Rachel Gramer

23 articles · 1 book

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Research Topics

  1. Radiant Figures: Visual Rhetorics in Everyday Administrative Contexts
    Abstract

    Radiant Figures: Visual Rhetorics in Everyday Administrative Contexts presents an approach to writing program administration that understands, accounts for, and embraces the rhetorical potential in the creation and circulation of everyday visual artifacts.

  2. Introduction
  3. 01. Thinking Through Data Visualization
  4. 02. Silhouette of DFWI
  5. 03. Visualizing the Role of Small, Stubborn Facts
  6. 04. WPA Responsive Genre Change
  7. 05. Diagram as Boundary Object
  8. 06. Designing to See, Mean, and Act
  9. 07. Is Teaching Just a List?
  10. 08. An Ecological Heuristic
  11. 09. Networks of Discourse
  12. 10. Visualizing Fairness
  13. 11. Maps, Stamps, and Plans
  14. 12. Graphic Re-Imaginings
  15. Path 1. Mapping in/as Administration
  16. Path 2. Visualizing Complexity and Simplicity
  17. Path 3. Visualizing Change
  18. Path 4. Visualizing Program Data
  19. Path 5. Visualizing Inventive Play
  20. Path 6. Visualizing Advocacy
  21. Path 7. Program Visibility
  22. Review Essay: No Day at the Beach: Women “Making It” in Academia
    Abstract

    The books reviewed here share the theme of women “making it†in the world of rhetoric and composition academe. The reviewers first critically summarize each of the three collections; then narratively synthesize their personal experiences with four prominent themes across these collections: knowing, balance, mentoring, and change. This four-part woven analysis, shows and tells tales from women about what has been lurking in the academy’s closet and what still needs to change.

    doi:10.58680/ce201728895
  23. ClarissaBlogs: Narrative, Writing, and the Self
    Abstract

    Our goals in this webtext are to 1) document our reflexive examination of the connections among narrative, writing, and the self that we performed as we read, responded to, analyzed, and wrote about Clarissa and blogs; and 2) offer a series of interpretive claims about how narrative functions as a powerful tool for the construction of a self, especially when that self is built within rhetorical interchange.

Books in Pinakes (1)