Affiliation:
1. University of North Texas
Abstract
This article employs neoclassic and feminist rhetorical perspectives to investigate the persuasive strategies in two scientific articles written in the late nineteenth century by Ellen Swallow Richards. One of the first credentialed female scientists in the United States, Richards wrote about nutrition research she conducted in her experimental food laboratory, the New England Kitchen, to persuade two separate audiences—one predominantly male and the other predominantly female—of the scientific value of nutrition studies. The article adds complexity to our historical underpinnings by querying how gender—of the writer, of the audiences, and in the nature of the topic—contributed to the writer’s rhetorical burdens and provides evidence that women historically have been active knowers and users of science and technology.
Subject
General Business, Management and Accounting,Communication,Business and International Management
Reference36 articles.
1. Abel, Mary H. “Practical Experiments for the Promotion of Home Economics: The New England Kitchen.” Journal of Home Economics 3 (1911): 362-66.
2. Atkinson, Edward. “The Institute and the Study of the Prevention of Loss by Fire.” Technology Quarterly (1895): 380-83.
3. Barrows, Anna. “Home Correspondence—Newspaper Cookery.” Good Housekeeping 14.4 (1892): 187.
4. Feminist theory, audience analysis, and verbal and visual representation in a technical communication writing task
5. The sound of women's voices
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