Justin Lewis

9 articles

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Who Reads Lewis

Justin Lewis's work travels primarily in Technical Communication (50% of indexed citations) · 4 total indexed citations from 3 clusters.

By cluster

  • Technical Communication — 2
  • Rhetoric — 1
  • Composition & Writing Studies — 1

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. Feminist Editing: Learning to Engage through Coalitional Accountability
  2. Editors' Introduction
    doi:10.21623/1.2.1.1
  3. Editors' Introduction to Issue 5.2
    doi:10.21623/1.5.2.1
  4. Editors' Introduction
  5. Editors' Introduction
  6. Content Management Systems, Bittorrent Trackers, and Large-Scale Rhetorical Genres: Analyzing Collective Activity in Participatory Digital Spaces
    Abstract

    Scholars of rhetoric and writing have long recognized the mediated nature of rhetorical action. From Plato’s early indictments of writing as enemy of memoria to Burke’s recognition of instrumental causes to recent analyses of digital mediation, the study of meaning-making refuses one-to-one, transparent theories of communication, instead recognizing that there is more to rhetorical action than humans. This article follows the trail of Haas, Swarts, and others arguing that analyses of mediation uncover much about human motives, digital communities, and rhetorical action. I argue that technologies often function as rhetorical genres, providing what Miller characterizes as “typified rhetorical actions based in recurrent situations” that occur in uniquely digital spaces. Working from sites of participatory archival creation and curation, I argue that invisible rhetorical genres operating at macroscopic levels of scale are central to shaping individual and communal activity in sites of distributed social production. To support this claim, I investigate two applications—a content management system called Gazelle and a bittorrent tracker called Ocelot—to demonstrate how largely invisible server-side software shapes rhetorical action, circumscribes individual agency, and cultivates community identity in sites of participatory archival curation. By articulating content management systems and other macroscopic software as rhetorical genres, I hope to extend nascent investigations into the medial capacities of digital tools that shape our collective digital experience.

    doi:10.1177/0047281615600634
  7. Participatory Archives and Technological Mediation: A RGS Approach to Understanding Tool Use in Digital Environments
  8. Editors' Introduction
  9. Editors' Introduction