Digital Rhetoric Collaborative

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The '''Digital Rhetoric Collaborative (DRC)''' is a collective venture to house resources related to digital rhetoric and computers and writing, and to create a community space where people working in these areas can share ideas, scholarship, and general conversation.<ref>Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative. Histories, Participation, and Communities at the Sweetland DRC. June 2014. https://storify.com/SweetlandDRC/digital-rhetoric-c-and-w-histories-project</ref>
The '''Digital Rhetoric Collaborative (DRC)''' is a collective venture to house resources related to digital rhetoric and computers and writing, and to create a community space where people working in these areas can share ideas, scholarship, and general conversation.<ref>Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative. Histories, Participation, and Communities at the Sweetland DRC. June 2014. https://storify.com/SweetlandDRC/digital-rhetoric-c-and-w-histories-project</ref>
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Emerging from the 2011 [[Computers and Writing]], the DRC arose from discussions about digital humanities, the rise of the digital monograph as norm, and desire for a way to continue computers and writing conversations between annual conferences.<ref>Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative. Histories, Participation, and Communities at the Sweetland DRC. June 2014. https://storify.com/SweetlandDRC/digital-rhetoric-c-and-w-histories-project</ref>The DRC further evolved at WIDE-EMU '11 and '12.<ref>Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative. Histories, Participation, and Communities at the Sweetland DRC. June 2014. https://storify.com/SweetlandDRC/digital-rhetoric-c-and-w-histories-project</ref>
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Emerging from the 2011 [[Computers and Writing]], the DRC arose from discussions about digital humanities, the rise of the digital monograph as norm, and desire for a way to continue computers and writing conversations between annual conferences.<ref>Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative. Histories, Participation, and Communities at the Sweetland DRC. June 2014. https://storify.com/SweetlandDRC/digital-rhetoric-c-and-w-histories-project</ref>The DRC further evolved at [[WIDE-EMU]] '11 and '12.<ref>Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative. Histories, Participation, and Communities at the Sweetland DRC. June 2014. https://storify.com/SweetlandDRC/digital-rhetoric-c-and-w-histories-project</ref>
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The DRC is supported by the Gayle Morris Sweetland Center for Writing [http://www.lsa.umich.edu/sweetland/] Board members, directors, yearly cohorts of graduate students, and the DRC community guide the collaborative's work.<ref>Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative. "About." N.d. http://www.digitalrhetoriccollaborative.org/about/</ref>   
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The DRC is supported by the '''Gayle Morris Sweetland Center for Writing'''.[http://www.lsa.umich.edu/sweetland/] Board members, directors, yearly cohorts of graduate students, and the DRC community guide the collaborative's work.<ref>Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative. "About." N.d. http://www.digitalrhetoriccollaborative.org/about/</ref>   
==Work==
==Work==
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* hosts a wiki where the histories and futures of digital rhetoric can be discovered and discussed. <ref>"Main Page." 14. Nov. 2014. http://webservices.itcs.umich.edu/mediawiki/DigitalRhetoricCollaborative/index.php/Main_Page </ref>  
* hosts a wiki where the histories and futures of digital rhetoric can be discovered and discussed. <ref>"Main Page." 14. Nov. 2014. http://webservices.itcs.umich.edu/mediawiki/DigitalRhetoricCollaborative/index.php/Main_Page </ref>  
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The DRC maintains active social media presences on Facebook [http://www.facebook.com/SweetlandDRC], Twitter[https://twitter.com/SweetlandDRC], and Pinterest [http://pinterest.com/SweetlandDRC]. DRC directors and fellows have participated in planning and Do-Make sessions at WIDE-EMU. <ref>Silver, Naomi. "DRC Goes to WIDE-EMU 2012." 14. Oct. 2012. http://www.digitalrhetoriccollaborative.org/2012/10/14/drc-goes-to-wide-emu-2012/</ref> The directors and fellows have presented at Computers and Writing. <ref>Evolutions: The History and Future of Computers and Writing and Related Fields, as told on the DRC Wiki. N.d. http://siteslab.org/cwcon/2014/proposal/evolutions-history-and-future-computers</ref>
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The DRC maintains active social media presences on Facebook [http://www.facebook.com/SweetlandDRC], Twitter[https://twitter.com/SweetlandDRC], and Pinterest [http://pinterest.com/SweetlandDRC]. DRC directors and fellows have participated in planning and Do-Make sessions at WIDE-EMU. <ref>Silver, Naomi. "DRC Goes to WIDE-EMU 2012." 14. Oct. 2012. http://www.digitalrhetoriccollaborative.org/2012/10/14/drc-goes-to-wide-emu-2012/</ref><ref>Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative. Histories, Participation, and Communities at the Sweetland DRC. June 2014. https://storify.com/SweetlandDRC/digital-rhetoric-c-and-w-histories-project</ref> The directors and fellows have presented at Computers and Writing. <ref>Evolutions: The History and Future of Computers and Writing and Related Fields, as told on the DRC Wiki. N.d. http://siteslab.org/cwcon/2014/proposal/evolutions-history-and-future-computers</ref>
==Award==
==Award==

Current revision

Contents


[edit] The Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative

Originally edited by --Sbblevin@uncg.edu 17:18, 14 November 2014 (EST)

The Digital Rhetoric Collaborative (DRC) is a collective venture to house resources related to digital rhetoric and computers and writing, and to create a community space where people working in these areas can share ideas, scholarship, and general conversation.[1]

Emerging from the 2011 Computers and Writing, the DRC arose from discussions about digital humanities, the rise of the digital monograph as norm, and desire for a way to continue computers and writing conversations between annual conferences.[2]The DRC further evolved at WIDE-EMU '11 and '12.[3]

The DRC is supported by the Gayle Morris Sweetland Center for Writing.[1] Board members, directors, yearly cohorts of graduate students, and the DRC community guide the collaborative's work.[4]

[edit] Work

As a space for involvement, the DRC

  • publishes with the University of Michigan Press a book series of born-digital as well as digitally-enhanced submissions — in the form of collections, monographs, or teaching materials of varying lengths and genres [5]
  • hosts a curated blog where participants can discuss issues and innovations and participate in blog carnivals;[6]
  • provides a space for sharing resources for instructors interested in teaching digital media and rhetoric and working with computers and writing;[7]
  • provides conversation space for extended dialogues; [8]
  • provides reviews of the annual meetings of Computers and Writing (and other related conferences and events) in order to make proceedings accessible to a wider audience; [9]
  • hosts a wiki where the histories and futures of digital rhetoric can be discovered and discussed. [10]

The DRC maintains active social media presences on Facebook [2], Twitter[3], and Pinterest [4]. DRC directors and fellows have participated in planning and Do-Make sessions at WIDE-EMU. [11][12] The directors and fellows have presented at Computers and Writing. [13]

[edit] Award

The UM Press/Sweetland Publication Prize in Digital Rhetoric is awarded annually to an innovative and important born-digital or substantially digitally- enhanced book-length project that displays critical and rigorous engagement in the field of digital rhetoric.[14]


[edit] References

  1. Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative. Histories, Participation, and Communities at the Sweetland DRC. June 2014. https://storify.com/SweetlandDRC/digital-rhetoric-c-and-w-histories-project
  2. Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative. Histories, Participation, and Communities at the Sweetland DRC. June 2014. https://storify.com/SweetlandDRC/digital-rhetoric-c-and-w-histories-project
  3. Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative. Histories, Participation, and Communities at the Sweetland DRC. June 2014. https://storify.com/SweetlandDRC/digital-rhetoric-c-and-w-histories-project
  4. Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative. "About." N.d. http://www.digitalrhetoriccollaborative.org/about/
  5. Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative. "Books." N.d. http://www.digitalrhetoriccollaborative.org/books/
  6. "Blog Carnivals." N.d. http://www.digitalrhetoriccollaborative.org/blog-carnivals/
  7. "Resources." N.d. http://www.digitalrhetoriccollaborative.org/resources/
  8. "Hack & Yack." N.d. http://www.digitalrhetoriccollaborative.org/conversations/hack-yack/
  9. "Conference Reviews." N.d. http://www.digitalrhetoriccollaborative.org/conference-reviews/
  10. "Main Page." 14. Nov. 2014. http://webservices.itcs.umich.edu/mediawiki/DigitalRhetoricCollaborative/index.php/Main_Page
  11. Silver, Naomi. "DRC Goes to WIDE-EMU 2012." 14. Oct. 2012. http://www.digitalrhetoriccollaborative.org/2012/10/14/drc-goes-to-wide-emu-2012/
  12. Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative. Histories, Participation, and Communities at the Sweetland DRC. June 2014. https://storify.com/SweetlandDRC/digital-rhetoric-c-and-w-histories-project
  13. Evolutions: The History and Future of Computers and Writing and Related Fields, as told on the DRC Wiki. N.d. http://siteslab.org/cwcon/2014/proposal/evolutions-history-and-future-computers
  14. Silver, Naomi. 26 Sept. 2014. http://www.digitalrhetoriccollaborative.org/2014/09/26/calling-for-your-submissions-to-the-drc-book-prize/
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