 |
As a rhetorician, I
am interested in what media shift means for rhetorical analysis
and criticism. In particular, my current research considers the
following question: How does persuasion as a form of social
influence occur in new media environments?
As interactive, digital
communication gradually supplements and to some extent replaces
traditional mass media, print, and even face-to-face interaction,
how can communication researchers trace and take note of changes
in the forms of communication?
- For example, when
many influential WWW texts no longer have an identifiable author
or message source, how do users judge the legitimacy and credibility
of site content?
- Or, when linear logic
and traditional forms of reasoning seem out of place in unstructured,
hypermediated environments, what alternative forms of logic take
their place?
- Or, as media texts
become more immersive, personalized, and malleable, what sorts
of continuous, reciprocal adaptation in the message works to "adjust
people to ideas and ideas to people?"
Provisional and ongoing
efforts to answer such questions keep me very interested in my work..
For example, in a 2003
study on website credibility,
I found that on website texts where the author is not identifiable,
users tend to consider other attributes, such as site design, usability,
and use of information resources. For them, "distributed credibility"
is a composite construct comprised of many factors. Only infrequently
do they consider who the site author might be.
In another co-authored
study in the Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, my
collaborators and I found that political web sites with higher levels
of text-based interactivity were sites on which users spent comparatively
more time and had greater recall of candidates' issue stances.
Here is an op-ed op-ed
piece I wrote for the San Francisco Chronicle, July
29, 2007 on the Democrate YouTube debates on Monday, July 23, 2007.
It is a speculation about the possible effects of this type of media
convergence on public perception of the candidates.
My 2007 book, Rhetoric
Online: Persuasion and Politics on the World Wide Web, considered
how existing rhetorical theories can be adapted to the study of
online persuasion. The book argues that there are many forms of
rhetorical activity on the Web that should be analyzed. These include
political campaigning, social activism, and persuasion disguised
as entertainment. The book used a case study method to illustrate
how the analysis of persuasion on web sites and in distributed networks
requires critics to make use, in part, of reader-centered criticism
and notions such as field dependency to study co-produced, customized,
de-centered hyptertext discourse. More information about the book
is available on the Peter
Lang Web Site.
|
|