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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[959] Spinuzzi, Clay. "Modeling Genre Ecologies." In 20th Annual International Conference on Computer Documentation, 200-207. ACM Press, 2002.
[960] Spinuzzi, Clay. "Compound Mediation in Software Development: Using Genre Ecologies to Study Textual Artifacts." In Writing Selves/Writing Societies: Research from Activity Perspectives, edited by Charles Bazerman and David Russell, 97-124. Fort Collins, CO: The WAC Clearinghouse and Mind, Culture, and Activity, 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.
[962] Spinuzzi, Clay. "Four Ways to Investigate Assemblages of Texts: Genre Sets, Systems, Repertoires, and Ecologies." In 22nd Annual International Conference on Design of Communication: The Engineering of Quality Documentation, 110-116. Memphis, TN: Association for Computing Machinery, 2004.
[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.
[1040] Spinuzzi, Clay. Grappling with distributed usability: A cultural-historical examination of documentation genres over four decades In ACM SIGDOC 1999: Proceedings of the 17th Annual International Conference on Computer Documentation. New York: ACM, 1999.
[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).
[1159] Spinuzzi, Clay. "Leveraging Mobile and Wireless Technologies in Qualitative Research: Some Half-Baked Suggestions." In Going Wireless: A Critical Exploration of Wireless and Mobile Technologies for Composition Teachers and Scholars, edited by Amy C. Kimme Hea, 255-273. Hampton Press, 2009.
[RN81] Spinuzzi, Clay. "Pseudotransactionality, Activity Theory, and Professional Writing Instruction." Technical Communication Quarterly 5 (1996): 295-308.
[RN192] Spinuzzi, Clay. "Toward Integrating Our Research Scope: A Sociocultural Field Methodology." Journal of Business and Technical Communication 16 (2002): 5-32.
[RN244] Spinuzzi, Clay. Tracing Genres through Organizations: A Sociocultural Approach to Information In Acting with Technology. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2003.
[RN254] Spinuzzi, Clay. "Four Ways to Investigate Assemblages of Texts: Genre Sets, Systems, Repertoires, and Ecologies." In 22nd Annual International Conference on Design of Communication: The Engineering of Quality Documentation, 110-116. Memphis, TN: Association for Computing Machinery, 2004.
[RN211] Spinuzzi, Clay. "Losing by Expanding: Corralling the Runaway Object." Journal of Business and Technical Communication 25 (2011): 449-486.
[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.