Maggie Fernandes

5 articles
University of Arkansas at Fayetteville

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Maggie Fernandes's work travels primarily in Digital & Multimodal (100% of indexed citations) · 1 indexed citations.

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  • Digital & Multimodal — 1

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  1. Drafting defensively, documenting authorship: An analysis of Draftback and Grammarly Authorship
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2025.102926
  2. Recoveries and Reconsiderations: Linguistic Justice and Storying Resistance to Generative AI
    doi:10.37514/pei-j.2025.27.2.05
  3. Giving Voice to Generative AI Refusal
    Abstract

    In their podcastEveryone's Writing with AI (Except Me!), McIntyre and Fernandes respond to the emergent conversation surrounding AI in rhetoric and writing studies. This webtext includes the podcast's first episode, an interview with Dr. Michael Black, and ends with the authors' thoughts about AI and writing studies.

  4. Building an Infrastructural Praxis: Understanding Twitter's Embeddedness in the U.S.-Mexico Border
    Abstract

    In this article, we document how Twitter is embedded within the U.S.-Mexico border and used to reorganize the oppressive conditions perpetuated by the border’s sociopolitical history. We do so through a mixed-methods case-study of three polarized, yet tangled, activist movements on Twitter, each of which responded to Trump’s border wall plans and zero-tolerance policy that separated asylum-seeking im/migrant children from their families. The hashtag movements included the liberal #FamiliesBelongTogether supporters (FBT), Trump Republican #BuildTheWall supporters (BTW), and liberal Anti-Wall (AW) #NoBorderWall and #TrumpShutDown denouncers. Findings indicate how the liberal activist movements inherited systemic issues of the broader U.S.-Mexico border infrastructure. Overall, we call for TPC to continue developing research agendas that learn from social activist networks so the field can understand its role in shaping the broader media infrastructure.

    doi:10.59236/rjv22i1pp166-207
  5. Sneaky Rhetorics, Habitual Media, and the Affective Politics of Lurking on Facebook