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  • Collaborative Assignment

    While focused on a reorder icon, press the Enter key or spacebar to "select" the icon. While a reorder icon is selected, pressing the up and down arrows will change the order of the selected item within the list. Pressing Enter key or spacebar again will drop the selected item at that location in the list.
  • Shorts

    Name Description Status Source
    "So Much Depends Upon" Wiki Required somuch.pbwiki.com Edit "So Much Depends Upon" Wiki Delete "So Much Depends Upon" Wiki
    Brevity
    Brevity is an online publication featuring "shorts," brief pieces of creative nonfiction.  To be published in Brevity, a piece must be 750 words or fewer.  The site includes not only excellent examples of the "short," but also craft essays related to the genre.
    Required www.creativenonfiction.org Edit Brevity Delete Brevity
    flashquake
    flashquake is an online publication featuring "flash," which the publishers define as poems of 35 lines or fewer, or prose of 1,000 words or fewer.  Unlike Brevity, flashquake publishes poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction that conforms to these parameters.
    Required www.flashquake.org Edit flashquake Delete flashquake
    Fourth Genre: Forum on Nonfiction
    While this web page doesn't really provide models of the short, it does provide some perspectives on writing nonfiction.  Fourth Genre is one of the premier literary journals for nonfiction works.
    Required msupress.msu.edu Edit Fourth Genre: Forum on Nonfiction Delete Fourth Genre: Forum on Nonfiction
    While focused on a reorder icon, press the Enter key or spacebar to "select" the icon. While a reorder icon is selected, pressing the up and down arrows will change the order of the selected item within the list. Pressing Enter key or spacebar again will drop the selected item at that location in the list.
  • Rhetoric & Style

    Name Description Status Source
    Stasis Theory (@ The Everyday Writer)
    This link will take you to a brief explanation of stasis theory, an approch to invention grounded in ancient rhetoric.  This brief explanation is a segment of Andrea Lunsford's The Everyday Writer.
    Required bcs.bedfordstmartins.com Edit Stasis Theory (@ The Everyday Writer) Delete Stasis Theory (@ The Everyday Writer)
    Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "Letter from Birmingham Jail"
    One of the most famous letters ever written, we'll be reading Martin Luther King's "Letter from Birmingham Jail" in order to inform our discussion of the various types of persuasive appeals and the writing we will do in connection with the Epistles project.  This version of King's letter is made available by the Martin Luther King, Jr., Research and Education Institute at Stanford University.
    Required www.stanford.edu Edit Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "Letter from Birmingham Jail" Delete Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "Letter from Birmingham Jail"
    Jon Stewart on Crossfire
    Jon Stewart on Crossfire (CF: Ancient Rhetorics, ch. 1)
    Required www.youtube.com Edit Jon Stewart on Crossfire Delete Jon Stewart on Crossfire
    "The Hottest Rhetorical Device of Campaign '08"
    An article from Slate.com about the use of antimetabole in political speeches from this year's presidential election cycle (and some historical examples, as well). 
    Required www.slate.com Edit "The Hottest Rhetorical Device of Campaign '08" Delete "The Hottest Rhetorical Device of Campaign '08"
    "Write Till You Drop," by Annie Dillard
    This column in the New York Times later became a part of The Writing Life, a book I highly recommend.
    Required www2.nytimes.com Edit "Write Till You Drop," by Annie Dillard Delete "Write Till You Drop," by Annie Dillard
    Silva Rhetoricae
    This site ammounts to an online textbook/encyclopedia related to the study of rhetoric.  We will probably be drawing on this site in connection with some of our Monday class meetings.
    Required humanities.byu.edu Edit Silva Rhetoricae Delete Silva Rhetoricae
    The Blogora

    The Blogora provides a collaborative space for connecting rhetoric, rhetorical methods and theories, and rhetoricians with public life. The Blogora is an initiative of the Rhetoric Society of America and is hosted by the Computer Writing and Research Lab, part of the Division of Rhetoric and Writing at The University of Texas at Austin.

    Required rsa.cwrl.utexas.edu Edit The Blogora Delete The Blogora
    While focused on a reorder icon, press the Enter key or spacebar to "select" the icon. While a reorder icon is selected, pressing the up and down arrows will change the order of the selected item within the list. Pressing Enter key or spacebar again will drop the selected item at that location in the list.
  • BAE-related Links

    Name Description Status Source
    "Cross of Gold" speech, by William Jennings Bryan
    Text and audio of William Jennings Bryan's "Cross of Gold" speech, originally delivered to the Democratic National Convention in 1896, and mentioned in Marilynne Robinson's essay in Best American Essays: 2007.
    Required www.americanrhetoric.com Edit "Cross of Gold" speech, by William Jennings Bryan Delete "Cross of Gold" speech, by William Jennings Bryan
    gladwell.com
    Malcolm Gladwell's blog.
    Required gladwell.typepad.com Edit gladwell.com Delete gladwell.com
    Cesar Millan
    Cesar Millan's web site.
    Required www.cesarmillaninc.com Edit Cesar Millan Delete Cesar Millan
    Body Language: What McCain and Obama Reveal
    A July 2005 article from Live Science, wherein two body movement experts apply Laban Movement Analysis to McCain and Obama.
    Required www.livescience.com Edit Body Language: What McCain and Obama Reveal Delete Body Language: What McCain and Obama Reveal
    David Foster Wallace News @ NYT Required topics.nytimes.com Edit David Foster Wallace News @ NYT Delete David Foster Wallace News @ NYT
    President Bush "Decider" Video on YouTube Required www.youtube.com Edit President Bush "Decider" Video on YouTube Delete President Bush "Decider" Video on YouTube
    David Foster Wallace Obituary (NYT)
    David Foster Wallace's obituary in the New York Times.
    Required www.nytimes.com Edit David Foster Wallace Obituary (NYT) Delete David Foster Wallace Obituary (NYT)
    David Foster Wallace Tribute (NYT)
    A tribute piece following the death of David Foster Wallace on September 12, 2008.
    Required www.nytimes.com Edit David Foster Wallace Tribute (NYT) Delete David Foster Wallace Tribute (NYT)
    David Foster Wallace Obit/Tribute at Slate.com Required www.slate.com Edit David Foster Wallace Obit/Tribute at Slate.com Delete David Foster Wallace Obit/Tribute at Slate.com
    David Foster Wallace Essay on Roger Federer
    "Play; Federer As Religous Experience," by David Foster Wallace
    Required query.nytimes.com Edit David Foster Wallace Essay on Roger Federer Delete David Foster Wallace Essay on Roger Federer
    David Foster Wallace, "Consider the Lobster"
    One of the essays that made DFW's reputation, this essay was originally published in Gourmet magazine and later became the titular essay of his second collection of nonfiction.

    Required www.gourmet.com Edit David Foster Wallace, "Consider the Lobster" Delete David Foster Wallace, "Consider the Lobster"
    Mosquito Ring Tones Required www.freemosquitoringtones.org Edit Mosquito Ring Tones Delete Mosquito Ring Tones
    While focused on a reorder icon, press the Enter key or spacebar to "select" the icon. While a reorder icon is selected, pressing the up and down arrows will change the order of the selected item within the list. Pressing Enter key or spacebar again will drop the selected item at that location in the list.
  • Internet Applications

    Name Description Status Source
    Blogger
    Blogger is probably the most accessible platform for creating a weblog, or blog.  While the use of blogs will not be a required part of this course, some of you may opt to utilize a blog rather than a more traditional journal or notebook in connection with some of the assignments.
    Required www.blogger.com Edit Blogger Delete Blogger
    Google Docs
    Google Docs is an online word processing application that contains nearly all the functionality of Microsoft Word.  The primary advantage to using Google Docs is the ability for multiple writers to collaborative on the same piece of writing.
    Required www.google.com Edit Google Docs Delete Google Docs
    PB Wiki
    PB Wiki is the platform we will be using for the publication of at least two of our writing projects: the "So Much Depends Upon" assignment and the "Epistles" assignment.
    Required pbwiki.com Edit PB Wiki Delete PB Wiki
    Google Notebook
    This is an application I only recently discovered.  It allows one to easily take and manage notes from online resources.  Those clippings are then saved for later use.  One may also elect to share his or her notebooks with others.
    Required www.google.com Edit Google Notebook Delete Google Notebook
    Library Thing
    Sort of a My Space for bookworms, Library Thing enables one to easily catalog one's personal library, both for personal record keeping and for comparison with other Library Thing users.
    Required www.librarything.com Edit Library Thing Delete Library Thing
    Chain Reading
    Another internet application for readers, Chain Reading allows one to manage and share a current reading list, a planned reading list, recommendations, and reviews.  Some members of the USF faculty utilize Chain Reading as a means of sharing their reading lists with one another and with students.  Check out Dr. Dyer's lists or Prof. Schuelke's lists.
    Required chainreading.com Edit Chain Reading Delete Chain Reading
    While focused on a reorder icon, press the Enter key or spacebar to "select" the icon. While a reorder icon is selected, pressing the up and down arrows will change the order of the selected item within the list. Pressing Enter key or spacebar again will drop the selected item at that location in the list.
While focused on a reorder icon, press the Enter key or spacebar to "select" the icon. While a reorder icon is selected, pressing the up and down arrows will change the order of the selected item within the list. Pressing Enter key or spacebar again will drop the selected item at that location in the list.