@article {1145, title = {The Social Implications of Enjoyment of Different Types of Music, Movies, and Television Programming.}, journal = {Western Journal of Communication}, volume = {71}, year = {2007}, pages = {271}, chapter = {259}, author = {Alice Hall} } @inbook {778, title = {Doing Public Business in Public}, booktitle = {Form and Genre: Shaping Rhetorical Action}, year = {1978}, note = {+}, month = {1978}, pages = {118{\textendash}138}, publisher = {Speech Communication Association}, organization = {Speech Communication Association}, address = {Falls Church, VA}, keywords = {genre}, author = {Halloran, Michael}, editor = {Campbell, Karlyn Kohrs and Jamieson, Kathleen Hall} } @article {RN35, title = {Computer Manuals for Novices: The Rhetorical Situation}, journal = {Journal of Technical Writing and Communication}, volume = {16}, number = {1/2/2015}, year = {1986}, pages = {105-120}, doi = {10.2190/VGBL-H297-QGXE-QWNJ}, author = {Hals, Ronald} } @article {779, title = {Discourse Genres in a Theory of Practice}, journal = {American Ethnologist}, volume = {14}, year = {1987}, note = {+ genre+ pdf rhet }, month = {1987}, pages = {668{\textendash}692}, keywords = {Bakhtin, Bourdieu, change, habitus, hybrid, innovation, Maya, new genre, Spanish}, author = {Hanks, William F.} } @article {780, title = {Status, Marginality, and Rhetorical Theory}, journal = {Quarterly Journal of Speech}, volume = {72}, year = {1986}, note = {+ j+ pdf rhet }, month = {1986}, pages = {38{\textendash}54}, keywords = {aletheia, concealment, doxa, episteme, genre, status}, author = {Hariman, Robert} } @article {781, title = {On Rhetorical Genre: An Organizing Perspective}, journal = {Philosophy and Rhetoric}, volume = {11}, year = {1978}, note = {QJS}, month = {1978}, pages = {262{\textendash}281}, keywords = {genre}, author = {Harrell, Jackson and Linkugel, Wil A.} } @article {1095, title = {Genre}, journal = {Journal of American Folklore}, volume = {108}, year = {1995}, pages = {509{\textendash}527}, author = {Harris, Trudier} } @article {782, title = {The Rhetoric of the True Believer}, journal = {Speech Monographs}, volume = {38}, year = {1971}, note = {QJS}, month = {1971}, pages = {249{\textendash}261}, keywords = {genre}, author = {Hart, Roderick P.} } @article {RN117, title = {Coming to Content Management: Inventing Infrastructure for Organizational Knowledge Work}, journal = {Technical Communication Quarterly}, volume = {17}, number = {1}, year = {2007}, pages = {10-34}, doi = {10.1080/10572250701588608}, url = {http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10572250701588608}, author = {Hart-Davidson, William and Bernhardt, Grace and McLeod, Michael and Rife, Martine and Grabill, Jeffrey T.} } @article {RN50, title = {Writing an Introduction to the Introduction}, journal = {Journal of Technical Writing and Communication}, volume = {39}, number = {3}, year = {2009}, pages = {321-329}, doi = {10.2190/TW.39.3.g}, author = {Hartley, James} } @inbook {783, title = {The Exploration of a Genre}, booktitle = {Shakespeare{\textquoteright}s Tragicomic Vision}, year = {1972}, month = {1972}, pages = {3{\textendash}33}, publisher = {Louisiana State University Press}, organization = {Louisiana State University Press}, address = {Baton Rouge}, keywords = {emergence, genre, literary, Shakespeare, tragicomic}, author = {Hartwig, Joan} } @inbook {1042, title = {The structure of a text}, booktitle = {Language, context, and text: Aspects of language in a social semiotic perspective}, year = {1989}, pages = {52-69}, publisher = {Oxford UP}, organization = {Oxford UP}, address = {Oxford}, author = {Hasan, R.}, editor = {Halliday, M. A. K. and Hasan, R.} } @book {784, title = {Logos and Power in Isocrates and Aristotle}, series = {Studies in Rhetoric/Communication}, year = {2004}, note = {+}, month = {2004}, publisher = {University of South Carolina Press}, organization = {University of South Carolina Press}, address = {Columbia, SC}, keywords = {change, democracy, education, genre, identification, kairos, literacy, orality, permanence, persuasion, Poetics, rhetoric}, isbn = {1-57003-526-1}, author = {Haskins, Ekaterina}, editor = {Benson, Thomas W.} } @book {1748, title = {Metadiscourse in Written Genres: Uncovering Textual and Interactional Aspects of Texts}, year = {2017}, publisher = {Peter Lang D}, organization = {Peter Lang D}, doi = {10.3726/b11093}, url = {http://www.peterlang.com/view/title/63601http://www.peterlang.com/view/title/63601}, editor = {Hatipoglu, Ciler and Akbas, Erdem and Bayyurt, Yasemin} } @article {785, title = {Sketches of Theories of Genre}, journal = {Poetics}, volume = {16}, year = {1987}, note = {+ genre}, month = {1987}, pages = {397{\textendash}430}, abstract = {This paper deals with conceptions of genre in literary studies by critically discussing their implications from the viewpoint of an empirical science of literature that has turned its attention to TV phenomena. The basic question addresses the necessity of genre conceptions within the empirical theory of literature. It is argued that there is no need for conceptualizing {\textquoteleft}genre{\textquoteright} within that theory because the underlying philosophy of generic thinking implies an incommensurable metaphysics. On the other hand, it is shown that issues of modern (functionalist sociological) theories of genre can largely be reconstructed as starting points for an empirical theory of {\textquoteleft}genres{\textquoteright} if their core assumptions are grounded on the level of cognition. Types of genre theories considered here are the classificationist, the form-content descriptivist, the typological universalist, and the functionalist sociological approach. The paper concludes with an attitude against genre as a scientific object domain of its own and suggests that {\textquoteleft}generic{\textquoteright} phenomena should be treated as problems of the aggregation of knowledge for consensual interaction in media systems.}, keywords = {Bakhtin, genre, literature, theory}, author = {Hauptmeier, Halmut} } @inbook {1189, title = {The Politics of Genre}, booktitle = {Debating World Literature}, year = {2004}, pages = {163-74}, publisher = {Verso}, organization = {Verso}, address = {New York}, isbn = {1859844588}, author = {Stephen Heath} } @article {786, title = {Defining the Genre of the Letter: Juan Luis Vives{\textquoteright} De conscribendis epistolis}, journal = {Renaissance and Reformation}, volume = {7}, year = {1983}, note = {cited in Streuver Theory as Practice, found on google search for rhetorica utens/docens}, month = {1983}, pages = {89{\textendash}105}, keywords = {genre, letter}, author = {Henderson, J.} } @book {1190, title = {Grief and Genre in American Literature, 1790-1870}, year = {2011}, pages = {200}, publisher = {Ashgate}, organization = {Ashgate}, address = {Burlington }, isbn = {1409420868}, author = {Desiree Henderson} } @article {RN145, title = {Style Congruency and Persuasion: A Cross-cultural Study Into the Influence of Differences in Style Dimensions on the Persuasiveness of Business Newsletters in Great Britain and the Netherlands}, journal = {IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication}, volume = {55}, number = {2}, year = {2012}, pages = {122-141}, doi = {10.1109/TPC.2012.2194602}, url = {http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/articleDetails.jsp?arnumber=6203647}, author = {Hendriks, B. and van Meurs, F. and Korzilius, H. and le Pair, R. and le Blanc-Damen, S} } @article {RN82, title = {(Re)Appraising the Performance of Technical Communicators From a Posthumanist Perspective}, journal = {Technical Communication Quarterly}, volume = {19}, number = {1}, year = {2009}, pages = {11/30/2015}, doi = {10.1080/10572250903372975.}, author = {Henry, Jim} } @inbook {1714, title = {What Do Technical Communicators Need to Know about Genre?}, booktitle = {Solving Problems in Technical Communication}, year = {2012}, pages = {337-361}, publisher = {U Chicago Press}, organization = {U Chicago Press}, address = {Chicago}, keywords = {technical}, isbn = {978-0226924076}, author = {Henze, Brent R.} } @article {RN68, title = {Emergent Genres in Young Disciplines: The Case of Ethnological Science}, journal = {Technical Communication Quarterly}, volume = {13}, number = {4}, year = {2004}, pages = {393-421}, doi = {10.1207/s15427625tcq1304_3}, url = {http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1207/s15427625tcq1304_3}, author = {Henze, Brent R.} } @inbook {RN268, title = {Teaching Genre in Professional and Technical Communication}, booktitle = {Teaching Professional and Technical Communication}, publisher = {Utah State University Pres}, organization = {Utah State University Pres}, chapter = {6}, address = {Logan, UT}, author = {Henze, Brent}, editor = {Bridgeford, Tracy} } @article {787, title = {Emergent Genres in Young Disciplines: The Case of Ethnological Science}, journal = {Technical Communication Quarterly}, volume = {13}, year = {2004}, note = {+ pdf rhet+ j }, month = {2004}, pages = {393{\textendash}421}, keywords = {disciplinarity, discipline, discourse formation, genre}, author = {Henze, Brent R.} } @article {788, title = {Renaissance Poverty and Lazarillo{\textquoteright}s Family: The Birth of the Picaresque Genre}, journal = {PMLA}, volume = {94}, year = {1979}, note = {+ pdf}, month = {1979}, pages = {876{\textendash}886}, abstract = {In the history of literature the change from the idealized worlds of the shepherd and the knight to the world of the picaro; from arcadia and chivalry to the desolate urban landscape of misery and hunger; from romance to irony-in fact, the Copernican revolution that produced a new genre-could only have been born of an upheaval that affected men{\textquoteright}s lives and forced educated writers to see conditions they had so far ignored. This change stemmed from an increased awareness of human misery, which the urban growth of the Renaissance had made highly visible. The genius of the Spanish author of the Lazarillo consists in his having found the literary voice for such a profound transformation of European society. The Lazarillo, of course, did not annihilate the past, but it gave artistic form to the all-pervading crisis that was destroying the basis of the traditional order.}, keywords = {Cervantes, copernican revolution, literary, literature, new genre, picaresque genre, poverty, social conditions}, author = {Herrero, Javier} } @article {791, title = {Weblogs as a Bridging Genre}, journal = {Information, Technology \& People}, volume = {18}, year = {2005}, note = {+ pdf rhetsame as Herring et al 2004 }, month = {2005}, pages = {142{\textendash}171}, keywords = {antecedents, blog, content analysis, corpus, genre, genre ecology, hybrid, impact, linguistics, new genre, technology}, author = {Herring, Susan C. and Scheidt, Lois Ann and Bonus, Sabrina and Wright, Elijah} } @inbook {790, title = {Bridging the Gap: A Genre Analysis of Weblogs}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 37th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Science}, year = {2004}, note = {+ pdf rhet+ digital genre }, month = {2004}, pages = {101{\textendash}111}, publisher = {IEEE Computer Society Press}, organization = {IEEE Computer Society Press}, address = {Los Alamitos, CA}, keywords = {antecedents, blog, content analysis, corpus, genre, impact, linguistics}, url = {http://www.blogninja.com}, author = {Herring, Susan C. and Scheidt, Lois Ann and Bonus, Sabrina and Wright, Elijah}, editor = {Sprague, Ralph H., Jr.} } @article {789, title = {Gender and Genre Variation in Weblogs}, journal = {Journal of Sociolinguistics}, volume = {10}, year = {2006}, note = {+ pdf rhet}, month = {2006}, pages = {439{\textendash}459}, keywords = {gender, genre, pronoun}, author = {Herring, Susan C. and Paolillo, John C.} } @booklet {793, title = {Genre Across the Curriculum}, year = {2005}, note = {+}, month = {2005}, publisher = {Utah State University Press}, address = {Logan, UT}, keywords = {Anson, composition, Dannels, genre, Palmquist, pedagogy, WAC, web, writing}, isbn = {0-87421-600-1}, author = {Herrington, Anne and Moran, Charles} } @inbook {792, title = {The Idea of Genre in Theory and Practice: An Overview of the Work in Genre in the Fields of Composition and Rhetoric and New Genre Studies}, booktitle = {Genre across the Curriculum}, year = {2005}, note = {+ b}, month = {2005}, pages = {1{\textendash}18}, publisher = {Utah State University Press}, organization = {Utah State University Press}, address = {Logan, UT}, keywords = {classroom, genre, Sydney school, teaching, WAC}, author = {Herrington, Anne and Moran, Charles}, editor = {Herrington, Anne and Moran, Charles} } @article {1300, title = {Indie: The institutional politics and aesthetics of a popular music genre}, journal = {Cultural Studies}, volume = {13}, year = {1999}, pages = {34-61}, chapter = {34}, abstract = {

This article is concerned with the complex relations between institutional politics and aesthetics in oppositional forms of popular culture. Indie is a contemporary genre which has its roots in punk\&$\#$39;s institutional and aesthetic challenge to the popular music industry but which, in the 1990s, has become part of the \‘mainstream\’ of British pop. Case studies of two important \‘independents\’, Creation and One Little Indian, are presented, and the aesthetic and institutional politics of these record companies are analysed in order to explore two related questions. First, what forces lead \‘alternative\’ independent record companies towards practices of professionalization and of partnership/collaboration with major corporations? Second, what are the institutional and political-aesthetic consequences of such professionalization and partnership? In response to the first question, the article argues that pressures towards professionalization and partnership should be understood not only as an abandonment of previously held idealistic positions (a \‘sell-out\’) and that deals with major record companies are not necessarily, in themselves, a source of aesthetic compromise. On the second question, it argues that collaboration with major record companies entails a relinquishing of autonomy for alternative independent record companies; but perspectives which ascribe negative aesthetic consequences directly to such problematic institutional arrangements may well be flawed.

}, keywords = {Aesthetics, Independent Record Companies, institutions, Music Industry}, issn = {0950-2386}, doi = {10.1080/095023899335365}, author = {David Hesmondhalgh} } @inbook {794, title = {A Model for Describing {\textquoteright}New{\textquoteright} and {\textquoteright}Old{\textquoteright} Properties of CMC Genres: The Case of Digital Folklore}, booktitle = {Genres in the Internet: Issues in the Theory of Genre}, year = {2009}, note = {+ b+pdf scanned }, month = {2009}, pages = {239{\textendash}262}, publisher = {John Benjamins}, organization = {John Benjamins}, address = {Amsterdam}, keywords = {ecology, function, genre, hybrid, internet, Swales}, author = {Heyd, Theresa}, editor = {Giltrow, Janet and Stein, Dieter} } @book {1041, title = {Validity in Interpretation}, year = {1967}, publisher = {Yale UP}, organization = {Yale UP}, address = {New Haven, CT}, author = {Hirsch, E.D.} } @inbook {795, title = {Semantics and Knowledge Organization}, booktitle = {Annual Review of Information Science and Technology}, year = {Submitted}, note = {+ pdf}, pages = {367{\textendash}405}, keywords = {genre, information retrieval, knowledge, organization}, author = {Hj{\o}rland, Birger} } @article {1219, title = {From Disturbance to Comfort Zone: Cross-Generic Strategies in Dean R. Koontz}, journal = {The Journal of Popular Culture}, volume = {37}, year = {2004}, month = {2004}, pages = {662-682}, chapter = {662}, author = {Linda J. Holland-Toll} } @book {1181, title = {Genre in Popular Music}, year = {2007}, pages = {224}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, organization = {University of Chicago Press}, address = {Chicago}, author = {Holt, Fabian} } @article {RN7, title = {The Impact of NSF and NIH Websites on Researcher Ethics}, journal = {Journal of Technical Writing and Communication}, volume = {40}, number = {4}, year = {2010}, pages = {403-427}, doi = {10.2190/TW.40.4.c}, author = {Hoover, R} } @inbook {796, title = {Innovation and Hybrid Genres: Disturbing Social Rhythm in Legal Practice}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth European Conference on Information Systems}, year = {2004}, note = {+ pdf}, month = {2004}, pages = {742{\textendash}752}, publisher = {Turku School of Economics and Business Administration}, organization = {Turku School of Economics and Business Administration}, address = {Turku, Finland}, abstract = {

This paper explores the non-adoption of an innovation via the concept of hybrid genres, that is digitalgenres that emerge from a non-digital material precedent. As instances of innovation these are often resisted because they disturb the order of activity and balance of power relations in a given situation, or require users to make conceptual and physical adaptation efforts that they consider too costly. The authors investigate such issues with a case study of the introduction of a hybrid digital genre, ODR or online dispute resolution, in legal practice.

}, keywords = {genre, hybrid, innovation, legal practice, power}, isbn = {951-564-192-6}, url = {http://is2.lse.ac.uk/asp/aspecis/default5.asp}, author = {Horton, K. and Davenport, E.}, editor = {Leino, T. and Saarinen, T. and Klein, S.} } @article {RN224, title = {Tactics for Building Images of Audience in Organizational Contexts: An Ethnographic Study of Technical Communicators}, journal = {Journal of Business and Technical Communication}, volume = {14}, number = {4}, year = {2000}, pages = {395-444}, author = {Hovde, Marjorie Rush} } @article {RN201, title = {Creating Procedural Discourse and Knowledge for Software Users: Beyond Translation and Transmission}, journal = {Journal of Business and Technical Communication}, volume = {24}, number = {2}, year = {2010}, pages = {164-205}, author = {Hovde, Marjorie Rush} } @conference {1230, title = {La aplicaci{\'o}n del an{\'a}lisis de g{\'e}nero a la ense{\~n}anza del espa{\~n}ol para fines espec{\'\i}ficos: el caso de la correspondencia comercial }, booktitle = {XLIII Congreso Acortando distancias: la diseminaci{\'o}n del espa{\~n}ol en el mundo }, year = {2008}, publisher = {Asociaci{\'o}n Europea de Profesores de Espa{\~n}ol}, organization = {Asociaci{\'o}n Europea de Profesores de Espa{\~n}ol}, address = {Madrid, Espa{\~n}a}, url = {http://cvc.cervantes.es/ensenanza/biblioteca_ele/aepe/pdf/congreso_43/congreso_43_49.pdf}, author = {Hsu, Tsai-Wen} } @inbook {1270, title = {{\textquoteright}Sweet Secrets{\textquoteright} from Occasional Receipt to Specialised Books: The Growth of a Genre}, booktitle = {Banquetting Stuffe}, year = {1986}, pages = {36-59}, publisher = {Edinburgh University Press}, organization = {Edinburgh University Press}, address = {Edinburgh}, keywords = {food studies}, issn = {0748601031}, author = {Hunter, L}, editor = {Wilson, C.A} } @article {RN107, title = {When Professional Biologists Write: An Ethnographic Study with Pedagogical Implications}, journal = {Technical Communication Quarterly}, volume = {12}, number = {2}, year = {2003}, pages = {207-224}, doi = {10.1207/s15427625tcq1202_4}, url = {http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1207/s15427625tcq1202_4}, author = {Hutto, David} } @article {798, title = {{\textquoteright}I Would Like to Thank My Supervisor{\textquoteright}. Acknowledgements in Graduate Dissertations}, journal = {International Journal of Applied Linguistics}, volume = {14}, year = {2004}, note = {+ pdf rhet}, month = {2004}, pages = {259{\textendash}275}, keywords = {acknowledgement, collaboration, EAP, ESP, genre, moves}, author = {Hyland, Ken and Tse, Polly} } @article {797, title = {Genre: Language, Context, and Literacy}, journal = {Annual Review of Applied Linguistics}, volume = {22}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, pages = {113{\textendash}135}, keywords = {applied linguistics, context, genre, language, literacy}, author = {Hyland, Ken} } @article {1037, title = {Convention and inventiveness in an occluded academic genre: A case study of retention{\textendash}promotion{\textendash}tenure reports}, journal = {English for Specific Purposes}, volume = {27}, year = {2008}, pages = {175{\textendash}192}, keywords = {academic writing, occluded genre, uptake}, author = {Hyon, Sunny} } @article {799, title = {Genre in Three Traditions: Implications for ESL}, journal = {TESOL Quarterly}, volume = {30}, year = {1996}, month = {1996}, pages = {693{\textendash}722}, abstract = {

Within the last two decades, a number of researchers have beeninterested in genre as a tool for developing Ll and L2 instruction. Both genre and genre-based pedagogy, however, have been conceived of in distinct ways by researchers in different scholarly traditions and in different parts of the world, making the genre literature a complicated body of scholarship to understand. The purpose of this article is to provide a map of current genre theories and teaching applications in three research areas where genre scholarship has taken significantly different paths: (a) English for specific purposes (ESP), (b) North American New Rhetoric studies, and (c) Australian systemic functional linguistics. The article compares definitions and analyses of genres within these three traditions and examines their contexts, goals, and instructional frameworks for genre-based pedagogy. The investigation reveals that ESP and Australian genre research provides ESL instructors with insights into the linguistic features of written texts as well as useful guidelines for presenting these features in classrooms. New Rhetoric scholarship, on the other hand, offers language teachers fuller perspectives on the institutional contexts around academic and professional genres and the functions genres serve within these settings.

}, keywords = {ESL, genre}, author = {Hyon, Sunny} }