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	<title>Articles&gt;Rhetoric&gt;Correspondence&gt;Genre</title>	<link>http://tc.eserver.org/dir/Articles/Rhetoric/Correspondence/Genre</link>
	<description>A listing of the most recently indexed works about Articles and Rhetoric and Correspondence and Genre in the field of technical communication.</description>
	<language>en-us</language>
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		<title>Articles&gt;Rhetoric&gt;Correspondence&gt;Genre</title>
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		<title>Letters and the Social Grounding of Differentiated Genres</title>
		<link>http://tc.eserver.org/14068.html</link>
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		<description>Several times in my research over the years, I have noticed letters playing a role in the emergence of distinctive genres: the early scientific article emerging from the correspondence of Hans Oldenburg, the first editor of the Philosophic Transactions of the Royal Society; the patent, originally known as letters patent; stockholders&apos; reports evolving from letters to stockholders; and internal corporate reporting and record forms regularizing internal corporate correspondence.  was not the first to notice any of these; however, in putting the four cases together, it struck me that these may be part of a more general pattern. As I pursued the thought that letters might have a special role in genre formation, many other examples of genres with strong connections to correspondence came to my attention, including newspapers and other periodicals, financial instruments such as bills of exchange and letters of credit, books of the New Testament, papal encyclicals, and novels. The letter, in its directness of communication between two parties within a specific relationship in specific circumstances (all of which could be commented on directly), seemed to provide a flexible medium out of which many functions, relationships, and institutional practices might develop--making new uses socially intelligible at the same time as allowing the form of the communication to develop in new directions.</description>
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