Katherine Bridgman

4 articles
Texas A&M University – San Antonio

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Who Reads Bridgman

Katherine Bridgman's work travels primarily in Digital & Multimodal (33% of indexed citations) · 6 total indexed citations from 5 clusters.

By cluster

  • Digital & Multimodal — 2
  • Technical Communication — 1
  • Rhetoric — 1
  • Community Literacy — 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. Crossing Thresholds: Identifying and Disrupting the Autonomous Models of Literacy Shaping Writing Center Work
  2. Reanimating the Answerable Body: Rhetorical Looking and the Digital Interface
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2019.05.007
  3. A Pedagogy of Rhetorical Looking: Atrocity Images at the Intersection of Vision and Violence
    Abstract

    At a historical moment when both violence and its mass mediation proliferate, this essay takes as its exigence the reinforcing and troubling relationships uniting violence, image, and vision. It offers rhetorical looking as a pedagogical strategy designed to undermine violence through visual engagement, and it focuses on the atrocity image—a photographic depiction of human-on-human violence—as both a site of violence and a site for intervening in violence. Comprising four interlocking and reciprocal tactics that operate nonlinearly, rhetorical looking performs slow looking, a mode of perception that moves beyond reception and critique to attend to a photograph’s image content and to the perceptual habits by which that content is evoked. By reflecting on its own processes—revealing agency and answerability in looking—rhetorically looking potentially fosters actions that respond to rather than dismiss violence.

    doi:10.58680/ce201729259
  4. Making Meaning at the Intersections
    Abstract

    This webtext "provides an account of us—the authors—conceptualizing, constructing, and producing a digital archive of old postcards as a site for research." Readers are invited to participate in the meaning-making process within the FSU Card Archive by making meaning from the postcards within the archive and to leaving their own expertise and interests behind for others.