English 680V: Visual Rhetoric in a Technological Age (Purdue) - Rhetorics http://www.digitalparlor.org/sp07/blakesley7/taxonomy/term/60/0 en Visual Space and Access http://www.digitalparlor.org/sp07/blakesley7/node/353 <p>I'm working on a paper about snobbiness and cultural capital for Pat's Public Rhetoric class, which lead me to notice an interesting visual rhetoric of space in a book store this weekend. It was a fairly large store, plenty of different categorized sections. What was interesting was the placement of the Literature section. The store's check out counter was a big raised oppressive affair, truly signifying: you the customer can not come back here.</p> <p><a href="http://www.digitalparlor.org/sp07/blakesley7/node/353">read more</a></p> http://www.digitalparlor.org/sp07/blakesley7/node/353#comment Rhetorics Sun, 08 Apr 2007 10:35:36 -0400 mark p 353 at http://www.digitalparlor.org/sp07/blakesley7 Place of Visual Rhetoric http://www.digitalparlor.org/sp07/blakesley7/node/351 <p>In Randall Collins’ chapter “The Mutual Focus/Emotional-Entrainment Model,” he asserts that television is a combination of picture and sound, claiming that “the stronger sense of involvement, of being pulled into the action, is from the sound” (55). A burst of cheering will bring us back into the room to discover that the game is in its final minutes, runners are about to score, the team is making a drive, etc.</p> <p><a href="http://www.digitalparlor.org/sp07/blakesley7/node/351">read more</a></p> http://www.digitalparlor.org/sp07/blakesley7/node/351#comment Rhetorics Wed, 04 Apr 2007 01:08:59 -0400 Morgan S. 351 at http://www.digitalparlor.org/sp07/blakesley7