Wikipedia:Wiki Ed/University of New Hampshire/Digital Rhetoric (Spring 2024)

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Course name
Digital Rhetoric
Institution
University of New Hampshire
Instructor
Michelle Gibbons
Wikipedia Expert
Ian (Wiki Ed)
Subject
Course dates
2024-01-23 00:00:00 UTC – 2024-05-06 23:59:59 UTC
Approximate number of student editors
20


COURSE DESCRIPTION

Accounts of the rhetorical tradition typically begin with ancient Greece and figures such as Protagoras, Plato, and Aristotle, whose work on rhetoric, or the art of persuasion, exerts a pervasive influence on the discipline. Concepts like genre, decorum, and doxa are still essential conceptual tools for thinking about rhetoric and covered in introductory rhetoric textbooks and courses. Yet, while rhetoric courses begin with the long-ago work of people who wore togas at public gatherings and wrote on scrolls, contemporary culture features wearable technology and touch screens. One of this course’s central concerns is how traditional rhetorical theories and methods apply in a world of hyperlinks, social media, viral videos, and so forth. Can we employ them as is, or do we need to develop new approaches in order to understand persuasion in new media environments?

And, of course, rhetoric’s long history doesn’t end with the ancients. This course also addresses how less ancient – ie. more recent - rhetorical perspectives might also offer insight into online, networked communication. Circulation emerges as a central concern. Throughout the course we consider how texts move among and between rhetorical contents, how they fragment in soundbites and fuse in remixes, and how audiences play a role in the process, viewing, clicking, liking, sharing, and so on. And at the heart of it all is perhaps the most enduring of rhetorical questions: how does discourse – in this case, online discourse - function epistemically, shaping, and perhaps even creating, our understanding of the world.

As it explores these issues, this course will tackle both rhetorical production and rhetorical analysis. That is, it will ask students to create digital rhetoric in the form of infographics, tweets, videos, and crowdsourced content, as well as analyzing their own and others’ rhetorical productions.

Student Assigned Reviewing
Abcd1008 Ann Richards
Sancho2323 Mary Fisher (activist)
Rhetoric1180 Mary Fisher (activist)
AJames312 Peter MacDonald (Navajo leader)
Brookeebrown Peter MacDonald (Navajo leader)
RedGarter1234 Mary Fisher (activist)
Abc321456789 Ann Richards
Student2324 Barbara Jordan
Avahaggis Ann Richards
CommunicationandRhetoric Peter MacDonald (Navajo leader)
Wildcats2001
Sophiazucco Shirley Sherrod
Ashleyhebert Elizabeth Glaser
Kelsie Leith
Eligore28 Barbara Jordan
Lwh1007 Barbara Jordan
Chan50502 Elizabeth Glaser
Jmc1286 Shirley Sherrod
Sophiaporterr Shirley Sherrod
Helenlinehan