Topic-Driven Environmental Rhetoric
Herausgeber: Ross, Derek G
Topic-Driven Environmental Rhetoric
Herausgeber: Ross, Derek G
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The chapters in this collection address four overarching areas of common topics in technical communication and environmental rhetoric: framing, place, risk and uncertainty, and sustainability.
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The chapters in this collection address four overarching areas of common topics in technical communication and environmental rhetoric: framing, place, risk and uncertainty, and sustainability.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 278
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. Dezember 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 399g
- ISBN-13: 9780367884703
- ISBN-10: 0367884704
- Artikelnr.: 58483388
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 278
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. Dezember 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 399g
- ISBN-13: 9780367884703
- ISBN-10: 0367884704
- Artikelnr.: 58483388
Derek G. Ross is Associate Professor in the Master of Technical and Professional Communication Program at Auburn University, USA. His work has appeared Technical Communication, Written Communication, and IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication, among others. He is the Ethics Editor/Columnist for Intercom Magazine and Co-Director of LUCIA, Auburn's Laboratory for Usability, Communication, Interaction, and Accessibility.
Foreword
[Carl Herndl]
Introduction
[Derek G. Ross]
Part I: Framing
1. Proof and Fluid Topics: Topic-Driven Environmental Rhetoric in Modern
Society
[Derek G. Ross]
2. Scientist as Hero, Technology as the Enemy: Commonplaces about Science
in Environmental Discourses
[Denise Tillery]
3. Granola-Eating, Birkenstock-Wearing, Tree Huggers Who Want to Take Your
Guns: Commonplaces of the Environmentalist
[Beth Jorgensen]
Part II: Place
4. Climate Crisis Made Manifest: The Shift From a Topos of Time To a Topos
of Place
[Esben Bjerggaard Nielsen]
5. Victims "in" and Protectors "of" Appalachia: Place and the Common Topic
of Protection in Missing Mountains: We Went to the Mountaintop, but it
Wasn't There
[Joshua P. Ewalt and James G. Cantrill]
6. Remembering the Alamo: Commonplaces in Texas Water Policy Arguments
[Ken Baake]
Part III: Risk and Uncertainty
7. Reconstituting Causality: Accident Reports as Posthuman Documentation
[Daniel Richards]
8. Toward an Apparent Decolonial Feminist Rhetoric of Risk
[Angela M. Haas and Erin A. Frost]
9. Designing Doubt: The Tactical Use of Uncertainty in Hydraulic Fracturing
Debates
[Jacqueline N. Kerr]
Part IV: Sustainability
10. Sustainability and Sustainable Development: The Evolution and Use of
Confused Notions
[Cynthia R. Haller]
11. The Three Pillars of Sustainability as a Special Topic of Invention in
the Marketing Discourse of Plastic-Packaging Companies
[Edward A. Malone and Shristy Bashyal]
[Carl Herndl]
Introduction
[Derek G. Ross]
Part I: Framing
1. Proof and Fluid Topics: Topic-Driven Environmental Rhetoric in Modern
Society
[Derek G. Ross]
2. Scientist as Hero, Technology as the Enemy: Commonplaces about Science
in Environmental Discourses
[Denise Tillery]
3. Granola-Eating, Birkenstock-Wearing, Tree Huggers Who Want to Take Your
Guns: Commonplaces of the Environmentalist
[Beth Jorgensen]
Part II: Place
4. Climate Crisis Made Manifest: The Shift From a Topos of Time To a Topos
of Place
[Esben Bjerggaard Nielsen]
5. Victims "in" and Protectors "of" Appalachia: Place and the Common Topic
of Protection in Missing Mountains: We Went to the Mountaintop, but it
Wasn't There
[Joshua P. Ewalt and James G. Cantrill]
6. Remembering the Alamo: Commonplaces in Texas Water Policy Arguments
[Ken Baake]
Part III: Risk and Uncertainty
7. Reconstituting Causality: Accident Reports as Posthuman Documentation
[Daniel Richards]
8. Toward an Apparent Decolonial Feminist Rhetoric of Risk
[Angela M. Haas and Erin A. Frost]
9. Designing Doubt: The Tactical Use of Uncertainty in Hydraulic Fracturing
Debates
[Jacqueline N. Kerr]
Part IV: Sustainability
10. Sustainability and Sustainable Development: The Evolution and Use of
Confused Notions
[Cynthia R. Haller]
11. The Three Pillars of Sustainability as a Special Topic of Invention in
the Marketing Discourse of Plastic-Packaging Companies
[Edward A. Malone and Shristy Bashyal]
Foreword
[Carl Herndl]
Introduction
[Derek G. Ross]
Part I: Framing
1. Proof and Fluid Topics: Topic-Driven Environmental Rhetoric in Modern
Society
[Derek G. Ross]
2. Scientist as Hero, Technology as the Enemy: Commonplaces about Science
in Environmental Discourses
[Denise Tillery]
3. Granola-Eating, Birkenstock-Wearing, Tree Huggers Who Want to Take Your
Guns: Commonplaces of the Environmentalist
[Beth Jorgensen]
Part II: Place
4. Climate Crisis Made Manifest: The Shift From a Topos of Time To a Topos
of Place
[Esben Bjerggaard Nielsen]
5. Victims "in" and Protectors "of" Appalachia: Place and the Common Topic
of Protection in Missing Mountains: We Went to the Mountaintop, but it
Wasn't There
[Joshua P. Ewalt and James G. Cantrill]
6. Remembering the Alamo: Commonplaces in Texas Water Policy Arguments
[Ken Baake]
Part III: Risk and Uncertainty
7. Reconstituting Causality: Accident Reports as Posthuman Documentation
[Daniel Richards]
8. Toward an Apparent Decolonial Feminist Rhetoric of Risk
[Angela M. Haas and Erin A. Frost]
9. Designing Doubt: The Tactical Use of Uncertainty in Hydraulic Fracturing
Debates
[Jacqueline N. Kerr]
Part IV: Sustainability
10. Sustainability and Sustainable Development: The Evolution and Use of
Confused Notions
[Cynthia R. Haller]
11. The Three Pillars of Sustainability as a Special Topic of Invention in
the Marketing Discourse of Plastic-Packaging Companies
[Edward A. Malone and Shristy Bashyal]
[Carl Herndl]
Introduction
[Derek G. Ross]
Part I: Framing
1. Proof and Fluid Topics: Topic-Driven Environmental Rhetoric in Modern
Society
[Derek G. Ross]
2. Scientist as Hero, Technology as the Enemy: Commonplaces about Science
in Environmental Discourses
[Denise Tillery]
3. Granola-Eating, Birkenstock-Wearing, Tree Huggers Who Want to Take Your
Guns: Commonplaces of the Environmentalist
[Beth Jorgensen]
Part II: Place
4. Climate Crisis Made Manifest: The Shift From a Topos of Time To a Topos
of Place
[Esben Bjerggaard Nielsen]
5. Victims "in" and Protectors "of" Appalachia: Place and the Common Topic
of Protection in Missing Mountains: We Went to the Mountaintop, but it
Wasn't There
[Joshua P. Ewalt and James G. Cantrill]
6. Remembering the Alamo: Commonplaces in Texas Water Policy Arguments
[Ken Baake]
Part III: Risk and Uncertainty
7. Reconstituting Causality: Accident Reports as Posthuman Documentation
[Daniel Richards]
8. Toward an Apparent Decolonial Feminist Rhetoric of Risk
[Angela M. Haas and Erin A. Frost]
9. Designing Doubt: The Tactical Use of Uncertainty in Hydraulic Fracturing
Debates
[Jacqueline N. Kerr]
Part IV: Sustainability
10. Sustainability and Sustainable Development: The Evolution and Use of
Confused Notions
[Cynthia R. Haller]
11. The Three Pillars of Sustainability as a Special Topic of Invention in
the Marketing Discourse of Plastic-Packaging Companies
[Edward A. Malone and Shristy Bashyal]