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{"id":286,"date":"2012-05-16T01:12:27","date_gmt":"2012-05-16T05:12:27","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.digitalrhetoriccollaborative.org\/?p=286"},"modified":"2023-11-03T14:42:04","modified_gmt":"2023-11-03T18:42:04","slug":"on-digital-rhetoric","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.digitalrhetoriccollaborative.org\/2012\/05\/16\/on-digital-rhetoric\/","title":{"rendered":"On Digital Rhetoric"},"content":{"rendered":"

I’m pleased to have the opportunity to start our blog carnival on digital rhetoric rolling, and as is my way, I’d like to start out on a serious note, but end with some playfulness (an attribute that is much on my mind as I continue to explore digital rhetoric approaches to computer games).<\/p>\n

I’ve been thinking quite a lot lately about digital rhetoric. Actually, I’ve been thinking about it pretty much non-stop since 2003, when the faculty members in a new program in Rhetoric and Writing at Michigan State University convinced me that digital rhetoric is in fact what I had been doing all along, from my work with Kairos<\/a> to my interest in writing technologies and new ways to teach with and about them. It was then that I first thought about writing a book about digital rhetoric\u2014while there were a number of works that addressed digital rhetoric as practice or engaged what I would consider digital rhetoric methods, much of the work that I found most productive only touched on one or two particular facets … there wasn’t anything that could be seen as a comprehensive collection that drew together the definitions, theories, methods, and practices of digital rhetoric in one place.<\/p>\n

It has actually taken me quite a bit more time than I anticipated to actually write this book (currently under review with the University of Michigan Press’s digitalculturebooks<\/a> series). And I find that the burgeoning interest in the subject is gratifying in the sense that I can see the development of an emergent field, arising from an interdisciplinary community of scholars and artists who see themselves and their interests reflected in the idea of merging digital production and rhetorical practice\u2014but it is also problematic, as more and more excellent works that could fit into the umbrella of digital rhetoric are being published, both in print and online. So while I have put together a snapshot of an emergent field in my book, Digital Rhetoric: Theory, Method, Practice<\/em>, it cannot possibly cover all of the excellent work that is currently taking off in fields like computers and writing, composition\/rhetoric, communications, media ecology, human-computer interface studies, digital arts and media, and Internet studies (to name but a few).<\/p>\n

But this is where this project \u2013 the Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative \u2013 comes in: it’s a way to bring together a number of disciplines and scholars and their work that isn’t limited to the time-bound form of the book. It is an instantiation of the ethos of digital rhetoric \u2013 the formation of a habitual gathering place for a specific community of rhetors.<\/p>\n

In this blog post, I thought I would provide a few brief excerpts that consider the definition of “digital rhetoric,” suggest a reading list of the key texts that have helped me to formulate and refine my definition, and provide two examples (you can decide if they “count” as examples of digital rhetoric — let me know in the comments!).<\/p>\n

Toward a Definition of Digital Rhetoric<\/h3>\n

In Virtualpolitik<\/em> (2009), Elizabeth Losh traces the term “digital rhetoric” to Richard Lanham”s “Digital Rhetoric and the Digital Arts” (1992), which was an early influence on my own thinking about how one would define digital rhetoric. The next time I encountered the term was in an article in College Composition and Communication<\/em> by Mary Hocks \u2013 her definition explains that “digital rhetoric describes a system of ongoing dialogue and negotiations among writers, audiences, and institutional contexts, but it focuses on the multiple modalities available for making meaning using new communication and information technologies” (2003,p. 632). From my perspective, there had been a fairly extensive gap between Lanham’s coining of the term and the next attempt to define and use it. But midway through my doctoral program, I encountered Zappen’s article on digital rhetoric, which serves in a roundabout way as a model for this text. In 2005, James Zappen argued that current work toward developing digital rhetoric has thus far resulted in “an amalgam of more-or-less discrete components rather than a complete and integrated theory in its own right. These discrete components nonetheless provide at least a partial outline for such a theory, which has potential to contribute to the larger body of rhetorical theory and criticism” (p. 323); this lack of “an integrated theory” seemed to me a perfect opening for my own work toward understanding, defining, and shaping a vision of digital rhetoric (although I have moved from seeking an integrated theory to articulating digital rhetoric theories<\/em> \u2013 as well as taking a closer look at methods and practices).<\/p>\n

***<\/p>\n

The term “digital rhetoric” is perhaps most simply defined as the application of rhetorical theory (as analytic method or heuristic for production) to digital texts and performances.<\/p>\n

I would add, following Zappen (2005), that the primary activities within the field of digital rhetoric include<\/p>\n