The Rhetoric of Cool: Composition Studies and New Media

The Rhetoric of Cool: Composition Studies and New Media

The Rhetoric of Cool: Composition Studies and New Media

The Rhetoric of Cool: Composition Studies and New Media

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Overview

The Rhetoric of Cool: Composition Studies and New Media offers a historical critique of composition studies’ rebirth narrative, using that critique to propose a new rhetoric for new media work. Author Jeff Rice returns to critical moments during the rebirth of composition studies when the discipline chose not to emphasize technology, cultural studies, and visual writing, which are now fundamental to composition studies. Rice redefines these moments in order to invent a new electronic practice.
The Rhetoric of Cool addresses the disciplinary claim that composition studies underwent a rebirth in 1963. At that time, three writers reviewed technology, cultural studies, and visual writing outside composition studies and independently used the word cool to describe each position. Starting from these three positions, Rice focuses on chora, appropriation, commutation, juxtaposition, nonlinearity, and imagery—rhetorical gestures conducive to new media work-- to construct the rhetoric of cool.
An innovative work that approaches computers and writing issues from historical, critical, theoretical, and practical perspectives, The Rhetoric of Cool challenges current understandings of writing and new media and proposes a rhetorical rather than an instrumental response for teaching writing in new media contexts.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780809387601
Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press
Publication date: 05/11/2007
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 208
File size: 381 KB

About the Author

Jeff Rice, an assistant professor of English at Wayne State University, is the author of Writing about Cool: Hypertext and Cultural Studies in the Computer Classroom and the co-editor of New Media/New Methods: The Turn From Literacy to Electracy.

Table of Contents

Contents Foreword: Elementary Cool 00 Gregory L. Ulmer Acknowledgments 00 Introduction 1 1. The Story of Composition Studies and Cool 00 2. Chora 000 3. Appropriation 000 4. Juxtaposition 000 5. Commutation 000 6. Nonlinearity 000 7. Imagery 000 Works Cited 000 Index 000
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