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.
Contribute
Please contribute additional items of scholarship to the Bibliography, in any language. You may import bibliographic information through DOI and RIS identifiers (though our Drupal software currently has a limited implementation of RIS import) or enter the details by hand.Search
You may search the Bibliography for any term or use the Advanced Search option for multiple search filters. To search the entire GXB site, please use the search function in the left menu.
Export 37 results:
Filters: First Letter Of Keyword is O [Clear All Filters]
[916] Commentary: Why Opera? The Politics of an Emerging Genre." Journal of Interdisciplinary History 36 (2006): 401-409.
"[1019] Communicative Practices in the Workplace: A Historical Examination of Genre Development." Journal of Technical Writing and Communication 30 (2000): 57-79.
"[1037] Convention and inventiveness in an occluded academic genre: A case study of retention–promotion–tenure reports." English for Specific Purposes 27, no. 2 (2008): 175-192.
"[702] Critiquing Critiques: A Genre Analysis of Feedback Across Novice to Expert Design Studios." Journal of Business & Technical Communication 22 (2008): 135-159.
"[829] The Discourse of Issues Management: A Genre of Organizational Communication." Communication Quarterly 45 (1997): 188-210.
"[807] The Emergence of Poetic Genre Theory in the Sixteenth Century." Modern Language Quarterly: A Journal of Literary History 59 (1998): 139-169.
"[807] The Emergence of Poetic Genre Theory in the Sixteenth Century." Modern Language Quarterly: A Journal of Literary History 59 (1998): 139-169.
"[855] Emerging Personal Media Genres." New Media & Society 12 (2010): 947-963.
"[969] The Epideictic Rhetoric of Science." Journal of Business and Technical Communication 5 (1991): 229-245.
"[1016] Explicit and Implicit Structuring of Genres in Electronic Communication: Reinforcement and Change of Social Interaction." Organization Science 10 (1999): 83-103.
"[963] Genre Ecologies: An Open-System Approach to Understanding and Constructing Documentation." ACM Journal of Computer Documentation 24 (2000): 169-181.
"[656] Genre, Intertextuality, and Social Power." Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 2 (1992): 131-172.
"[895] Genre Repertoire: The Structuring of Communicative Practices in Organizations." Administrative Science Quarterly 39 (1994): 541-574.
"[687] Introduction: Notes toward a Generic Reconstitution of Literary Study." New Literary History 34 (2003).
"[687] Introduction: Notes toward a Generic Reconstitution of Literary Study." New Literary History 34 (2003).
"[687] Introduction: Notes toward a Generic Reconstitution of Literary Study." New Literary History 34 (2003).
"[1343] Les Genres de documents dans les organisations: analyse théorique et pratique In Gestion de l'information. Québec: Presses de l'Université du Québec, 2015.
[1343] Les Genres de documents dans les organisations: analyse théorique et pratique In Gestion de l'information. Québec: Presses de l'Université du Québec, 2015.
[784] Logos and Power in Isocrates and Aristotle In Studies in Rhetoric/Communication, Edited by Thomas W. Benson. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press, 2004.
[850] On the Material and the Symbolic: Silverstone's Double Articulation of Research Traditions in New Media Studies." New Media & Society 9 (2007): 16-24.
"[973] Occluded Genres in the Academy: The Case of the Submission Letter." In Academic Writing: Intercultural and Textual Issues, edited by E. Vantola and A. Mauranen, 45-58. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 1996.
"[918] Opera in Seventeenth-Century Venice: The Creation of a Genre. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1991.
[982] The Origin of Genres." New Literary History 8 (1976): 159-170.
"[701] Performing tribal rituals: A genre analysis of 'crits' in design studios." Communication Education 54 (2005): 136-160.
"[1763] The Pervasive Power of PowerPoint: How a Genre of Professional Communication Permeates Organizational Communication." Organization Studies 34, no. 12 (2013): 1777-1801.
"