Browsing by Author "Bjork C"
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- Item1. Introduction(Pod Uni podcast, 2021-03-01) Bjork CProducer-host Dr Collin Bjork introduces you to Pod Uni - the podcast about podcasting. Learn how to make your own podcast and how to think critically about the podcasts that we listen to.
- Item2. Karakia(Pod Uni podcast, 2021-03-01) Bjork CProducer-host Dr Collin Bjork recites this Māori karakia and explains how it connects to notions of writing that are important for podcasting.
- Item3. Mics & Sounds(Pod Uni podcast, 2021-03-01) Bjork CProducer-host Dr Collin Bjork introduces you to 3 types of microphones you might use (shotgun, cardioid, and omnidirectional) and 3 types of nonhuman sounds you might gather in the field (room tones, ambient sounds, and characteristic sound effects).
- Item4. Interviewing(Pod Uni podcast, 2021-03-01) Bjork CProducer-host Dr Collin Bjork introduces you to the art of interviewing. We discuss how to select good locations for conducting interviews and what to do before, during, and after the interview itself. We also talk about the “hunter” and “farmer” methods of interviewing. And we give a shoutout to Studs Terkel!
- Item5. Narration(Pod Uni podcast, 2021-03-01) Bjork CProducer-host Dr Collin Bjork introduces you to two key aspects of podcast narration: writing for audio and vocal delivery. We open by talking about how your language as the host/narrator is linked to your relationship with your audience, topic, and interviewees. In the middle, we’ve got lots of tips and tricks. And we conclude by emphasizing the significance of using your own voice and language rather than trying to mimic someone else’s.
- Item6. Post-Production(Pod Uni podcast, 2021-03-01) Bjork CProducer-host Dr Collin Bjork offers a broad overview of important things to consider after you’ve finished recording audio for your podcast. These include: editing software, hosting platforms, podcatchers, promoting your podcast, and making money from your podcast. (Spoiler alert: it’s really difficult to make $$$ podcasting!)
- ItemA scholarly dialogue: writing scholarship, authorship, academic integrity and the challenges of AI(Taylor and Francis Group, 2024-03-25) Wise B; Emerson L; Van Luyn A; Dyson B; Bjork C; Thomas SEConcerns about the role of technology and the quality of student writing in higher education are not new. Historically, writing scholars have been at the forefront of initiatives that scrutinise and integrate new technologies in higher education. This article contends that writing scholars are again uniquely equipped to assist students, teachers in all disciplines, and institutions of higher education in navigating the challenges created by the public availability of generative artificial intelligence (AI). Adopting a dialogical approach, the article brings together six scholars from diverse disciplinary backgrounds within the broad umbrella of writing studies. Through the lens of writing scholarship, this chorus of critical voices illuminates the important questions posed by, and possible responses to, AI in higher education. Although AI complicates key issues in higher education such as academic integrity, assessment, and authorship, writing scholarship provides an essential framework for educators to respond to these challenges. Collectively, these scholars map the history of writing scholars’ responses to technological change in higher education and suggest how writing scholars can contribute to the debates and discussions concerning the impact of AI on higher education.
- ItemBraiding Time: Sami Temporalities for Indigenous Justice(Taylor and Francis Group LLC, 2021-07-12) Buhre F; Bjork CIn Indigenous/settler relations, temporal rhetoric functions as an essential tool for both subjugation and resistance. Much scholarship on these temporalities focuses on Turtle Island and is thus implicitly shaped by a seminal historical event: the arrival of European colonizers. We extend this research by turning to Sweden, where the Indigenous Sami and the Scandinavians, who would later become their colonizers, have a long history of continuous interaction. We analyze a pamphlet written by Elsa Laula, the leader of the Sami civil rights movement in early twentieth-century Sweden, as well as Swedish policies and press documents from the time. While the settler Swedes employ similar techniques of temporal othering and erasure as colonizers on Turtle Island, Laula’s rhetoric differs subtly. Her rhetoric enacts resistance by highlighting how Sami temporalities are braided with Swedish temporalities, a rhetorical move that echoes their intertwined histories.
- ItemDesign Rhetoric with Anneli Bowie (South Africa)(Global Rhetorics Podcast, 2020-12-13) Bjork C; Quintero J; Bowie AProducer-hosts Dr Collin Bjork and Jose Quintero interview Dr Anneli Bowie. This episode features an interview with Dr. Anneli Bowie, a scholar at the University of Johannesburg in South Africa. She discusses her research at the intersection of design and rhetoric. She also describes her time as an Erasmus Mundus scholar in Sweden, her service learning pedagogy, and her latest research about the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
- ItemFrom Sweden to the World with Frida Buhre and Eric Bengtson (Sweden part 2)(Global Rhetorics podcast, 2020-07-09) Bjork C; Quintero J; Buhre F; Bengtson EProducer-hosts Dr Collin Bjork and Jose Quintero host the second of a two-part interview with Dr. Frida Buhre and Dr. Erik Bengtson, co-founders of the International Rhetoric Workshop (IRW). In this episode, they tell us about the role of rhetoric at large in Sweden, including a popular game show that’s all about rhetoric. They also discuss the origins of the IRW as well as the opportunities and challenges of doing rhetoric on a global scale.
- Item‘Listening closely’ to mediated intimacies and podcast intimacies in Song Exploder(1/08/2023) Clarke K; Bjork CIntimacy is an important and growing concept in both media studies and podcast studies. But research regarding intimacies in both disciplines has yet to fully account for the connection between sound and normativity, which is essential to podcasting and important to mediated intimacies more broadly. In this article, we mobilise scholarship from these two fields to analyse the award-winning music podcast Song Exploder. Our study highlights that attending to intimacies in podcasting involves both analysing how the story structure aligns with social norms and listening critically to the ways the sound design and audio editing complements and complicates these intimate stories. We contend that identifying the intersection of sound and normativity in this podcast contributes to understanding the cultural work of podcasting and underscores the key role of sound in mediated intimacies.
- ItemResisting Temporal Regimes, Imagining Just Temporalities(Taylor and Francis Group LLC, 2021-07-12) Bjork C; Buhre F
- ItemThe Podcaster as an Agent of Social ChangeBjork C; Choong P
- ItemTime & Truth with Frida Buhre and Eric Bengtson (Sweden)(Global Rhetorics podcast, 2020-05-22) Bjork C; Quintero J; Buhre F; Bengtson EProducer-hosts Dr Collin Bjork and Jose Quintero host the first of a two-part interview with Dr. Frida Buhre and Dr. Erik Bengtson, both scholars at Uppsala University in Sweden. They tackle rhetoric’s relationship with two big ideas: time and truth. They also discuss the next generation of rhetorical scholarship in Sweden.
- ItemWhen All You See Is White - Kefaya Diab (Jordan & Tunisia)(Global Rhetorics podcast, 2020-08-24) Bjork C; Quintero J; Diab KProducer-hosts Dr Collin Bjork and Jose Quintero interview Dr. Kefaya Diab, a Jordanian scholar of Palestinian origin who is postdoctoral fellow at Indiana University in the United States. She discusses her research about the role of affect in activist work–a phenomenon she terms “a sense of agency”–and provides examples from the Tunisian Arab Spring and from academia itself.