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.

Journal Article
[RN238] Schryer, Catherine F.. "Records as Genre." Written Communication 10 (1993): 200-234.
[936] Schryer, Catherine F.. "Records as Genre." Written Communication 10 (1993): 200-234.
[748] Freedman, Aviva. "Reconceiving Genre." Texte 8/9 (1990): 279-292.
[985] Toms, Elaine G.. "Recognizing Digital Genre." Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 27 (2001): http://www.asis.org/Bulletin/Dec-01/toms.html.
[RN108] Fraiberg, Steven. "Reassembling Technical Communication: A Framework for Studying Multilingual and Multimodal Practices in Global Contexts." Technical Communication Quarterly 22 (2013): 10/27/2015.
[RN82] Henry, Jim. "(Re)Appraising the Performance of Technical Communicators From a Posthumanist Perspective." Technical Communication Quarterly 19 (2009): 11/30/2015.
[659] Brooks, Kevin. "Reading, Writing, and Teaching Creative Hypertext: A Genre-Based Pedagogy." Pedagogy: Critical Approaches to Teaching Literature, Language, Composition, and Culture 2 (2002): 337-358.
[1299] Miranda, Dave, and Michel Claes. "Rap Music Genres and Deviant Behaviors in French-Canadian Adolescents." Journal of Youth and Adolescence 33, no. 2 (2004): 113-122.
[RN109] Moran, Michael G.. "Ralph Lane's 1586 Discourse on the First Colony: The Renaissance Commercial Report as Apologia." Technical Communication Quarterly 12 (2003): 125-154.
[RN64] Tillery, Denise. "Radioactive Waste and Technical Doubts: Genre and Environmental Opposition to Nuclear Waste Sites." Technical Communication Quarterly 12 (2003): 405-421.
[655] Bregman, A., and C. Haythornthwaite. "Radicals of Presentation: Visibility, Relation, and Co-presence in Persistent Conversation." New Media & Society 5 (2003): 117-140.
[891] Neale, Steve. "Questions of Genre." Screen 31 (1990): 45-66.
[593] Anderson, Dana. "Questioning the Motives of Habituated Action: Burke and Bourdieu on Practice." Philosophy and Rhetoric 37 (2004): 255-274.
[1741] Luzón, María José. "Public Communication of Science in Blogs." Written Communication 30531, no. 462 (2013): 428-457.
[RN81] Spinuzzi, Clay. "Pseudotransactionality, Activity Theory, and Professional Writing Instruction." Technical Communication Quarterly 5 (1996): 295-308.
[RN58] Lemansk, Steve. "Proposal Pitfalls Plaguing Researchers: Can Technical Communicators Make a Difference." Journal of Technical Writing and Communication 44 (2014): 211-222.
[RN102] MacMillan, Stuart. "The Promise of Ecological Inquiry in Writing Research." Technical Communication Quarterly 21 (2012): 346-361.
[RN152] Levis, J. M., and G. M. Levis. "A project-based approach to teaching research writing to nonnative writers." IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication 46 (2003): 210-220.
[RN79] Blythe, Stuart, Claire Lauer, and Paul G. Curran. "Professional and Technical Communication in a Web 2.0 World." Technical Communication Quarterly 23 (2014): 265-287.
[RN172] Gygi, Kathleen, and Mark Zachry. "Productive Tensions and the Regulatory Work of Genres in the Development of an Engineering Communication Workshop in a Transnational Corporation." Journal of Business and Technical Communication 24 (2010): 358-38.
[1242] Maíz, Claudio. "Problemas genológicos del discurso ensayístico: Origen y configuración de un género." Acta Literaria 28 (2003): 79-105.
[RN147] Tillery, Denise. "The Problem of Nuclear Waste: Ethos and Scientific Evidence in a High-Stakes Public Controversy." IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication 49 (2006): 325-334.
[1236] Cartmell, Deborah. "Pride and Prejudice and the adaptation genre." Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance 3, no. 3 (2011): 227-243.
[673] Catenaccio, Paola. "Press Releases as a Hybrid Genre: Addressing the Informative/Promotional Conundrum." Pragmatics 18 (2008): 9-31.
[835] Lassen, Inger. "Is the Press Release a Genre? A Study of Form and Content." Discourse Studies 8 (2006).

Pages