Into the Blogsphere: an online peer-reviewed collection of essays blog ::
I've just discovered this
fascinating project (I think it was only published a few days ago, I'll write more about it for sure when I have time!)
Table of Contents
Foreword
Power Surge: Writing-Rhetoric Studies, Blogs, and Embedded Whiteness
Kathleen Ethel Welch, University of Oklahoma
Introduction: Weblogs, Rhetoric, Community, and Culture
Laura Gurak, Smiljana Antonijevic, Laurie Johnson, Clancy Ratliff, and Jessica Reyman, University of Minnesota
Visual Blogs
Meredith Badger, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology
Blogs as Virtual Communities: Identifying a Sense of Community in the Julie/Julia Project
Anita Blanchard, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
The Spirit of Paulo Freire in Blogland: Struggling for a Knowledge-Log Revolution
Christine Boese, Independent researcher
Remediation, Genre, and Motivation: Key Concepts for Teaching with Weblogs
Kevin Brooks, Cindy Nichols, and Sybil Priebe, North Dakota State University
Culture Clash: Journalism and the Communal Ethos of the Blogosphere
Brian Carroll, Berry College
Promiscuous Fictions
Tyler Curtain, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Weblog Journalism: Between Infiltration and Integration
Jason Gallo, Northwestern University
Women and Children Last: The Discursive Construction of Weblogs
Susan C. Herring, Inna Kouper, Lois Ann Scheidt, and Elijah L. Wright, Indiana University at Bloomington
The Labyrinth Unbound: Weblogs as Literature
Steve Himmer, Emerson College
Battlecat Then, Battlecat Now: Temporal Shifts, Hyperlinking and Database Subjectivities
Kylie Jarrett, University of South Australia
Imagining the Blogosphere: An Introduction to the Imagined Community of Instant Publishing
Graham Lampa, Hamline University
Moving to the Public: Weblogs in the Writing Classroom
Charles Lowe, Purdue University, and Terra Williams, Arizona State University
Blogging as Social Action: A Genre Analysis of the Weblog
Carolyn Miller and Dawn Shepherd, North Carolina State University
Personal Publication and Public Attention
Torill Elvira Mortensen, Volda College
Weblogs and the Public Sphere
Andrew Ó Baoill, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Parody Blogging and the Call of the Real
Trish Roberts-Miller, University of Texas at Austin
Links, Lives, Logs: Presentation in the Dutch Blogosphere
Frank Schaap, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam School of Communications Research
Common Visual Design Elements of Weblogs
Lois Ann Scheidt and Elijah Wright, Indiana University at Bloomington
Formation of Norms in a Blog Community
Carolyn Wei, University of Washington