Currently viewing the category:
"digital humanities"
I’d like to thank the panelists (Kristen Seas, Laurie Gries, Scott Gage) for allowing me to respond to their engaging and exciting presentations on rhetorical circulation. I’d like to indirectly respond to the issues raised with two brief historical examples. I argue that each raises significant issues for present-day delivery studies, specifically issues of methodology [...]
- I’m an Assistant Professor of Composition and Rhetoric in the Department of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Cincinnati. As a Fulbright Middle East and North Africa Regional Research Scholar, I will be on leave in 2012.
Recent posts
- Yale and mass-digitization: Creating open access policies sans cultural stakeholders?
- Response to H.23 Remixing Delivery: Circulating Rhetorics and Rhetorical Circulations
- Response to “What Direction for Rhet-Comp?”
- Interview with Chronicle of Higher Education
- Archive 2.0 whitepaper is now available
- Public art & writing in Montreal
- Samaritan research trip update