Congratulations, Dr. Forsthoefel!

Please join me in congratulating Dr. Jennifer Forsthoefel who successfully defended her dissertation and will graduate this semester.

Dissertation Title: Contending with (Inter)Disciplinary Identity and Specialization: Rhetorical Pasts and Futures for Women’s Studies, Composition Studies, and Writing Center Studies

Dissertation Committee: Drs. Burmester (Chair), Hocks, Harker

Dr. Forsthoefel has accepted a position as a Brittain Fellow at Georgia Tech and will be teaching Composition courses and working in the communication center. Congratulations!

Reminder: Abstract Discussion This Sunday

Welcome to the last few weeks of the semester!

Please don’t forget to stop by our 2nd Annual C’s Proposal Workshop this Sunday (April 19th) at Twain’s in Decatur from 3-5pm!

We will be having an informal discussion about research ideas for the upcoming May 5th CCCC abstract deadline (the CFP can be found here).  Take a break, bring your ideas and hang out with us for a while!

RSA – Graduate Student Annual Webinar – Friday, April 10

Posted on behalf of Dr. Gaillet. Access the online announcement here.

All members of RSA are invited to join us this Friday, April 10 from 5:00pm-6:30pm EDT for the Annual RSA Webinar, hosted by the RSA graduate student chapter at Indiana University. This year, the RSA webinar will provide interactive access to Dr. Collin G. Brooke’s keynote address to the Indiana Digital Rhetoric Symposium, titled “Cognition in the Wild(fire): Digital Rhetorics & Peak Virality.” An abstract of Dr. Brooke’s keynote address can be found below.

RSA members wishing to attend the webinar can access the livestream by clicking here. Attendees are also invited to participate via Twitter in a Q&A following Dr. Brooke’s keynote, using the hashtag #IDRS15.

What: 2015 RSA Webinar, featuring Dr. Collin G. Brooke’s keynote address, “Cognition in the Wild(fire): Digital Rhetorics & Peak Virality”

Where: Indiana University, Student Building, Collaborative Studio, Room 15

When: Friday, April 10 5:00pm-6:30pm

How: Access the livestream at http://idrs.indiana.edu/program/livefeed.shtmland interact via Twitter using hashtag #IDRS15

Dr. Collin G. Brooke, “Cognition in the Wild(fire): Digital Rhetorics & Peak Virality”

Abstract:

Not so long ago, the printed page, the formal speech, and the published book served as the sites where rhetoricians performed their analyses. These genres were largely (although not entirely) static, and much of the rhetorical theory designed to interrogate them presumed this stasis. As rhetoric has turned to the digital, however, we have developed a better sense of circulation and rhetorical velocity, an understanding of how our ideas move, often unevenly, through time and space. Nowhere is this more evident than in the figure of the virus; an entire industry has emerged around the idea of making things “go viral.”

One of the challenges facing digital rhetorics over the next decade is to interrogate the idea of virality, its affordances and limits as a model of rhetorical effects and effectiveness. Going viral is not simply a case of the rhetorics that we know moving faster and further than they did before our digital infrastructure. Likening the spread of ideas to a virus makes specific assumptions about the effect (and persistence) of the ideas that circulate in this fashion, and those assumptions may not always match up with reality or our intentions and goals for changing it.

My presentation will suggest that, in addition to thinking about the changes in velocity that come with digital rhetoric, we need to attend to entropy as well. Unlike an infectious disease or a zombie bite, the effects of viral rhetorics are not always lasting. I suggest that the wildfire might offer us another conceptual metaphor for understanding the spread of ideas in the digital realm.

We look forward to your participation in the RSA 2015 Webinar.

Sincerely,
Katherine Lind and Sarah Frank
RSA Board of Directors Graduate Representatives

Free webinar this afternoon

A reminder:

On March 27th, Dr. Michael Hyde is delivering a lecture at the University of Pittsburgh that will be available to a remote audience as a live webinar via online streaming and concurrent social media chats.

Dr. Hyde is the Distinguished Chair of Communication Ethics at Wake Forest University and will be discussing his forthcoming book: The Interruption That We Are: Communication Ethics, the Lived Body, and Our Posthuman Future.

The lecture and webinar are hosted by the Department of Communication and the RSA Student Chapter at the University of Pittsburgh. We will moderate the online discussion and include questions from the remote audience in the Q&A session.

Key details:

— Live streaming begins on Friday, March 27th at 3:00 PM (EDT) 

— Webinar: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CVQ5LQftalw

— Twitter: #HydeAtPitt

If you have questions about tuning in or participating remotely, please email us at rsa.upitt@gmail.com

RSA @ GSU Spring Rhetoric Colloquium Fri., Mar. 27th

The Spring Rhetoric Colloquium, hosted by GSU’s chapter of the Rhetoric Society of America, will be held this Friday.

Date: Friday, March 27 2015
Time: 11:00am
Location: 25 Park Place, Rm. 830

Presenters will be speaking about the importance of Visual Rhetoric for their respective fields, current research interests, and have a Q&A session with students in attendance.

Presenters:
Dr. Nathan Atkinson – Assistant Professor of Communication
Dr. Lynée Lewis Gaillet – Professor of English, Director of Lower Division Studies, Director of the Writing Studio
Dr. Mary Hocks – Associate Professor of English
Dr. Carol Winkler – Professor of Communication, Associate Dean for the Humanities

Hope to see you there!

 

Coalition & Mentoring Tables at 4C – Wed., 6:30 pm in Marriott Ballroom III

One of the best opportunities at 4C! The Coalition of Women Scholars in the History of Rhetoric and  Composition meets Wed. evening and offers mentoring and discussion roundtables in the second half of the session — from 7:30-8:30 p.m. (EDT) in Marriott Ballroom III.

4C15 Mentoring Tables

1. Alt Academics & Independent Scholars: Beth Hewett, Erin Krampetz

beth.hewett@verizon.netekrampetz@ashoka.org

2. Campus Labor Activism: Kirsti Cole, Bo Wang

kirsti.cole@mnsu.edubwang@csufresno.edu

3. Developing Research Questions: David Gold, Sarah Hallenbeck, Lindsay Rose Russell

davidphillipgold@pe1404.comHallenbecks@uncw.edurussellr@illinois.edu

4. Grad School Transitions: Nan Johnson, Wendy Sharer

johnson.112@osu.edusharerw@ecu.edu

5. Fostering Inclusion: Risa Applegarth, Cristina Ramirez, Hyoejin Yoon

risa_applegarth@uncg.educristinaramirez@email.arizona.eduhyoon@wcupa.edu

6. Making Monographs: Kate Adams, Lynée Gaillet

kadams@loyno.edu lgaillet@gsu.edu

7. Making the Most of Digital Resources: April Cobos, Becca Richards

acobo001@odu.edurichardr@stolaf.edu

8. Mentoring Undergraduate Research: Jane Greer, Paige Banaji

greerj@umkc.edupaige.banaji@gmail.com

9. When and How to Say No: Marta Hess, Gwen Pough

mhess@gsu.edugdpough@syr.edu

10. Working in the Archives: Nancy Myers, Tarez Samra Graban

tarez.graban@gmail.comnamyers@uncg.edu

 

GSU at the 4Cs next weekend!

Wednesday, March 18
6:30pm-8:30pm CWS   A New Work Showcase hosted by the Coalition of Women Scholars in the History of Rhetoric and Composition
Location: Marriott Marriott, Grand Ballroom E, Level Two

Lynee Gaillet Georgia State University

Thursday, March 19

1:45pm-3:00pm C.05   Engaging Publics Beyond the Classroom: Invention and Pedagogies of Place
Location: Marriott Marriott, Florida Ballroom II, Level Two

Ashley Holmes Georgia State University – Reclaiming Public Space Through Digital Mapping: A Place-Based Approach to Mobile Composition

1:45pm-3:00pm C.13   Pushing for Change: Positive and Innovative Change in WPA
Location: Marriott Marriott, Grand Ballroom I, Level Two

Beth Burmester Georgia State University, Atlanta – Speaker 3: Innovative Risks for New Rewards in Writing Program Administration: Public Scholarship and Insights from Critics in Medicine, Law, and Finance

3:15pm-4:30pm D.13   Contingent Faculty and Academic Work off the Tenure Track
Location: Marriott Marriott, Florida Ballroom V, Level Two

Lynee Gaillet Georgia State University

Letizia Guglielmo Kennesaw State University

3:15pm-4:30pm D.24   Digital Talkback: Circumventing Conventions with/in Digital Spaces
Location: Convention Center Tampa CC, Room 3, First Floor

Meng Yu Georgia State University, Atlanta – Speaker 3: The Resisted Code from China

4:45pm-6:00pm E.35   Confronting Race in the Academy: Whiteness, Islamaphobia, and Academic Borderlands
Location: Convention Center Tampa CC, Room 10, First FloorChair: Xiaobo Wang Georgia State University
Friday, March 20
8:00am-9:15am F.19   Rhetorics of Risk, Loss, Nostalgia, and Connection in Sonic Composing Practices
Location: Marriott Marriott, Meeting Room 9, Level Three

Mary Hocks Georgia State University – Speaker 2: More Cowbell”: Musical Composing and Recording Processes as Sonic Rhetoric

8:00am-9:15am F.39   Getting Them Ready: Developing College Readiness through AP Courses, Partnerships, and Social Networks
Location: Convention Center Tampa CC, Room 20, First Floor

Tommy Jolly Georgia State University – Speaker 2: Promoting College Writing Readiness in Light of Sociocultural Theory

8:00am-9:15am F.21   Global Contexts for Writing Education and Research
Location: Marriott Marriott, Meeting Room 2, Level Two

Yunye Yu Georgia State University – Speaker 2: Beijing Mongolian Language and Culture School Project: A Case of preserving and promoting “minority” culture through literacy movement in a multi-cultural society

9:30am-10:45am G.36   Risky Disclosure: Mental Illness and Teachers of Writing
Location: Convention Center Tampa CC, Room 18, First Floor

Chair: Stephanie Horton Georgia State University

12:30pm-1:45pm I.39   The Risk and Promise of Relational Work
Location: Convention Center Tampa CC, Room 18, First Floor

Chair and Respondent: Lynee Gaillet Georgia State University

2:00pm-3:15pm J.14   Rethinking Composition: Rhetorical Pasts and Futures
Location: Marriott Marriott, Meeting Room 4, Level Two

Jennifer Forsthoefel Georgia State University – Speaker 3: Risks and Rewards: A Disciplinary Critique of the Rhetorical Pasts and Futures for Composition Studies, Writing Center Studies, and Women’s Studies

Saturday, March 21
11:00am-12:15pm M.24   Transfer, Metacognition, and Revision: Teaching the Writing Process with Digital and Visual Technologies
Location: Marriott Marriott, Grand Ballroom J, Level Two

Chair: Jennifer Forsthoefel Georgia State University

Friday, March 20, 2015, from 7:30 – 8:45 p.m. (after the SIGs)

 

 

 

Ongoing

Ignite Showcase

Location: ??

Laura Anderson Georgia State University – Civic Engagement, CCCCs-Style: Empowering Slacktivist Rhetors to Enact Social Change

 

Digital Archives of Literacy Narratives (DALN) – Table outside exhibits.

Co-Director: Michael Harker

Volunteers: Valerie Robin, Matthew Sansbury, Doug Hall, Kateland Wolf

 

Rhetoric Mini-Conference @ Emory, Mar. 16th

Shared on behalf of Dr. Gaillet, who will be speaking at this conference. See the poster for schedule and details.

 

Mini Conference

“What Do Rhetoricians at Work Do? Or, What Rhetoric Does for Us.”

Event sponsored by the Linguistics Program and co-sponsored by the

English and Sociology departments at Emory University

When: Monday, March 16, 2015, 10:00-12:20 & 2:20-5:30

Where: Room 201 Modern Languages Building & Room

N301 “Kemp Malone” Callaway Building

*James Murphy, University of California-Davis

*Michelle Ballif, University of Georgia

*Michael L. Bruner, Georgia State University

*David Fisher, Emory University

*Roberto Franzosi, Emory University

*Lynée Lewis Gaillet, Georgia State University

List of Speakers

Schedule

Room 201 Modern Languages Building

10:00-12:30 Meet the rhetoricians with your questions

Informal meetings with the rhetoricians and lunch

Room N301 “Kemp Malone” Callaway Building

12:30-2:20 Lunch served

Room N301 “Kemp Malone” Callaway Building

2:20-5:30 Talks

James Murphy

“Prologue: Where Does Rhetoric Fit in Language Use Studies?”

Michelle Ballif

“How Rhetoric Does Us”

Michael L. Bruner

“The Rhetorical Unconscious”

David Fisher

“Simulating Chronotopes: Space, Time, and Transfer in Virtual Case Environments.”

Coffee break

Roberto Franzosi

“The Linguistic Turn and Metaphor: The Lost Gamut of Tropes and Figures”

Lynée Lewis Gaillet

“Rhetoric and Remembering: Historiography and Archival Research”

James Murphy

“Epilogue: What Have We Said Here Today?”

7:00-10:00 Catered dinner party at Roberto Franzosi’s