This book begins from the assumption that there is an intrinsically technological dimension to rhetoric, arguing that we have become so accustomed to practicing rhetoric in the context of print technologies that we have often naturalized or ignored that dimension. New communication and information technologies do not simply provide us with new sites of rhetorical practice; instead they challenge us to reconceive rhetoric altogether. This groundbreaking volume argues that a rhetoric of new media should attend to 'ecologies of practice', treating interfaced rather than texts as our sites and...
This book begins from the assumption that there is an intrinsically technological dimension to rhetoric, arguing that we have become so accustomed to ...