Rhetorical Climatology: By A Reading Group

· · · · ·
· MSU Press
电子书
252

关于此电子书

What if rhetoric and climate are intimately connected? Taking climates to be rhetorical and rhetoric to be climatic, A Reading Group offers a generative framework for making sense of rhetorical studies as they grapple with the challenges posed by antiracist, decolonial, affective, ecological, and more-than-human scholarship to a tradition with a long history of being centered around individual, usually privileged, human agents wielding language as their principal instrument. Understanding the atmospheric and ambient energies of rhetoric underscores the challenges and promises of trying to heal a harmed world from within it. A cowritten “multigraph,” which began in 2018 as a reading group, this book enacts an intimate, mutualistic spirit of shared critical inquiry and play—an exciting new way of doing, thinking, and feeling rhetorical studies by six prominent scholars in rhetoric from communication and English departments alike.

作者简介

Chris Ingraham is an associate professor of communication, and core faculty member in environmental humanities at the University of Utah. His interdisciplinary teaching and research draw on rhetorical theory, environmental communication, and media aesthetics to make sense of the many environments that humans create and inhabit. He is the author of Gestures of Concern and coeditor, with Nicholas Taylor, of LEGOfied: Building Blocks as Media.
John Ackerman is an associate professor in the Program for Writing and Rhetoric at University of Colorado, Boulder, and is jointly affiliated with the departments of communication and English. His research reveals the material history, representation, and performance of neighborhoods, cities, and regions in the US Northeast and Southwest. His current research explicates “doctrines of discovery” and other settler colonial technologies that code and contain white supremacy in urban life and set the terms and conditions for antiracist and uneven economic recovery and renewal.

Jennifer Lin LeMesurier is an associate professor at Colgate University who studies the intersection of embodiment, culture, and race. Her scholarship has been published in Rhetoric Society Quarterly, Rhetoric Review, and College Composition and Communication. Her book, Inscrutable Eating: Asian Appetites and the Rhetorics of Racial Consumption, analyzes how rhetorics of food dovetail with the portrayal of Asians in Western contexts.

Bridie McGreavy is an associate professor of environmental communication in the Department of Communication and Journalism at the University of Maine. McGreavy is also a faculty fellow in the Senator George J. Mitchell Center for Sustainability Solutions. She studies how communication shapes sustainability and justice efforts in coastal shellfishing communities, river restoration and freshwater conservation initiatives, and diverse collaborations to address complex problems. Her work has been published in an interdisciplinary set of journals and books.

Candice Rai is an associate professor of English at the University of Washington. She recently coedited Writing across Difference: Theory and Intervention (with James Rushing Daniel and Katie Malcolm) and Field Rhetoric: Ethnography, Ecology, and Engagement in the Places of Persuasion (with Caroline Gottschalk Druschke), and is the author of Democracy’s Lot: Rhetoric, Publics, and the Places of Invention. Her work engages in place-based inquiry to study public rhetoric and writing, political discourse and action, and argumentation.

Nathan Stormer is a professor of communication and journalism at the University of Maine. He has written about the history of abortion rhetoric in the United States and various themes within rhetorical theory.

为此电子书评分

欢迎向我们提供反馈意见。

如何阅读

智能手机和平板电脑
只要安装 AndroidiPad/iPhone 版的 Google Play 图书应用,不仅应用内容会自动与您的账号同步,还能让您随时随地在线或离线阅览图书。
笔记本电脑和台式机
您可以使用计算机的网络浏览器聆听您在 Google Play 购买的有声读物。
电子阅读器和其他设备
如果要在 Kobo 电子阅读器等电子墨水屏设备上阅读,您需要下载一个文件,并将其传输到相应设备上。若要将文件传输到受支持的电子阅读器上,请按帮助中心内的详细说明操作。