Bibliography

Filters: Convention-and-inventiveness-occluded-academic-genre-case-study-retention%E2%80%93promotion%E2%80%93tenure is   [Clear All Filters]
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 
T
[1290] Leitch, Thomas. "Twice-Told Tales: The Rhetoric of the Remake." Literature Film Quarterly 18, no. 3 (1990): 138-149.
[919] Rose, Brian. "TV Genres Re-Reviewed." Journal of Popular Film and Television 31 (2003): 2-4.
[818] Kelley-Romano, Stephanie. "Trust No One: The Conspiracy Genre on American Television." Southern Communication Journal 73 (2008): 105-121.
[RN94] Sun, Huatong. "The Triumph of Users: Achieving Cultural Usability Goals With User Localization." Technical Communication Quarterly 15 (2006): 457-481.
[683] Cohen, Margaret. "Traveling Genres." New Literary History 34 (2003): 481-499.
[1200] Freadman, A. "The Traps and Trappings of Genre Theory." Applied Linguistics 33, no. 5 (2012): 544-563.
[857] Lyon, J.. "Transforming Manifestoes: A Second Wave Problematic." Yale Journal of Criticism 5 (1991): 101-127.
[RN181] Brent, Doug. "Transfer, Transformation, and Rhetorical Knowledge: Insights From Transfer Theory." Journal of Business and Technical Communication 25 (2011): 396-420.
[808] Jerz, Dennis G.. On the Trail of the Memex: Vannevar Bush, Weblogs and the Google Galaxy. Vol. 2003. dichtung-digital.de, 2003.
[728] Everett, Anna. "Trading Private and Public Spaces @ HGTV and TLC: On New Genre Formations in Transformation TV." Journal of Visual Culture 3 (2004): 157-181.
[RN45] Williams, Miriam F.. "Tracing W. E. B. DuBois' 'Color Line' in Government Regulations." Journal of Technical Writing and Communication 36 (2006): 141-165.
[RN244] Spinuzzi, Clay. Tracing Genres through Organizations: A Sociocultural Approach to Information In Acting with Technology. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2003.
[961] Spinuzzi, Clay. Tracing Genres through Organizations: A Sociocultural Approach to Information In Acting with Technology, Edited by Bonnie Nardi, Viktor Kaptelinin and Kirsten Foot. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2003.
[914] Reiff, Mary Jo, and Anis Bawarshi. "Tracing Discursive Resources: How Students Use Prior Genre Knowledge to Negotiate New Writing Contexts in First-Year Composition." Written Communication 28 (2011): 312-337.
[913] Rehm, Georg. "Towards Automatic Web Genre Identification." In 35th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, 1143-1152., 2002.
[828] Kress, Gunther, and Terry Threadgold. "Towards a Social Theory of Genre." Southern Review 21 (1988): 215-243.
[1169] Nystrand, Martin, and John Duffy. Towards a Rhetoric of Everyday Life: New Directions in Research on Writing, Text, and Discourse. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2003.
[935] Schmidt, S. J.. "Towards a Constructivist Theory of Media Genre." Poetics 16 (1987): 371-395.
[RN192] Spinuzzi, Clay. "Toward Integrating Our Research Scope: A Sociocultural Field Methodology." Journal of Business and Technical Communication 16 (2002): 5-32.
[RN119] Rude, Carolyn D.. "Toward an Expanded Concept of Rhetorical Delivery: The Uses of Reports in Public Policy Debates." Technical Communication Quarterly 13 (2004): 271-288.
[596] Artemeva, Natasha. "Toward a Unified Social Theory of Genre Learning." Journal of Business & Technical Communication 22 (2008): 160-185.
[RN159] Artemeva, Natasha. "Toward a Unified Social Theory of Genre Learning." Journal of Business and Technical Communication 22 (2008): 160-185.
[RN41] Wang, Junhua. "Toward a Critical Perspective of Culture: Contrast or Compare Rhetorics." Journal of Technical Writing and Communication 38 (2008): 133-148.
[1772] Cristovao, V. L.. "Towads a hybrid approach to genre teaching: comparing the swiss and brazilian schools of socio-discursive interactionism and rhetorical genre studies." Diálogo das Letras 7, no. 2 (2018): 101-120.
[RN168] Artemeva, Natasha. "A Time to Speak, a Time to Act: A Rhetorical Genre Analysis of a Novice Engineerís Calculated Risk Taking." Journal of Business and Technical Communication 19 (2005): 389-421.

Pages