Mission Statement

From RhetorClick

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Placeholder for our mission statement. Patrick and others will take a first stab at this.
Placeholder for our mission statement. Patrick and others will take a first stab at this.
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== RhetorClick ==
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==RhetorClick==
Hi, and welcome to the ENGW 4341 wiki, soon to be RhetorClick. We are students of Dr. Quinn Warnick's Current Theories of Rhetoric and Composition class (and Quinn himself, of course), and we hope to build a functioning wiki for current rhetorical theories.
Hi, and welcome to the ENGW 4341 wiki, soon to be RhetorClick. We are students of Dr. Quinn Warnick's Current Theories of Rhetoric and Composition class (and Quinn himself, of course), and we hope to build a functioning wiki for current rhetorical theories.
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We hope to create a powerful, usable, and open index for these ideas.
We hope to create a powerful, usable, and open index for these ideas.
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==Rules==
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Anyone can contribute to RhetorClick.
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 +
Content must be relevant to current rhetorical theories.
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 +
Pre-20th century rhetoric ''is allowed'', as those theories greatly inform modern rhetoric. We still emphasize current rhetoric, though, so keep these sections brief.
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When editing or creating new content, please keep your fellow readers and editors in mind. Please keep discussion and content civil.

Revision as of 01:12, 21 March 2011

Placeholder for our mission statement. Patrick and others will take a first stab at this.

RhetorClick

Hi, and welcome to the ENGW 4341 wiki, soon to be RhetorClick. We are students of Dr. Quinn Warnick's Current Theories of Rhetoric and Composition class (and Quinn himself, of course), and we hope to build a functioning wiki for current rhetorical theories.

What are current rhetorical theories? We all feel like we probably know what a current rhetorical theory is, but let's set some guidelines. A current rhetorical theory is:

Examples of a current rhetorical theories would be Richard Weaver's "The Cultural Role of Rhetoric," Roland Barthes' Death of the Author, and Douglas Brent's Rogerian Rhetoric

We hope to create a powerful, usable, and open index for these ideas.

Rules

Anyone can contribute to RhetorClick.

Content must be relevant to current rhetorical theories.

Pre-20th century rhetoric is allowed, as those theories greatly inform modern rhetoric. We still emphasize current rhetoric, though, so keep these sections brief.

When editing or creating new content, please keep your fellow readers and editors in mind. Please keep discussion and content civil.

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