Kristine Blair

16 articles

Loading profile…

Publication Timeline

Co-Author Network

Research Topics

Who Reads Blair

Kristine Blair's work travels primarily in Digital & Multimodal (62% of indexed citations) · 51 total indexed citations from 3 clusters.

By cluster

  • Digital & Multimodal — 32
  • Composition & Writing Studies — 10
  • Technical Communication — 9

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. Andrea Lunsford
  2. Mya Poe
  3. Angela Crow
  4. Emily Wierszewski
  5. Remediating the Book Review
    Abstract

    In this essay, Tulley and Blair combine instructional and editorial perspectives to analyze how the process of digital composing reshapes often entrenched notions of authorship and composing practice within the English major by having students reenvision a traditional print genre, the book review, in digital space.

    doi:10.1215/15314200-2009-005
  6. Remediating Knowledge-Making Spaces in the Graduate Curriculum: Developing and Sustaining Multimodal Teaching and Research
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2008.11.005
  7. Response to Thomas Skeen's “constructing essentialism”: Computers and Composition and the “risk of essence”
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2008.01.001
  8. Older Adults and Community-based Technological Literacy Programs: Barriers & Benefits to Learning
    Abstract

    In this article, we briefl y review national statistics on older adults and computer usage —statistics that led us to volunteer to develop technological literacy programs for older adults at local community centers. Because we recognize that all literacies are developed and used by specifi c people in specifi c contexts, we describe the community centers where we volunteered, our roles as teachers and later as researchers, and the technological literacy curricula we developed and revised based on extensive input from participants. We discuss the barriers and benefi ts to older adults’ acquisition of technological literacies. We argue for the importance of building communities of practice based on relational support and interaction and for the importance of drawing from assets and needs existing within communities.

    doi:10.25148/clj.1.2.009516
  9. Paying attention to adult learners online: The pedagogy and politics of community
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2005.12.006
  10. Mentors versus masters: Women’s and girls’ narratives of (re)negotiation in web-based writing spaces
    doi:10.1016/s8755-4615(02)00128-7
  11. More Than the Toys
    doi:10.2307/378999
  12. Feminist Cyberscapes: Mapping Gendered Academic Spaces
    Abstract

    Mapping the Terrain of Feminist Cyberscapes, Kristine Blair and Pamela Takayoshi Map of Location I: The Body in Virtual Space Technological Fronts: Lesbian Lives On the Joanne Addison and Susan Hilligoss Postmodernist Looks at the Body Electric: Email, Female and Hijra, Sarah Sloane Re-Membering Mama: The Female Body Embodied and Disembodied Communication, Barbara Monroe Making the Map: Interview with Helen Schwartz Map of Location II: Constructions of Online Identities Our Studnets, Our Selves I, A Mestiza, Continually Walk Out of One Culture Into Another: Alba's Story, Sibylle Gruber Pedagogy, Emotion and The Protocol of Care, Shannon Wilson. Writing (Without) The Body: Gender and Power in Networked Discussion Groups, Donna LeCourt Making the Map: Interview with Gail Hawisher Map of Location III: Discourse Communities Online and in Classrooms A Virtual Locker Room in Classroom Chat Spaces: The Politics of Men as Other, Christine Boese The Use of Electronic Communication in Facilitating Feminine Modes of Discourse: An Irigaraian Heuristic, Morgan Gresham and Cecilia Hartley Over the Line, Online, Gender Lines: Email and Women in the Classroom, Dene Grigar Maps of Location IV: Virtual Coalitions and Collaborations Designing Feminist Multimedia for The United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women, Mary Hocks Voicing The Landscape: A Discourse of Their Own, Laura Julier, Paula Gillespie, And Kathleen Blake Yancey Thirteen Ways of Looking at an M-Word, Margaret Daisley and Susan Romano Making The Map: Interview With Mary Lay and Elizabeth Tebeaux Map of Location V: The Future: to be Mapped Later Feminist Research in Computers and Composition, Lisa Gerrard An Online Dialogue with the Contributors to Feminist Cyberscapes Mapping the Future: Interview with Cynthia Selfe

    doi:10.2307/358504
  13. Net chick: A smart-girl guide to the wired world
    doi:10.1016/s8755-4615(99)80015-2
  14. Literacy, dialogue, and difference in the ‘electronic contact zone’
    doi:10.1016/s8755-4615(98)90004-4
  15. Navigating the Image of Woman Online
  16. Review
    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq0602_7