Christina Haas

Featured Link

Christina Haas, Ph.D. Rhetoric (Carnegie Mellon)
Associate Professor

chaas at kent.edu

Areas of Interest

Literacy, Technology Studies, Process Research, Writing Theory

Selected Recent Publications

“Composing in Technological Contexts: A Study of Note-Making.” Written Communication 6 (1990): 512-47.

“Revising On-Line: Computer Technologies and the Revising Process.”With C. Hill and D. Wallace. Computers and Composition 9 (1991): 83-109.

“Planning in Writing: The Cognition of a Constructive Process.” With L. Flower, K. Schriver, and J. R. Hayes. In The Rhetoric of Doing: Essays in Honor of James L. Kinneavy. Ed. S. Witte, N. Nakadate, and R. D. Cherry. Carbondale IL: Southern Illinois UP, 1992. 181-243.

“Shared Information: Some Observations of Communication in Japanese Technical Settings. ”With J. Funk. In Reading Empirical Research Studies: The Rhetoric of Research. Ed. J. R. Hayes, R. E. Young, et al. Mahweh NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1992. 139-54.

“Beyond ‘Just the Facts’: Reading and Writing as Rhetorical Action.” In Hearing Ourselves Think: Cognitive Research in the College Writing Classroom. Ed. A. Penrose and B. Sitko. New York: Oxford UP, 1993. 19-32.

“Writing the Technology That Writes Us.” With C. Neuwirth. In Literacy and Computers. Ed. C. Selfe and S. Hilligoss. New York: Modern Language Association, 1994. 319-35.

“Learning To Read Biology: One Student’s Rhetorical Development in College.” Written Communication 11 (1994): 43-84.

Writing Technology: Studies on the Materiality of Literacy. Mahweh NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1996.

Educated in the USA: Readings on the Problems and Promise of Education. Ed. with J. Nelson and S. Greene. Dubuque: Kendall Hunt, 1997.

"Materializing Public and Private: The Spatialization of Conceptual Categories in Discourses of Abortion.” In Material Rhetorics. Ed. J. Selzer and S. Crowley. Madison: U Wisconsin P, 1999. 218-38.

“On the Relationship of Old and New Technologies.” Computers and Composition 16 (1999): 209-28.

“Rhetorical Reading Strategies and the Construction of Meaning.” With L. Flower. In On Writing Research: CCCC Braddock Essays, 1975-1998. Ed. L. Ede. New York: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 1999. 242-59.

“‘People Do What They Know’: Some Accounts of Participation in Project UNLOC.” With K. Weiss. Works and Days 17/19 (1999-2000): 511-35.

“ITEXT” Future Directions for Research on the Relationship between Information Technology and Writing.” With C. Geisler, C. Bazerman, S. Doheny-Farina, L. Gurak, D. Kaufer, A. Lunsford, and C. Miller. Journal of Business and Technical Communication 15 (2001): 269-308.

“Writing as Embodied Practice: The Case of Engineering Standards.” With S. Witte. Journal of Business and Technical Communication 15 (2001): 413-57.  

 
 

This page was last modified on November 1, 2006