|
Jenny Rice is an Associate Professor in the Department of Writing, Rhetoric, and Digital Studies at the University of Kentucky. Her research focuses on public rhetorics as they emerge at the fringes of ordinary discourse. Recently, she has written about conspiracy theory, pseudoscience, and other kinds of extraordinary claims. Her first book, Distant Publics: Developmental Rhetoric and the Subject of Crisis, was published by the University of Pittsburg Press is 2012. Along with Casey Boyle, she recently edited Inventing Place: Writing Lone Star Rhetorics (2018, Southern Illinois Press). Her forthcoming book is tentatively titled Awful Archives: Evidence, Anomaly, and the Rhetoric of Extraordinary Claims. Rice's work has appeared in such publications as Rhetoric Society Quarterly, College English, College Composition and Communication, and Quarterly Journal of Speech.
Jenny lives in Lexington, Kentucky with her family. She teaches courses in fringe rhetorics, bullshit, argumentation, and legal writing. In her spare time, she runs the Horse's Mouth Storytelling Night, which is a monthly event featuring true stories told by Lexingtonians.
More information about Dr. Rice can be found here.
Jenny lives in Lexington, Kentucky with her family. She teaches courses in fringe rhetorics, bullshit, argumentation, and legal writing. In her spare time, she runs the Horse's Mouth Storytelling Night, which is a monthly event featuring true stories told by Lexingtonians.
More information about Dr. Rice can be found here.