Central Works in Technical Communication.
Edited by Johndan Johnson-Eilola and Stuart A. Selber.
Oxford University Press, 2004.

Summary

Bringing together thirty-two landmark essays, Central Works in Technical Communication provides a broad and representative overview of the field. It introduces students, new teachers, and new practitioners to the community of technical communication as an intellectual and communal endeavor that encompasses such complex theoretical topics as research methods, social issues, and ethics. Editors Johndan Johnson-Eilola and Stuart A. Selber engaged in a comprehensive selection process--including the consultation of a review board of leading teachers and scholars--and have included some of the most influential articles and book chapters published in technical communication over the last twenty-five years. Each essay is accompanied by a reflective piece written by its author specifically for this volume. These commentaries provide context for the essays and allow the authors to add to or challenge their original ideas and resituate them in a contemporary environment. The book also features section introductions written by the editors that offer historical and conceptual approaches to understanding the contributions each work makes to the field of technical communication.

Central Works in Technical Communication is organized around eight major conceptual categories: histories, rhetorical perspectives, philosophies and theories, ethical and power issues, research methods, workplace studies, online environments, and pedagogical directions. An alternative table of contents groups the essays into additional categories including collaboration, gender, genre, usability, and visual theory and practice. Ideal for advanced undergraduate and graduate courses in technical communication, this collection is also a compact and convenient resource for practicing professionals and academics new to the field.

Reviews

"Johnson-Eilola and Selber do a superb job at canvassing both historic and current foundational works in a wide variety of specialty areas that, over time and collectively, have defined and shaped our field. Their coherent, single-volume collection of the most influential articles in the field is destined to become an invaluable resource for advanced technical communication students, newcomers to the field, veterans in the field, and practitioners."

- Rachel Spilka, University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee

"Central Works in Technical Communication is exactly the right name for this collection. Johnson-Eilola and Selber have gathered a broad, even-handed sampling of some of the best works in our field: those dog-eared articles that are scattered throughout our journals and books and filing cabinets, the ones we pull out when we want to touch base with our field--and introduce it to others."

- Clay Spinuzzi, University of Texas at Austin

"I could see actually restructuring my course to reflect the topics used to organize this book."

--Jimmie Killingsworth, Texas A&M University

You can purchase Central Works directly from Oxford University Press or from Amazon, among other places.

Table of Contents

Histories

Robert J. Connors. The Rise of Technical Writing Instruction in America.

Russell Rutter. History, Rhetoric, and Humanism: Toward a More Comprehensive Definition of Technical Communication.

Katherine T. Durak. Gender, Technology, and the History of Technical Communication.

Rhetorical Perspectives

Carolyn A. Miller. A Humanistic Rationale for Technical Writing.

Linda Driskill. Understanding the Writing Context in Organizations.

Carolyn D. Rude. The Report for Decision-Making: Genre and Inquiry.

Robert R. Johnson. Audience Involved: Toward a Participatory Model of Writing.

Philosophies and Theories

David N. Dobrin. What’s Technical about Technical Writing?

Charlotte Thralls and Nancy Roundy Blyler. The Social Perspective and Professional Communication: Diversity and Directions in Research.

Mary M. Lay. Feminist Theory and the Redefinition of Technical Communication.

Jennifer Daryl Slack, David James Miller, and Jeffrey Doak. The Technical Communicator as Author: Meaning, Power, Authority.

Johndan Johnson-Eilola, Johndan. Relocating the Value of Work: Technical Communication in a Post-Industrial Age.

Ethical and Power Issues

Stephen B. Katz. The Ethic of Expediency: Classical Rhetoric, Technology, and the Holocaust.

Dale L. Sullivan. Political-Ethical Implications of Defining Technical Communication as a Practice.

Carl Herndl. Teaching Discourse and Reproducing Culture: A Critique of Research and Pedagogy in Professional and Non-Academic Writing.

Ben F. Barton and Marthalee S. Barton. Ideology and the Map: Toward a Postmodern Visual Design Practice

Research Methods

Teresa M. Harrison. Frameworks for the Study of Writing in Organizational Contexts.

Nancy Blyler. Taking a Political Turn: The Critical Perspective and Research in Technical Communication.

Davida Charney. Empiricism is Not a Four-Letter Word.

Patricia Sullivan and James E. Porter. On Theory, Practice, and Method: Toward a Heuristic Research Methodology for Professional Writing.

Workplace Studies

Jack Selzer. The Composing Processes of an Engineer.

Dorothy Winsor. Engineering Writing/Writing Engineering.

Stephen Doheny-Farina. Writing in an Emerging Organization: An Ethnographic Study.

Nancy Allen, Dianne Atkinson, Meg Morgan, Teresa Moore, and Craig Snow. What Experienced Collaborators Say about Collaborative Writing.

James Paradis. Text and Action: The Operator’s Manual in Context and in Court.

Barbara Mirel. Writing and Database Technology: Extending the Definition of Writing in the Workplace.

Online Environments

Tharon Howard. Who “Owns” Electronic Texts?”

Stephen A. Bernhardt. The Shape of Text to Come: The Texture of Print on Screens.

Cynthia L. Selfe and Richard J. Selfe. The Politics of the Interface: Power and Its Exercise in Electronic Contact Zones.

Pedagogical Directions

Stuart A. Selber. Beyond Skill Building: Challenges Facing Technical Communication Teachers in the Computer Age.

Deborah Bosley. Cross-Cultural Collaboration: Whose Culture Is It, Anyway?

Lee E. Brasseur. Contesting the Objectivist Paradigm: Gender Issues in the Technical and Professional Communication Curriculum.

[last update: 2.21.04]