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Rhetoric, through everyday things / edited by Scot Barnett, Casey Boyle ; introduction by Scot Barnett ; introduction by Casey Boyle ; contributions by Marilyn M. Cooper ; contributions by John Muckelbauer ; contributions by Christa Teston ; contributions by Katie Zabrowski ; contributions by Donnie Johnson Sackey ; contributions by William Hart-Davidson ; contributions by Cydney Alexis ; contributions by Kevin Rutherford ; contributions by Jason Palmeri ; contributions by S. Scott Graham ; contributions by Kristie S. Fleckenstein ; contributions by Brian J. McNely ; contributions by Laurie Ellen Gries ; contributions by Kim Lacey ; contributions by Jodie Nicotra ; contributions by Sarah Overbaugh Hallenbeck ; contributions by James J. Brown ; contributions by Nathaniel A. Rivers ; contributions by Thomas Rickert.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Rhetoric, culture, and social critiquePublisher: Tuscaloosa : University Alabama Press, 2016Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780817389949
  • 0817389946
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Rhetoric, through everyday things.DDC classification:
  • 808 23
LOC classification:
  • P301 .R4715 2016eb
Other classification:
  • LAN015000
Online resources:
Contents:
Introduction: rhetorical ontology, or, how to things with things / Scot Barnett and Casey Boyle -- The new ontology of persuasion. Listening to strange strangers, modifying dreams / Marilyn M. Cooper -- Implicit paradigms of rhetoric: Aristotelian, cultural and heliotropic / John Muckelbauer -- Rendering and reifying brain sex science / Christa Teston -- Alinea phenomenology: cookery as flat ontography / Katie Zabrowski -- Writing things. Writing devices / Donnie Johnson Sackey and William Hart Davidson -- The material culture of writing: objects, habitats, and identities in practice / Cydney Alexis -- The things they left behind: toward an object-oriented history of composition / Kevin Rutherford and Jason Palmeri -- Object-oriented ontology's binary duplication and the promise of thing-oriented ontologies / S. Scott Graham -- Seeing things. Materiality's rhetorical work: the nineteenth-century parlor stereoscope and the second-naturing vision / Kristie S. Fleckenstein -- Circulatory intensities: take a book, return a book / Brian J. McNely -- On rhetorical becoming / Laurie Gries -- So close, yet so far away: temporal pastiche and dear photograph / Kim Lacey -- Assembling things. Assemblage rhetorics: creating new frameworks for rhetorical action / Jodie Nicotra -- Objects, material commonplaces, and the invention of the "new woman" / Sarah Hallenbeck -- Encomium of QWERTY / James J. Brown Jr. and Nathaniel A. Rivers -- Afterword: a crack in the cosmic egg, turning into things / Thomas Rickert.
Summary: "A fascinating addition to rhetoric scholarship, Rhetoric, Through Everyday Things expands the scope of rhetorical situations beyond the familiar humanist triad of speaker-audience-purpose to an inclusive study of inanimate objects. The fifteen essays in Rhetoric, Through Everyday Things persuasively overturn the stubborn assumption that objects are passive tools in the hands of objective human agents. Rhetoric has proved that forms of communication such as digital images, advertising, and political satires do much more than simply lie dormant, and Rhetoric, Through Everyday Things shows that objects themselves also move, circulate, and produce opportunities for new rhetorical publics and new rhetorical actions. Objects are not simply inert tools but are themselves vibrant agents of measurable power. Organizing the work of leading and emerging rhetoric scholars into four broad categories, the collection explores the role of objects in rhetorical theory, histories of rhetoric, visual rhetoric, literacy studies, rhetoric of science and technology, computers and writing, and composition theory and pedagogy. A rich variety of case studies about objects such as women's bicycles in the nineteenth century, the QWERTY keyboard, and little free libraries ground this study in fascinating, real-life examples and build on human-centered approaches to rhetoric to consider how material elements--human and nonhuman alike--interact persuasively in rhetorical situations. Taken together, Rhetoric, Through Everyday Things argues that the field of rhetoric's recent attention to material objects should go further than simply open a new line of inquiry. To maximize the interdisciplinary turn to things, rhetoricians must seize the opportunity to reimagine and perhaps resolve rhetoric's historically problematic relationship to physical reality and ontology. By tapping the rich resource of inanimate agents such as "fish, political posters, plants, and dragonflies," rhetoricians can more fully grasp the rhetorical implications at stake in such issues."--Publisher's description
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Print version record.

Includes bibliographical references (pages 233-533) and index.

Introduction: rhetorical ontology, or, how to things with things / Scot Barnett and Casey Boyle -- The new ontology of persuasion. Listening to strange strangers, modifying dreams / Marilyn M. Cooper -- Implicit paradigms of rhetoric: Aristotelian, cultural and heliotropic / John Muckelbauer -- Rendering and reifying brain sex science / Christa Teston -- Alinea phenomenology: cookery as flat ontography / Katie Zabrowski -- Writing things. Writing devices / Donnie Johnson Sackey and William Hart Davidson -- The material culture of writing: objects, habitats, and identities in practice / Cydney Alexis -- The things they left behind: toward an object-oriented history of composition / Kevin Rutherford and Jason Palmeri -- Object-oriented ontology's binary duplication and the promise of thing-oriented ontologies / S. Scott Graham -- Seeing things. Materiality's rhetorical work: the nineteenth-century parlor stereoscope and the second-naturing vision / Kristie S. Fleckenstein -- Circulatory intensities: take a book, return a book / Brian J. McNely -- On rhetorical becoming / Laurie Gries -- So close, yet so far away: temporal pastiche and dear photograph / Kim Lacey -- Assembling things. Assemblage rhetorics: creating new frameworks for rhetorical action / Jodie Nicotra -- Objects, material commonplaces, and the invention of the "new woman" / Sarah Hallenbeck -- Encomium of QWERTY / James J. Brown Jr. and Nathaniel A. Rivers -- Afterword: a crack in the cosmic egg, turning into things / Thomas Rickert.

"A fascinating addition to rhetoric scholarship, Rhetoric, Through Everyday Things expands the scope of rhetorical situations beyond the familiar humanist triad of speaker-audience-purpose to an inclusive study of inanimate objects. The fifteen essays in Rhetoric, Through Everyday Things persuasively overturn the stubborn assumption that objects are passive tools in the hands of objective human agents. Rhetoric has proved that forms of communication such as digital images, advertising, and political satires do much more than simply lie dormant, and Rhetoric, Through Everyday Things shows that objects themselves also move, circulate, and produce opportunities for new rhetorical publics and new rhetorical actions. Objects are not simply inert tools but are themselves vibrant agents of measurable power. Organizing the work of leading and emerging rhetoric scholars into four broad categories, the collection explores the role of objects in rhetorical theory, histories of rhetoric, visual rhetoric, literacy studies, rhetoric of science and technology, computers and writing, and composition theory and pedagogy. A rich variety of case studies about objects such as women's bicycles in the nineteenth century, the QWERTY keyboard, and little free libraries ground this study in fascinating, real-life examples and build on human-centered approaches to rhetoric to consider how material elements--human and nonhuman alike--interact persuasively in rhetorical situations. Taken together, Rhetoric, Through Everyday Things argues that the field of rhetoric's recent attention to material objects should go further than simply open a new line of inquiry. To maximize the interdisciplinary turn to things, rhetoricians must seize the opportunity to reimagine and perhaps resolve rhetoric's historically problematic relationship to physical reality and ontology. By tapping the rich resource of inanimate agents such as "fish, political posters, plants, and dragonflies," rhetoricians can more fully grasp the rhetorical implications at stake in such issues."--Publisher's description

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