Greetings! I wanted to pass on the announcement of a new list dedicated to exploring "digital rhetoric" -- what is it? How is it enacted? What is the relationship between digital rhetoric and classical rhetoric, digital rhetoric and visual rhetoric, digital rhetoric and digital literacy? Please consider joining the conversation if you are interested in questions like these. We're hoping for a broadly interdisciplinary group, and I'm particularly hopeful that folks on this list will be interested in signing up too. (And feel free to forward as appropriate, thanks!) Doug ANNOUNCING H-Digirhet: H-Net Network for Digital Rhetoric Member of: H-Net: Humanities and Social Sciences Online ABOUT H-Digirhet H-Digirhet provides an online discussion space for teachers, researchers, and scholars who are working at the intersections of writing, rhetoric, communication, and digital technologies, focusing on issues of digital composition, computer-mediated communication (CMC), digital literacy, information and communication technologies (ICTs), human-computer interaction (HCI) and digital rhetoric. Like all H-Net lists, H-Digirhet is moderated to edit out material that, in the editors' opinion, is not germane to the list, involves technical matters (such as subscription management requests), is inflammatory, or violates evolving, yet common, standards of Internet etiquette. H-Net's procedure for resolving disputes over list editorial practices is Article II, Section 2.20 of our bylaws, located at: http://www.h-net.org/about/by-laws.php H-Digirhet is currently edited by Douglas Eyman. Logs and more information can also be located at: http://www.h-net.org/~digirhet To join H-Digirhet, please send a message from the account where you wish to receive mail, to: listserv@h-net.msu.edu (with no signatures or styled text, word wrap off for long lines) and only this text: sub H-Digirhet firstname lastname, institution Example: sub H-Digirhet Leslie Jones, Pacific State U Alternatively, you may go to http://www.h-net.org/lists/subscribe.cgi to perform the same function as noted above. Follow the instructions you receive by return mail. If you have questions or experience difficulties in attempting to subscribe, please send a message to: help@mail.h-net.msu.edu H-Net is an international network of scholars in the humanities and social sciences that creates and coordinates electronic networks, using a variety of media, and with a common objective of advancing humanities and social science teaching and research. H-Net was created to provide a positive, supportive, equalitarian environment for the friendly exchange of ideas and scholarly resources, and is hosted by Michigan State University. For more information about H-Net, write to webstaff@mail.h-net.msu.edu, or point your web browser to: http://www.h-net.org