
Women and Feminism in Technical Communication--An Update
http://baywood.metapress.com/link.asp?target=contribution&id=4JUC8RAC73H6N57U
access restricted (by the publisher) to members/subscribers/customers only
peer-reviewed
Thompson, Isabelle and Elizabeth Overman Smith
Journal of Technical Writing and Communication
2006
Abstract:
The purposes of this study are to determine the current status of scholarship published in five major technical communication journals about women and feminism and to identify changes in focus that may have occurred over the last five years. We begin with a discussion of the frequency of publication for articles whose titles have keywords relating to women and feminism. After identifying 21 articles, we consider the thematic patterns in the narrowed corpus. We conclude that scholarly publication about women and feminism in technical communication has moved from a moderate or radical concern for inclusion to a postmodern concern for critique of visual, verbal, and mechanical "technologies," which previously were not considered political.