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Project 1: Journal Review
WRA 885 // Jack Hennes
1. Inrtoduction2. Overview of Journals3. Findings About the Articles4. Findings About the Journals 5. Implications
Introduction
• rhet/comp • “multimodal public rhetoric” • multimodal pedagogy,
professional writing, community action
Steve ParksLinda FlowerJenny RiceEllen CushmanJeff GrabillMelanie YergeauGeoffrey SircAmy C. Kimme Hea.
Each journal presents a different, yet vital area of focus:
• Composition Theory // JAC• Professional Writing // JBTC• Community Writing // Reflections
JAC: A Journal of Rhetoric, Culture, and Politics
JAC is centered on featuring interdisciplinary scholarship in composition theory, broadly conceived, and is published four times a year.
• Lynn Worsham, Editor • Julie Jung,
Senior Editor• Founded in
1980• Quarterly
Journal of Business and Technical Communication
JBTC is a peer-reviewed and published quarterly, covers the latest communication practices, problems and trends in both business and academic settings, including written, oral and electronic communication in all areas of business, science and government.
• David R. Russell, Editor • Founded in
1987 • Sage
Publications• Quarterly
Reflections: A Journal of Public Rhetoric, Civic Writing, and Service Learning
“Reflections publishes a lively collection of scholarship on public rhetoric and civic writing, occasional essays and stories both from and about community writing and literacy projects, interviews with leading workers in the field, and reviews of current scholarship touching on these issues and topics.”
• Christina Kirklighter, Editor • Founded in
2000 • Published
about twice a year
Article Findings // JAC• Both articles are carefully and thoroughly argued, and are
incredibly dense as a result
• Both use theoretical frames to approach their pieces, in turn presenting arguments that contribute to a body of theory
• Their data include symbols and artifacts, analyzed to unpack their meaning and contribute to their arguments
• Schell, Eileen. “Transnational Environmental Justice Rhetorics and the Green Belt Movement: Wangari Mixta Maathai’s Ecological Rhetorics and Litericies.” 33.3-4 (2013). Print.
• Abraham, Matthew. “Recognizing the Effects of the Past in the Present: Theorizing A Way Forward on the Israel- Palestine Conflict.” 33.1-2 (2013). Print.
Article Findings // JBTC• Both articles are clearly and concisely written, and they also
expose how artifacts produced for public audiences can be unpacked to expose how they operate rhetorically
• While these practices and approaches are not exclusive to
business and technical writing, the investigation of scientific and environmental artifacts help align these articles within the focus of business and technical communication
• Neil Lindeman. “Subjectivized Knowledge and Grassroots Advocacy: An Analysis of an Environmental Controversy in Northern California.” 2013, 27.1: 62-90.
• Miriam F. Williams. “Reimagining NASA: A Cultural and Visual Analysis of the U.S. Space Program.” 2012, 26.3: 368-389.
Article Findings // Reflections • Both pieces are critical-reflective of their experiences
engaging in projects and present an outline of what they accomplished/hope to accomplish in the future
• Both articles are accessible to read and present ways that academics and community members have worked together in actual projects.
• Their methods are reflective and help display how others can enact community projects for themselves.
• Eva M. Moya, & Guillermina G. Núñez. “Public Art, Service- Learning, and Critical Reflection: Nuestra Casa as a Case Study of Tuberculosis Awareness on the U.S-Mexico Border.” Latin@s in Public Rhetoric, Civic Writing, and Service Learning (Spec. Issue). 13.1: 127-151 (Fall 2013).
• Catherine Girves, Lorrie McAllister, Dickie Selfe, and Amy Youngs. “Reflections on Community Future Casting: Digital Storytelling to Inspire Urban Solutions.” 12.1: 152-159 (Fall 2012).
Journal Findings Each journal serves as a space for
• the critical analysis of multimodal artifacts -AND/OR-• analyzing or reflecting on the production, reflection, or circulation of
multimodal artifacts in public spaces -AND/OR-• revealing the rhetoricity of artifacts –AND ALWAYS-• finding a way to place that analysis, reflection, or investigation within the
conversations of a subfield (composition theory, community writing, business and technical communication)
Despite the considerable overlap with elements of multimodal public rhetoric, there were significant silos that the journals attempted to adhere to in their focus that the articles sought to fight against.
These silos were amplified by the citation policies for each journal.
Implications • Each journal presents a vital area of focus (comp theory, professional
writing, community writing) • Rhet/comp presents an enormous amount of institutional and cultural
thrust, one that shapes and guides the methodologies writers take in these publications
• This analysis has enabled me to gain a greater understanding of how journals feature work that crosses and blurs the boundaries of professional writing, community writing, and multimodal pedagogy, sometimes in ways that push against each journal’s traditional area of focus
I hope to do work that complicates these boundaries, and my focused study of these publications helped me gain an understanding of what I must do rhetorically to contribute to specific conversations in these sub-fields, further showing how that work truly does traverse the borders represented by these journals.
Questions?