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Beth Godbee; Rasha Diab – College Composition and Communication, 2025
What are we in rhetoric, writing, and literacy studies currently practicing? What practices do harm and, in contrast, which counter harm? How do we disrupt everyday, cumulative, and structural injustices and instead invest in accountability? In addition to asking these and other questions, this article engages four accountability practices that…
Descriptors: Accountability, Higher Education, Violence, Feminism
Chen Chen – College Composition and Communication, 2025
This Research Brief provides an overview of the current scholarship on transnational feminist rhetorics (TFR), drawing from interdisciplinary traditions. TFR inquiries should always begin with "a cogent analysis of power" (Dingo et al.), attending to how transnational power dynamics act on gendered bodies and how those bodies engage with…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Writing (Composition), Feminism, Rhetoric
Cassandra Woody – College Composition and Communication, 2020
This article argues that rhetoric-focused first-year composition curricula may effectively use feminist revisions to rhetoric by employing a method the author calls "procedural feminism," or the distillation of feminist rhetorical practices and theory within curricular development that does not make feminism a topic students will…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Feminism, Freshman Composition, Curriculum Design
Katherine Fredlund – College Composition and Communication, 2021
When first admitted to Oberlin College, women were expected to attend their rhetoric courses in silence. Not content with an education that did not prepare them for public speaking, some women students collaborated to educate themselves. Their history uncovers feminist and antiracist disruptions to composition and rhetoric that have much to teach…
Descriptors: Educational History, Universities, Colleges, Writing (Composition)
Courtney Rivard – College Composition and Communication, 2019
Using assignments drawn from a first-year composition course that centers the Southern Life Histories Collection, part of the New Deal's Federal Writers' Project, this paper argues for a pedagogical approach that teaches students digital literacy through archival rhetorics by converting archival texts into data.
Descriptors: Archives, Writing (Composition), Media Adaptation, Electronic Publishing
Enoch, Jessica; Bessette, Jean – College Composition and Communication, 2013
Recent surveys of feminist rhetorical historiography by Royster and Kirsch, Elizabeth Tasker and Frances B. Holt-Underwood, K. J. Rawson, Kathleen J. Ryan, and Jessica Enoch reveal that very few feminist historiographers have taken up digital methodologies or engaged digital humanist conversations. Thus while digital feminist scholars have…
Descriptors: Historiography, Feminism, Humanities, Electronic Publishing
Ira Allen, Editor; Elizabeth A. Flynn, Editor – College Composition and Communication, 2016
This symposium, "Barack Obama's Significance for Rhetoric and Composition," aims to provoke and renew disciplinary conversations about the meaning of an age now nearly past, as well as to pose questions that resonate for presidential rhetoric generally. It includes: (1) "Obama's Rhetoric: Black Talk Flow, White Folk Fluent"…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Rhetoric, Political Candidates, Elections
Kirsch, Gesa E.; Royster, Jacqueline J. – College Composition and Communication, 2010
In this article, we undertake three critical tasks: First, we delineate major shifts in feminist rhetorical inquiry, thus describing a new and changed landscape of the field. Second, we argue that as feminist rhetorical practices have shifted, so have standards of excellence. To articulate excellence in feminist rhetorical studies, we draw…
Descriptors: Feminism, Rhetoric, Literary Criticism, Standards
Seigel, Marika A. – College Composition and Communication, 2009
In the technical communication classroom, the received wisdom is that good instructions should "stay out of the way" of the users' engagement with technological systems. This article draws on Burke's concept of perspective by incongruity and on examples of instructions produced during the Women's Health Movement to demonstrate that sometimes…
Descriptors: Technical Writing, Reader Text Relationship, Females, Expository Writing
Ryan, Kathleen J.; Graban, Tarez Samra – College Composition and Communication, 2009
This article uses the convergence of our positionings as feminists, pragmatists, and rhetoricians to theorize communicative gaps related to different beliefs about writing instruction as sites of generative dialogue. We offer a WPA/TA discourse model centered on productive resistance and on discursive power, to posit feminist pragmatic rhetoric as…
Descriptors: Feminism, Rhetoric, Writing Instruction, Pragmatics
Helmbrecht, Brenda M.; Love, Meredith A. – College Composition and Communication, 2009
Our article seeks to integrate alternative voices into traditional rhetorical study by turning to "Bitch" and "BUST," two mainstream zines that serve as dynamic examples of young women's rhetoric in action. We believe these zines are shaping the present and future of women's rhetoric. Their most significant contribution to the understanding of…
Descriptors: Females, Young Adults, Feminism, Rhetoric
Moulder, M. Amanda – College Composition and Communication, 2011
This article discusses how archival documents reveal early nineteenth-century Cherokee purposes for English-language literacy. In spite of Euro-American efforts to depoliticize Cherokee women's roles, Cherokee female students adapted the literacy tools of an outsider patriarchal society to retain public, political power. Their writing served…
Descriptors: American Indians, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Literacy

Powell, Katrina M.; Takayoshi, Pamela – College Composition and Communication, 2003
Argues that seeing reciprocity as a context-based process of definition and re-definition of the relationship between participants and researchers helps them understand how research projects can benefit participants in ways that they desire. Considers the ethical dimensions of reciprocal research relationships. Uses the authors' own research…
Descriptors: Ethics, Feminism, Higher Education, Research Methodology

Welch, Nancy – College Composition and Communication, 2002
Turns to contemporary feminist object-relations theory to understand the efforts of students in a service learning course, to push beyond the usual subject-object, active-passive dualisms that pervade community-based literacy projects, and to compose instead complex representations in which all participants are composed as active, as knowing, and…
Descriptors: Feminism, Higher Education, Instructional Improvement, Service Learning

Rhodes, Jacqueline – College Composition and Communication, 2002
Focuses on the "publicly authored" Internet spaces on the World Wide Web. Explores how these generative texts negotiate the odd interplay of fixity and fluidity online, an interplay that at once suggests both the presence of a coherent feminist community-through-text and the inadequacy of coherence as a textual principle. (SG)
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Feminism, Higher Education, Identification (Psychology)