MeatJournal.com 2.2: Main
In the rush toward digital space, what often gets forgotten is the "meat," the living, breathing, paying-bills bodies who write.

ISSN 1549-4454
VOLUME 2.2
SPRING/SUMMER 2007

MEATJOURNAL is a peer-reviewed, (very) independent, (sometimes/mostly) quarterly journal. COPYRIGHT: MeatJournal.com loves the free exchange of information, so we encourage you to distribute copies of our articles for research or educational purposes free of charge and without permission (as long as you cite us!). Since we use images only after getting our own limited-use permission, however, we can't give you permission to use individual author's works (contact the authors themselves for permission). We do expressly prohibit any commercial use of our website and/or our articles without our written (yes, meat-text) consent.

Counter

Marco Delgado, "Hannah" (2006)

The Material Matters: Rhetoric and Political Economy || Victor Villanueva

Let me put it this way. The role of rhetoric, according to Burke, is the demystification of the ideological. The role of political economy is the demystification of relations tied to the economic. If we’re to understand where we are and what is happening to us—and maybe even to affect it—we need the tools provided by both. But we think of “economics” as a numbers game. And we humanities types tend to fear numbers...

The Rhetorician's Tea || Marsha Lee Schuh

... we have asked a few of these "one-eyed men and women" to tea, and their dialogue today may help us come to some conclusions about the question that has plagued us: what is rhetoric? Let us listen in on their polite conversation ...

Is there a Queer Digital Rhetoric? || Jonathan Alexander

How might multimodality figure queerness? Even more specifically, how might multimodality embody the queer in dynamic dimensions? We can read, see, hear, perhaps even touch the queer—and have it touch us through multiple senses, potentially even interactively.

Miscellany || Poetry, flash fiction, suspicious news, and more.

Laura Madeline Wiseman, "On Another Death"; more ...