This book galvanizes conversations in ecology and writing to firmly establish the significance of writing research that intersects with ecology. Contributors look to establish ecological writing studies not just as a legitimate or important form of research, but as paramount to the future of writing studies and writing theory.
1. Ecology, Writing, and the Future of Writing Studies, Sidney I. Dobrin 2. In Terms Of Writing: I.e., Raúl Sánchez 3. Writing Ecologies, Rhetorical Epidemics, Kristen Seas 4. Cosmopolitan Ethics, Textual Piracy, and Rhetorical Salvage, Joe Marshal Hardin 5. Circulation, Transformation, and Consequentiality: An Ecological Perspective of Delivery for the Digital Age, Laurie Gries 6. The Virtual Reality of Disciplines: Network(ed) Rhetorics and the Construction of Knowledge, Collin Gifford Brooke 7. Digital Ecologies, Sean Morey 8. Post-Media Occupations for Writing Theory, John Tinnell 9. Ecotechnics: The Heuretics of Entelechy, Gregory L. Ulmer 10. Circulating Musics: Digital Ecologies in -ReverbNation, Byron Hawk 11. The Ecology of the Question: Reading Austin's Public Housing Debates, 1937-1938, Jenny Edbauer Rice 12. In Choric Space, Everyone Can You Scream . . . And Scream . . . And Scream . . ., Thomas Rickert 13. What do Rhetorical Ecologies Produce? A Theory of Sustainable Social Objects, William Hart-Davidson 14. Ecology, Ecologies, and Institutions: Eco and Composition, Donnie Johnson Sackey and Dànielle Nicole DeVoss
Sidney I. Dobrin is Associate Professor of English at the University of Florida, US.