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
[RN118] Skinner, Carolyn. "Incompatible Rhetorical Expectations: Julia W. Carpenter's Medical Society Papers, ñ." Technical Communication Quarterly 21 (2012): 307-324.
[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.
[957] Sollaci, Luciana B., and Mauricio G. Pereira. "The Introduction, Methods, Results, and Discussion (IMRAD) Structure: A Fifty-Year Survey." Journal of the Medical Library Association 92 (2004): 364-371.
[RN135] Shaw, P., and A Okamura. "The letter of submission: avoiding the promotional genre." IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication 41 (1998): 274-276.
[1157] Spinuzzi, Clay. ""Light Green Doesn't Mean Hydrology!": Toward a Visual-Rhetorical Framework for Interface Design." Computers and Composition 18, no. 1 (2001).
[1158] Spinuzzi, Clay. ""Light Green Doesn't Mean Hydrology!": Toward a Visual-Rhetorical Framework for Interface Design." Computers and Composition 18, no. 1 (2001).
[RN173] Spafford, Marlee M., Catherine F. Schryer, Marcellina Mian, and Lorelei Lingard. "Look Who's Talking: Teaching and Learning Using the Genre of Medical Case Presentations." Journal of Business and Technical Communication 20 (2006): 121-158.
[RN173] Spafford, Marlee M., Catherine F. Schryer, Marcellina Mian, and Lorelei Lingard. "Look Who's Talking: Teaching and Learning Using the Genre of Medical Case Presentations." Journal of Business and Technical Communication 20 (2006): 121-158.
[RN247] Spafford, Marlee, Catherine F. Schryer, Marcellina Mian, and Lorelei Lingard. "Look Who's Talking: Teaching and Learning Using the Genre of Medical Case Presentations." Journal of Business & Technical Communication 20 (2006): 121-158.
[RN247] Spafford, Marlee, Catherine F. Schryer, Marcellina Mian, and Lorelei Lingard. "Look Who's Talking: Teaching and Learning Using the Genre of Medical Case Presentations." Journal of Business & Technical Communication 20 (2006): 121-158.
[RN211] Spinuzzi, Clay. "Losing by Expanding: Corralling the Runaway Object." Journal of Business and Technical Communication 25 (2011): 449-486.
[RN146] Spinuzzi, C., S. Nelson, K. S. Thomson, F. Lorenzini, R.A. French, G. Pogue, S.D. Burback, and J. Momberger. "Making the Pitch: Examining Dialogue and Revisions in Entrepreneurs' Pitch Decks." IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication 57 (2014): 158-181.
[RN56] Saidy, Christina, Mark Hannah, and Tom Sura. "Meeting Students Where They Are: Advancing a Theory and Practice of Archives in the Classroom." Journal of Technical Writing and Communication 41 (2011): 173-191.
[RN56] Saidy, Christina, Mark Hannah, and Tom Sura. "Meeting Students Where They Are: Advancing a Theory and Practice of Archives in the Classroom." Journal of Technical Writing and Communication 41 (2011): 173-191.
[RN103] Swarts, Jason. "Mobility and Composition: The Architecture of Coherence in Non-places." Technical Communication Quarterly 16 (2007): 279-309.
[1174] Freedman, Aviva. "Navigating the Current of Economic Policy: Written Genres and the Distribution of Cognitive Work at a Financial Institution." Mind, Culture, and Activity 4, no. 4 (1997): 238-255.
[RN24] Shehza, Wasima. "Outlining Purposes, Stating the Nature of the Present Research, and Listing Research Questions or Hypotheses in Academic Papers." Journal of Technical Writing and Communication 41 (2011): 139-160.
[RN57] Spears, Lee A.. "Persuasive Techniques Used in Fundraising Messages." Journal of Technical Writing and Communication 32 (2002): 245-265.
[1763] Schoeneborn, Dennis. "The Pervasive Power of PowerPoint: How a Genre of Professional Communication Permeates Organizational Communication." Organization Studies 34, no. 12 (2013): 1777-1801.
[931] Saiber, Arielle. "The Polyvalent Discourse of Electronic Music." Publications of the Modern Language Association 122 (2007): 1613-1625.
[964] Spooner, Michael, and Kathleen Yancey. "Postings on a Genre of Email." College Composition and Communication 47 (1996): 252-278.
[952] Sigelman, Lee. "Presidential Inaugurals: The Modernization of a Genre." Political Communication 13 (1996): 81-92.
[RN81] Spinuzzi, Clay. "Pseudotransactionality, Activity Theory, and Professional Writing Instruction." Technical Communication Quarterly 5 (1996): 295-308.
[936] Schryer, Catherine F.. "Records as Genre." Written Communication 10 (1993): 200-234.
[RN238] Schryer, Catherine F.. "Records as Genre." Written Communication 10 (1993): 200-234.

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