Browsing by Author "Quintero J"
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- 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.
- 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.