@mastersthesis {872, title = {Environmental Impact Statements and Rhetorical Genres: An Application of Rhetorical Theory to Technical Communication}, year = {1980}, note = {QJS}, month = {1980}, school = {Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute}, keywords = {genre}, author = {Miller, Carolyn R.} } @article {873, title = {Genre as Social Action}, journal = {Quarterly Journal of Speech}, volume = {70}, year = {1984}, note = {+}, month = {1984}, pages = {151{\textendash}176}, keywords = {action, genre}, author = {Miller, Carolyn R.} } @inbook {874, title = {Rhetorical Community: The Cultural Basis of Genre}, booktitle = {Genre and the New Rhetoric}, year = {1994}, note = {+}, month = {1994}, pages = {67{\textendash}78}, publisher = {Taylor and Francis}, organization = {Taylor and Francis}, address = {London}, keywords = {Bakhtin, community, culture, genre, genre set, Giddens, narration, polis, structuration}, author = {Miller, Carolyn R.}, editor = {Freedman, Aviva and Medway, Peter} } @article {875, title = {Discourse Classifications in Nineteenth-Century Rhetorical Pedagogy}, journal = {Southern Speech Communication Journal}, volume = {51}, year = {1986}, note = {+}, month = {1986}, pages = {371{\textendash}384}, keywords = {composition, genre, pedagogy}, author = {Miller, Carolyn R. and Jolliffe, David A.} } @inbook {876, title = {Special Topics of Argument in Engineering Reports}, booktitle = {Writing in Nonacademic Settings}, year = {1985}, note = {+ b}, month = {1985}, pages = {309{\textendash}341}, publisher = {Guilford Press}, organization = {Guilford Press}, address = {New York}, keywords = {discipline, genre, institution, topic, topos}, author = {Miller, Carolyn R. and Selzer, Jack}, editor = {Odell, Lee and Goswami, Dixie} } @inbook {877, title = {Blogging as Social Action: A Genre Analysis of the Weblog}, booktitle = {Into the Blogosphere: Rhetoric, Community, and the Culture of Weblogs}, year = {2004}, month = {2004}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Libraries, http://blog.lib.umn.edu/blogosphere/blogging_as_social_action.html}, organization = {University of Minnesota Libraries, http://blog.lib.umn.edu/blogosphere/blogging_as_social_action.html}, address = {Minneapolis, MN}, keywords = {blog, diary, digital, exhibitionism, genre, internet, log, voyeurism, weblog}, url = {http://blog.lib.umn.edu/blogosphere/blogging_as_social_action.html}, author = {Miller, Carolyn R. and Shepherd, Dawn}, editor = {Gurak, Laura and Antonijevic, Smiljana and Johnson, Laurie and Ratliff, Clancy and Reymann, Jessica} } @inbook {878, title = {Questions for Genre Theory from the Blogosphere}, booktitle = {Genres in the Internet: Issues in the Theory of Genre}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, pages = {263{\textendash}290}, publisher = {John Benjamins}, organization = {John Benjamins}, address = {Amsterdam}, abstract = {

The blog illustrates well the constant change that characterizes electronic media. With a rapidity equal to that of their initial adoption, blogs became not a single genre but a multiplicity. To explore the relationship between the centrifugal forces of change and the centripetal tendencies of recurrence and typification, we extend our earlier study of personal blogs with a contrasting study of the kairos, technological affordances, rhetorical features, and exigence for what we call public affairs blogs. At the same time, we explore the relationship between genre and medium, examining genre evolution in the context of changing technological affordances. We conclude that genre and medium must be distinguished and that the aesthetic satisfactions of genre help account for recurrence in an environment of change.

}, keywords = {aesthetic, blog, change, digital, exigence, genre, media, medium, rhetoric, stability}, author = {Miller, Carolyn R. and Shepherd, Dawn}, editor = {Giltrow, Janet and Stein, Dieter} } @inbook {1420, title = {Discourse Genres}, booktitle = {Verbal Communication}, series = {Handbooks of Communication Science}, year = {2016}, pages = {269{\textendash}286}, publisher = {De Gruyter}, organization = {De Gruyter}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {

Genre marks large-scale repeated patterns of meaning in human symbolic production and interaction. Approaches to genre can be divided into the formalistthematic, attending to categories and discriminations based on linguistic or textual elements and drawing from cognitive theories; and the pragmatic, attending primarily to use-patterns drawing from social theories of function, action, and communal interaction. This overview draws from disciplines explicitly concerned with natural language, including literature, rhetoric, and several areas of linguistics. A distinction between rational and empirical approaches to genre affects both how genre is conceived and what methods are used for analysis. The rational approach grounds genre in a principle or theory determined by the theorist, yielding a relatively small, closed set of genres; the empirical grounds genre in the experience of those for whom genres are significant, yielding an historically changing, open set of genres. Genre analysis is applied in many discourse disciplines and for a variety of purposes, both descriptive and prescriptive.

}, keywords = {exigence, formalism, genre awareness, genre system, macrostructure, move analysis, rhetoric, social action, Text type, uptake, utterance}, isbn = {9783110255478}, doi = {10.1515/9783110255478-015}, url = {http://www.degruyter.com/view/books/9783110255478/9783110255478-015/9783110255478-015.xml}, author = {Miller, Carolyn R. and Kelly, Ashley R.}, editor = {A. Rocci and L. de Saussure} } @article {RN237, title = {Genre as Social Action}, journal = {Quarterly Journal of Speech}, volume = {70}, number = {2}, year = {1984}, pages = {151{\textendash}167}, doi = {10.1080/00335638409383686}, author = {Miller, Carolyn R.} } @book {1717, title = {Emerging Genres in New Media Environments}, year = {2017}, publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan}, organization = {Palgrave Macmillan}, address = {London}, abstract = {

This volume explores cultural innovation and transformation as revealed through the emergence of new media genres. New media have enabled what impresses most observers as a dizzying proliferation of new forms of communicative interaction and cultural production, provoking multimodal experimentation, and artistic and entrepreneurial innovation. Working with the concept of genre, scholars in multiple fields have begun to explore these processes of emergence, innovation, and stabilization. Genre has thus become newly important in game studies, library and information science, film and media studies, applied linguistics, rhetoric, literature, and elsewhere. Understood as social recognitions that embed histories, ideologies, and contradictions, genres function as recurrent social actions, helping to constitute culture. Because genres are dynamic sites of tension between stability and change, they are also sites of inventive potential. Emerging Genres in New Media Environments brings together compelling papers from scholars in Brazil, Canada, England, and the United States to illustrate how this inventive potential has been harnessed around the world.

}, keywords = {genre analysis, genre history, genre theory, visual genre}, isbn = {978-3-319-40294-9}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-40295-6}, url = {http://link.springer.com/10.1007/978-3-319-40295-6http://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/978-3-319-40295-6http://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/978-3-319-40295-6.pdf}, editor = {Miller, Carolyn R. and Kelly, Ashley R.} } @book {1761, title = {Landmark Essays on Rhetorical Genre Studies}, series = {Landmark Essays in Rhetoric and Composition}, year = {2018}, pages = {272}, publisher = {Routledge}, organization = {Routledge}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Landmark Essays on Rhetorical Genre Studies gathers major works that have contributed to the recent rhetorical reconceptualization of genre. A lively and complex field developed over the past 30 years, Rhetorical Genre Studies is central to many current research and teaching agendas. This collection, which is organized both thematically and chronologically, explores genre research across a range of disciplinary interests but with a specific focus on rhetoric and composition. With introductions by the co-editors to frame and extend each section, this volume helps readers understand and contextualize both the foundations of the field and the central themes and insights that have emerged. It will be of particular interest to students and scholars working on topics related to composition, rhetoric, professional and technical writing, and applied linguistics.

}, isbn = {9781138047709}, url = {https://www.routledge.com/Landmark-Essays-on-Rhetorical-Genre-Studies/Miller-Devitt/p/book/9781138047709}, author = {Miller, Carolyn R. and Devitt, Amy J.} }