Bibliography

This Bibliography is for peer-reviewed academic research and scholarship. For other genre-related publications and sources, please see the Resources page and contribute such material there.

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Filters: First Letter Of Last Name is S  [Clear All Filters]
Journal Article
[RN13] Swarts, Jason. "Information Technologies as Discursive Agents: Methodological Implications for the Empirical Study of Knowledge Work." Journal of Technical Writing and Communication 38 (2008): 301-329.
[RN118] Skinner, Carolyn. "Incompatible Rhetorical Expectations: Julia W. Carpenter's Medical Society Papers, ñ." Technical Communication Quarterly 21 (2012): 307-324.
[1779] Thieme, Katja, and Mary Ann S. Saunders. "How do you wish to be cited? Citation practices and a scholarly community of care in trans studies research articles." Journal of English for Academic Purposes 321315225151110329295992010220217325082325756200523392114218323882 (2018): 80-90.
[RN231] Swarts, Jason. "Help is in the Helping: An Evaluation of Help Documentation in a Networked Age." Technical Communication Quarterly 24 (2015): 164-187.
[RN15] Spinuzz, Clay. "Grappling with Distributed Usability: A Cultural-Historical Examination of Documentation Genres Over Four Decades." Journal of Technical Writing and Communication 31 (2001): 41-59.
[949] Sharer, Wendy B.. "Genre Work: Expertise and Advocacy in the Early Bulletins of the U.S. Women's Bureau." Rhetoric Society Quarterly 33 (2003): 5-32.
[938] Schryer, Catherine F.. "Genre Time/Space: Chronotopic Strategies in the Experimental Article." JAC: A Journal of Composition Theory 19 (1999): 81-89.
[944] Schryer, Catherine F., and Philippa Spoel. "Genre Theory, Health-Care Discourse, and Professional Identity Formation." Journal of Business and Technical Communication 19 (2005): 249-278.
[944] Schryer, Catherine F., and Philippa Spoel. "Genre Theory, Health-Care Discourse, and Professional Identity Formation." Journal of Business and Technical Communication 19 (2005): 249-278.
[RN161] Schryer, Catherine F., and Philippa Spoel. "Genre Theory, Health-Care Discourse, and Professional Identity Formation." Journal of Business and Technical Communication 19 (2005): 249-278.
[RN161] Schryer, Catherine F., and Philippa Spoel. "Genre Theory, Health-Care Discourse, and Professional Identity Formation." Journal of Business and Technical Communication 19 (2005): 249-278.
[RN138] R. Sheehan, Johnson, and A Flood. "Genre, rhetorical interpretation, and the open case: teaching the analytical report." IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication 42 (1999): 20-31.
[603] Askehave, Inger, and John M. Swales. "Genre Identification and Communicative Purpose: A Problem and a Possible Solution." Applied Linguistics 22 (2001): 195-212.
[963] Spinuzzi, Clay, and Mark Zachry. "Genre Ecologies: An Open-System Approach to Understanding and Constructing Documentation." ACM Journal of Computer Documentation 24 (2000): 169-181.
[RN255] Spinuzzi, Clay, and Mark Zachry. "Genre Ecologies: An Open-System Approach to Understanding and Constructing Documentation." ACM Journal of Computer Documentation 24 (2000): 169-181.
[933] Schliefer, Ronald, and Alan Velie. "Genre and Structure: Toward an Actantial Typology of Narrative Genres and Modes." MLN 102 (1987): 1122-1150.
[RN162] Sherlock, Lee. "Genre, Activity, and Collaborative Work and Play in World of Warcraft: Places and Problems of Open Systems in Online Gaming." Journal of Business and Technical Communication 23 (2009): 263-293.
[RN210] Suchan, Jim. "Gauging Openness to Written Communication Change: The Predictive Power of Metaphor." Journal of Business and Technical Communication 28 (2014): 447-476.
[RN70] Artemeva, Natasha, Susan Logie, and Jennie St-Martin. "From page to stage: How theories of genre and situated learning help introduce engineering students to discipline-specific communication." Technical Communication Quarterly 8 (1999): 301-316.
[RN74] Sutcliffe, Rebecca J.. "Feminizing the professional: The government reports of Flora Annie Steel." Technical Communication Quarterly 7 (1998): 153-173.
[970] Sullivan, Dale. "The Ethos of Epideictic Encounter." Philosophy and Rhetoric 26 (1993): 113-133.
[969] Sullivan, Dale. "The Epideictic Rhetoric of Science." Journal of Business and Technical Communication 5 (1991): 229-245.
[971] Sullivan, Dale. "The Epideictic Character of Rhetorical Criticism." Rhetoric Review 11 (1993): 339-349.
[RN54] Sapienza, Filipp. "Does Being Technical Matter? XML, Single Source, and Technical Communication." Journal of Technical Writing and Communication 32 (2002): 155-170.
[1227] Skageby, Jorgen. "Dismantling the guitar hero? A case of prodused parody and disarmed subversion." Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies 19, no. 1 (2013): 63-76.

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