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Book Review

Still life with rhetoric: A new materialist approach for visual rhetorics. L. E. Gries. Boulder, CO: University Press of Colorado, 2015, 324 pages, including index. US$27.95 (paperback).

References

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  • Grabill, J. (2006). The study of writing in the social factory: Methodology and rhetorical agency. In J. B. Scott, B. Longo, & K. V. Wills (Eds.), Critical power tools (pp. 151–170). Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.
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  • Miller, C. (1989). What’s practical about technical writing? In B. E. Fearing & W. K. Sparrow (Eds.), Technical writing theory and practice (pp. 14–24). New York, NY: MLA.
  • Pringle, K., & Williams, S. (2005). The future is the past: Has technical communication arrived as a profession? Technical Communication, 52(3), 361–370.
  • Salvo, M. J. (2006). Rhetoric as productive technology: Cultural studies in/as technical communication methodology. In J. B. Scott, B. Longo, & K. V. Wills (Eds.), Critical power tools (pp. 219–240). Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.
  • Slack, J. D., Miller, J. M., & Doak, J. (1993). The technical communicator as author: Meaning, power, authority. Journal of Business and Technical Communication 7(1),12–16.
  • Sullivan, P. & Porter, J.E. (1993). On theory, practice, and method: Toward a heuristic research methodology for professional writing. In R. Spilka (Ed.), Writing in the Workplace: New Research Perspectives (pp. 220–237). Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press.

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