Jen Wingard
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Editor. Peitho: Journal of the Coalition of Women Scholars in the History of Rhetoric and Composition.
http://peitho.cwshrc.org. (March 2016-Present)
• 19.1 Fall/Winter (December 2016)
• 19.2 Spring/Summer (March 2017)
• 20.1 Fall/Winter (October 2017)
• 20.2 Spring/Summer (April 2018)
Managing Editor. “Cultural Studies/Pedagogy/Activism Series.” Lexington Books. Lantham, MD.
(2015-Present)
Branded Bodies, Rhetoric, and the Neoliberal Nation- State. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2013. Second edition printed February 2015.
Review. Rhetoric Society Quarterly 44.2 (April 2014). 197-9.
“Assembling Houston: Writing and Teaching the Neoliberal City.” Special Cluster on Transnationalism
and Rhetoric. JAC: A Journal of Rhetoric, Culture, and Politics 33.3-4: (Summer 2014). 553-83.
“#houstonstrong: Resisting and Reifying the Neoliberal Public.” Communication in the Public.
Forthcoming Fall 2018.
“Rotten to the Core: Writing Texas as a State of Exception.” Rhetoric Society Quarterly (under review).
“Some of the People, All of the Time: Trump’s Selective Inclusion.” Conversation and Commentary on
Gender and Citizenship.” Women’s Studies in Communication 40.4 (2017): 330-333.
“Toward a Cogent Analysis of Power: Transnational Rhetorical Studies.” with Rebecca Dingo and Rachel
Riedner. Special Cluster on Transnationalism and Rhetoric. JAC: A Journal of Rhetoric, Culture, and Politics 33.3-4: (Summer 2014). 517-28.
“Toward a Critical Transnational Feminist Rhetorical Methodology.” with Rebecca Dingo and
Rachel Riedner. Peitho: The Journal of Feminist Scholars in the History of Rhetoric and
Composition 20.2 (Spring/Summer 2018).
“Branding Citizens: Assembling the Logic(s) of “One Bad Apple.” Rhetoric and Neoliberalism. Ed. Kim
H. Nguyen. London: Palgrave, 2016. 148-73.
Contributor. Interrupting Heteronormativity: Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Pedagogy and
Responsible Teaching at Syracuse University. Kathleen Farrell, Nisha Gupta, Mary Queen, eds.
Syracuse, NY: The Graduate School of Syracuse University, 2004.
“Disposable Drudgery: Outsourcing Goes to College.” with Rebecca Dingo and Rachel Riedner in
Transnational Writing Program Administration. Ed. David Martins. Ogden, UT: Utah State P, 2015. 265-88.
“(Re)producing Globalization: The Laboring Body in Maria Full of Grace.” Screening Cinema:
Motherhood in Contemporary World Cinemas. Ed. Asma Sayed. Toronto, ON: Demeter Press, 2016. 91-107.
“Rhetorical Assemblages: Scales of Neoliberal Ideology.” Capital at the Brink: Overcoming the
Destructive Legacies of Neoliberalism, Eds. Jeffery Di Leo and Uppender Mehan. Ann Arbor, MI: Open Humanities Press, 2014. 101-18.
“Trump’s not just one Bad Apple: He’s a Part of a Spoiled Bunch.” What Rhetoric Can Teach Us About
Donald Trump. Ed. Ryan Skinnell. London: Imprint Academic, 2018.
“Chelsea and Ivanka: A Tale of Two Bettys.” Gray Matter: The Houston Chronicle. 10 May 2017.
“Childs Play: Team Trump Rewrites a Department of Energy Website for Kids.” Patrick. G. Lee.
ProPublica and The Atlantic. 18 February 2017. (http://indepthnh.org/2017/02/18/childs-play- team-trump-rewrites-a-department-of-energy-website-for-kids/)
“Donald Trump says ‘America First’ like Isolationists before World War II.” Rick Hampson. USA
Today. 11 April 2016. (http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2016/04/10/donald-...)
“Feminist Networks, Feminist Assemblages, and Feminist Scales: Half the Sky is Only Half the Story”
with Rebecca Dingo and Rachel Riedner, Women in and Beyond the Global, Nov 2010. (http://www.womeninandbeyond.org/?p=721)
“Harvey’s Toxic Aftermath in Houston: A Catastrophic Neoliberal Legacy.” Against the Current 192
January 2018. (https://www.solidarity-us.org/atc/current)
“The Hit Documentary Blackfish has a Message as Dubious as its Methods.” with Michael Sicinski. The
Nashville Scene. 8 August 2013. (http://www.nashvillescene.com/arts- culture/film/article/13049413/the-hit-documentary-blackfish-has-a-message-as-dubious-as-its- methods)
“Interview.” Three Interviews: CCCC 2011, All Our Relations. Sara Moon. April 2011.
(http://cccc2011.jimdo.com/interviews-with-presenters/) and (http://www.pearsonhighered.com/cccc2011_emergingpedagogies/).
“Just How Unique is the Political Rhetoric of the Donald Trump Era?” Janell Ross. The Washington
Post. 7 December 2015. (https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2015/12/07/is-our-out-of-...)
“Republicans and Dems Fight Over Appropriate Response to Orlando Shooting.” Miranda Green.
DecodeDC. 13 June 2016. (http://www.decodedc.com/republicans-dems-fight-appropriate-response-orla...)
“The Man Without a Plan: Trump’s “Softening” Rhetoric.” Women in and Beyond the Global.
17 November 2016. (http://www.womeninandbeyond.org/?p=20659)
“What Trump’s Rhetoric Says about His Leadership.” Fortune.com. 17 November 2016.
(http://fortune.com/2016/11/17/donald-trump-rhetoric-leadership/)
“Why the Words We Use After a Tragedy Matter.” Alexandra Hart and Rhonda Fanning. Texas
Standard. 14 June 2016. (http://tpr.org/post/why-words-we-use-after-tragedy-matter#stream/0)
Luster, Alex. Stick ‘Em Up. (film). Reflections: A Journal of Public Rhetoric, Civic Writing, and Service
Learning 12.1: (Fall 2012).
Has studied at
- Syracuse University, earning a(n) PhD in 2008.
Has been mentored by ("Ancestors")
- Eileen Schell, as dissertation chair
- Gwendolyn D. Pough , as a non-chair member of the dissertation committee
- Collin Brooke, as a non-chair member of the dissertation committee
- Rebecca Moore Howard, as a professor (graduate)
- Margaret Himley, as dissertation chair
- Lois Agnew, as a professor (graduate)
- Steve Parks, as a professor (graduate)
Has worked at
Has mentored ("Descendants")
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