Volume 26, Issue 3: Spring 2024

 

A print (etching and aquatint) showing an elf woman in a tree. She is nude and is using a long branch to point downward at a bear who is looking up at her. In the background are other leafy branches and a scenic cove. The print has a pink tint, and at the top left is the word Peitho. At the top right is written '26.3 Spring 2024.' Around the whole image is a black frame. The original art is by Max Klinger and is titled Bear and Elf (Bär und Elfe). It was created in 1881 and is in the National Gallery of Art’s public domain collection of images.

About this Issue

 PDF

Editor: Rebecca Dingo and Clancy Ratliff
Associate Editor: Jennifer Nish
Editorial Assistant: Stacie Klinowski and Rachel Smith
Web Coordinator: Hannah Taylor
Cover Art: a print (etching and aquatint) showing an elf woman in a tree. She is nude and is using a long branch to point downward at a bear who is looking up at her. In the background are other leafy branches and a scenic cove. The print has a pink tint, and at the top left is the word Peitho. At the top right is written “26.3 Spring 2024.” Around the whole image is a black frame. The original art is by Max Klinger and is titled Bear and Elf (Bär und Elfe). It was created in 1881 and is in the National Gallery of Art’s public domain collection of images. 

Introduction


Editors’ Introduction
Rebecca Dingo and Clancy Ratliff
Tags: protest, Gaza, methods, new materialism, transnational, digital media
DOI: 10.37514/PEI-J.2024.26.3.01

Articles


Marking the Boundaries of Care in/and Definitions of Refugee Medical Encounters
Mais T. Al-Khateeb
Tags: unexceptional logics of care, cultural interventions, colonialism of comparison, medical encounters, occlusion
DOI: 10.37514/PEI-J.2024.26.3.02

"It Helps Me Feel More Comfortable": Creating an Affective Public to Build Confidence on Instagram
Faith Kurtyka
Tags: Instagram, Social Media, Feminist Activism
DOI: 10.37514/PEI-J.2024.26.3.03

When Ethics Get in the Way: The Methodological Messiness of Analyzing #MeToo
Caroline Dadas
Tags: failure; intentionality; visualization; feminist methods; queer methodology; social network analysis
DOI: 10.37514/PEI-J.2024.26.3.04

Cluster Conversation


Cluster Introduction: Why Teach Feminist Rhetorical New Materialisms
Megan Poole
Tags: feminist science studies, new materialisms, rhetorical feminisms, pedagogy
DOI: 10.37514/PEI-J.2024.26.3.05

When The First Rhetoric You Hear is New Materialist
Jessica Julian and MarLee Yow
Tags: rhetorical new materialisms, Big Rhetoric, living thought, matter and meaning
DOI: 10.37514/PEI-J.2024.26.3.06

Defining the Rhetoric in Feminist Rhetorical New Materialisms
Catherine Schanie and Jessica Julian
Tags: rhetorical new materialisms, plant rhetoric, evolution, reciprocity, humility
DOI: 10.37514/PEI-J.2024.26.3.07

Rhetoric in a Dappled World
Kathleen Criner
Tags: rhetorical new materialisms, chaotic composing, feminist praxis, definition of man
DOI: 10.37514/PEI-J.2024.26.3.08

Book Reviews


Review of Writing For Love and Money: How Migration Drives Literacy Learning in Transnational Families
Nelesi Rodrigues
Tags: migration, literacy learning, transnational, methodology, writing remittances, ethnography
DOI: 10.37514/PEI-J.2024.26.3.09

Review of Constellating Home: Trans and Queer Asian American Rhetorics
Sumaiya Sarkar Sharmin
Tags: Homing, archive, queer, counternarrative, diasporic
DOI: 10.37514/PEI-J.2024.26.3.10

 

Share this Issue