theorizing Technology While Courting Credibility: Emerging Rhetorics in CAI Scholarship
    doi:10.2307/358764
  9. Review: Theorizing Technology While Courting Credibility: Emerging Rhetorics in CAI Scholarship
    Abstract

    Preview this article: Review: Theorizing Technology While Courting Credibility: Emerging Rhetorics in CAI Scholarship, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/ccc/45/4/collegecompositioncommunication8769-1.gif

    doi:10.58680/ccc19948769
  10. Technopower and technoppression: Some abuses of power and control in computer-assisted writing environments
    doi:10.1016/8755-4615(91)80038-f