Enculturation has come out with a new issue fairly recently (well, since the last time I checked :)). The theme of the special issue is "Rhetoric/Composition: Intersections/Impasses/Differends." I'm not crazy about the three-pop-ups design, or the fact that in the table of contents, we only see authors' names and not titles, but there I go being picky. The issue, as the editors' introduction explains, is about the terms "rhetoric" and "composition"--is "rhetoric" subsumed under "composition"? What are the intersections? Or is rhetoric, as Krista Ratcliffe suggests in her article, "just hiding out"? The editors ask us to continue the conversation:'
CALL FOR FURTHER RESPONSE:
New Call For Papers
Enculturation
Second Posting
The editors of Enculturation
seek papers for a second posting of this special issue on "Rhetoric and
Composition."We encourage short 800-1000 word
responses to texts posted here or to the issues raised in our initial call for
papers (see below).We also welcome the submission
of longer articles that relate to ANY aspect of rhetoric and composition. First
consideration will be given to articles that explicitly indicate a relationship
to the texts published in this initial posting and to texts that speak to
issues in our first call that have not already been substantively addressed.In addition to academic
projects/papers, we are interested in reviews or original web-sites/projects,
recently published books, print or e-journals, and ESPECIALLY
hypertext/web-ready submissions that use hypertext for rhetorical ends.All responses and general submissions will be due by March 31, 2004. Please send
submissions to:
Lisa Coleman -- lcoleman@sosu.edu
Lorien Goodman -- lgoodman@pepperdine.edu



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