Scanning as a Rhetorical Activity: Reporting Histories of Ether Experiments in the Johns Hopkins University Physical Seminary (1892–1913)

IF 1.9 1区 文学 Q2 COMMUNICATION Written Communication Pub Date : 2020-11-06 DOI:10.1177/0741088320964265
Gabriel Cutrufello
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Abstract

This article reports on a study that examined papers written by graduate students in the Physical Seminary course at Johns Hopkins University (1892–1913) to investigate how students reused various visuals of the interferometer to construct narratives of late-19th-century Ether research. Their representations of the interferometer focused on the mechanics of the devices by constructing a series of textual-visual relationships, requiring that the reader scan back and forth between the written text and the accompanying visual. These multimodal texts demonstrate how the students used writing activities to create a narrative of equipment development, which highlighted the centrality of trained vision in enculturating graduate students into disciplinary writing practices in the late 19th century. Through an analysis of the specific interactions and the network of visuals the students used to reconstruct a history of Ether investigation, scholars of writing and rhetoric can see how important inclusion of equipment and its detailed discussion was to graduate writing and disciplinary enculturation in the sciences.
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扫描作为一种修辞活动:约翰霍普金斯大学物理学院以太实验的历史报告(1892-1913)
本文报告了一项研究,该研究考察了约翰霍普金斯大学物理神学院研究生(1892-1913)所写的论文,以调查学生如何再利用干涉仪的各种视觉效果来构建19世纪后期以太研究的叙述。他们对干涉仪的描述通过构建一系列文本-视觉关系来关注设备的力学,要求读者在书面文本和伴随的视觉之间来回扫描。这些多模态文本展示了学生如何利用写作活动来创造设备发展的叙述,突出了19世纪后期培养研究生进入学科写作实践的训练视力的中心地位。通过对学生们用来重建以太研究历史的具体互动和视觉网络的分析,写作和修辞学学者可以看到设备的包含及其详细讨论对科学领域的研究生写作和学科文化化是多么重要。
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来源期刊
Written Communication
Written Communication COMMUNICATION-
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
15.80%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: Written Communication is an international multidisciplinary journal that publishes theory and research in writing from fields including anthropology, English, education, history, journalism, linguistics, psychology, and rhetoric. Among topics of interest are the nature of writing ability; the assessment of writing; the impact of technology on writing (and the impact of writing on technology); the social and political consequences of writing and writing instruction; nonacademic writing; literacy (including workplace and emergent literacy and the effects of classroom processes on literacy development); the social construction of knowledge; the nature of writing in disciplinary and professional domains.
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