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Glitching Out with Casey Boyle

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Manage episode 119229511 series 72457
Content provided by Eric Detweiler. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Eric Detweiler or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

This episode of Rhetoricity features an interview with Casey Boyle, an assistant professor in the Department of Rhetoric and Writing at The University of Texas at Austin. Dr. Boyle’s work has appeared in such anthologies as Rhetoric and the Digital Humanities and Thinking with Bruno Latour in Rhetoric and Composition. He serves as assistant editor for Enculturation: A Journal of Writing, Rhetoric, and Culture and has forthcoming articles in both College English and Technical Communication Quarterly. At UT-Austin, Dr. Boyle teaches courses on writing with sound, digital rhetoric, and network theory. He is currently co-editing an anthology entitled Rhetoric, Through Everyday Things with Scot Barnett and working on a monograph entitled Rhetoric as a Posthuman Practice.

The starting point for this episode's conversation is "The Rhetorical Question Concerning Glitch," an article of Dr. Boyle's that appeared in the March 2015 issue of Computers and Composition. We beginning be discussing points of overlap between "glitch art" and rhetoric. From there, Dr. Boyle discusses how his work with glitch troubles the boundaries between "theory" and "practice" as well as so-called "creative" and "critical" rhetorical work. We wrap up by talking about another of his current projects: a series of interviews with humanities scholars about their failed projects.

This episode contains some glitched audio files, so there are a few moments of sudden volume change--not enough to damage listening ears, but enough that it seems worth a warning.

Specifically, this episode includes gliched clips from the following:

  • "The Tourist" - Radiohead
  • "The Tourist" - Sarah Jarosz
  • "The Tourist" - Flash Hawk Parlor Ensemble
  • "It just works. Seamlessly." (YouTube video uploaded by all about Steve Jobs.com)
  • "Search and Destroy" - Peaches
  • "Search and Destroy" - Iggy and the Stooges
  • Brazil (film)
  • Spartacus (film)
  • "Crystal Blue Persuasion" - Tommy James and the Shondells
  • "The Internet" (episode of the TV series Computer Chronicle)
  • freesound.org
  continue reading

53 episodes

Artwork

Glitching Out with Casey Boyle

Rhetoricity

63 subscribers

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Manage episode 119229511 series 72457
Content provided by Eric Detweiler. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Eric Detweiler or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

This episode of Rhetoricity features an interview with Casey Boyle, an assistant professor in the Department of Rhetoric and Writing at The University of Texas at Austin. Dr. Boyle’s work has appeared in such anthologies as Rhetoric and the Digital Humanities and Thinking with Bruno Latour in Rhetoric and Composition. He serves as assistant editor for Enculturation: A Journal of Writing, Rhetoric, and Culture and has forthcoming articles in both College English and Technical Communication Quarterly. At UT-Austin, Dr. Boyle teaches courses on writing with sound, digital rhetoric, and network theory. He is currently co-editing an anthology entitled Rhetoric, Through Everyday Things with Scot Barnett and working on a monograph entitled Rhetoric as a Posthuman Practice.

The starting point for this episode's conversation is "The Rhetorical Question Concerning Glitch," an article of Dr. Boyle's that appeared in the March 2015 issue of Computers and Composition. We beginning be discussing points of overlap between "glitch art" and rhetoric. From there, Dr. Boyle discusses how his work with glitch troubles the boundaries between "theory" and "practice" as well as so-called "creative" and "critical" rhetorical work. We wrap up by talking about another of his current projects: a series of interviews with humanities scholars about their failed projects.

This episode contains some glitched audio files, so there are a few moments of sudden volume change--not enough to damage listening ears, but enough that it seems worth a warning.

Specifically, this episode includes gliched clips from the following:

  • "The Tourist" - Radiohead
  • "The Tourist" - Sarah Jarosz
  • "The Tourist" - Flash Hawk Parlor Ensemble
  • "It just works. Seamlessly." (YouTube video uploaded by all about Steve Jobs.com)
  • "Search and Destroy" - Peaches
  • "Search and Destroy" - Iggy and the Stooges
  • Brazil (film)
  • Spartacus (film)
  • "Crystal Blue Persuasion" - Tommy James and the Shondells
  • "The Internet" (episode of the TV series Computer Chronicle)
  • freesound.org
  continue reading

53 episodes

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