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"Profiles in Digital Scholarship & Publishing: Douglas Eyman"

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About the Interviewee

"Profiles in Digital Scholarship & Publishing: Douglas Eyman"

Douglas Eyman is Associate Professor of English and the Director of graduate
programs in Writing and Rhetoric at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia.
His latest books are Digital Rhetoric: Theory, Method, Practice and Play/Write:
Digital Rhetoric, Writing, Games. Dr. Eyman is also the senior editor and
publisher of Kairos: A Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, and Pedagogy, one of the longest running, continuously published digital scholarly journals in the world.

About the Interviewer

Elizabeth Barnett is an MA candidate in Rhetoric and Writing in the University of New Mexico's Department of English Language and Literature. Her interests lie in the pedagogy of multimodal digital composition and technical writing. 

Contents

Digital Rhetoric: Expanding Definitions

The Human in the Machine

Digital Rhetoric In the Classroom

Sustainability in the Digital Realm

Authorship & Audience in A Digital Age

Future Work: A Theory of Digital Rhetoric

 

Xchanges: You’ve explored a lot of definitions of digital rhetoric and as yet its study lacks an integrated theory. In 2015 you wrote, “this lack of ‘an integrated theory’ seemed to me a perfect opening for my own work toward understanding, defining, and shaping a vision of digital rhetoric (although I have moved from seeking an integrated theory to articulating digital rhetoric theories and methods).”

Will you, or have you, ever come back to trying to put together an integrated theory?

DE: I'm thinking about it. I have some thoughts on this, but I haven't put them out anywhere yet. As a scholar, I tend more toward being the person who provides the infrastructure or comes up with a way to produce the thing you want to do. That's what I really like about being a director of a Ph.D. program. All these great students come in, and I say, "How can I help you do this really interesting project?" I see that as my goal: to be the person that builds things to support people so that they can put new things in the world. That being said, I am working on a project that I think I'm going to call "Rhetoric, Design, Code" and look at how those practices and those theories interoperate.

I'll just say thanks very much for the opportunity to talk about things that are really interesting to me. I love to see more people thinking about and finding new models for producing digital scholarship. I’m so excited to see people building the infrastructures and the models for keeping those sustained.

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Posted by xcheditor on May 18, 2021 in interview, Issue 14.1

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