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Content management and the production of genres

Published: 22 October 2007 Publication History

Abstract

In this paper, I suggest that granularized content management introduces as-yet-unexplored issues to genres of technical communication. I argue that content management, while it can, as advertised, free content and make it easy to reuse that content in multiple genres, that flexibility can create new problems for genres and genre systems, leading to problematic reuse, inflexible genre systems, rigid and proprietary genres, and uncritical internationalization.

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Cited By

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  • (2018)Work Motivation in the Rhetoric of Component Content ManagementJournal of Business and Technical Communication10.1177/105065191876203032:3(308-346)Online publication date: 7-Mar-2018
  • (2018)Negotiating Multilingual Quality in Component Content-Management EnvironmentsIEEE Transactions on Professional Communication10.1109/TPC.2017.274727861:1(77-100)Online publication date: Mar-2018
  • (2018)Towards a business process-oriented approach to enterprise content managementInformation Systems and e-Business Management10.1007/s10257-009-0124-69:4(475-496)Online publication date: 13-Dec-2018
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    cover image ACM Conferences
    SIGDOC '07: Proceedings of the 25th annual ACM international conference on Design of communication
    October 2007
    286 pages
    ISBN:9781595935885
    DOI:10.1145/1297144
    • General Chair:
    • David Novick,
    • Program Chair:
    • Clay Spinuzzi
    Permission to make digital or hard copies of all or part of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for components of this work owned by others than ACM must be honored. Abstracting with credit is permitted. To copy otherwise, or republish, to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and/or a fee. Request permissions from [email protected]

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    Publication History

    Published: 22 October 2007

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    Author Tags

    1. content management
    2. genre theory
    3. xml

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    Cited By

    View all
    • (2018)Work Motivation in the Rhetoric of Component Content ManagementJournal of Business and Technical Communication10.1177/105065191876203032:3(308-346)Online publication date: 7-Mar-2018
    • (2018)Negotiating Multilingual Quality in Component Content-Management EnvironmentsIEEE Transactions on Professional Communication10.1109/TPC.2017.274727861:1(77-100)Online publication date: Mar-2018
    • (2018)Towards a business process-oriented approach to enterprise content managementInformation Systems and e-Business Management10.1007/s10257-009-0124-69:4(475-496)Online publication date: 13-Dec-2018
    • (2017)A Systematic Literature Review of Changes in Roles/Skills in Component Content Management Environments and Implications for EducationTechnical Communication Quarterly10.1080/10572252.2017.128795826:2(173-200)Online publication date: 8-Feb-2017
    • (2015)Remaking the Pitch: Reuse Strategies in Entrepreneurs’ Pitch DecksIEEE Transactions on Professional Communication10.1109/TPC.2015.241527758:1(45-68)Online publication date: Mar-2015
    • (2015)Component content management in multiple languages: A conceptual controversy2015 IEEE International Professional Communication Conference (IPCC)10.1109/IPCC.2015.7235805(1-4)Online publication date: Jul-2015
    • (2014)The Complexities of Globalized Content ManagementJournal of Business and Technical Communication10.1177/105065191456247229:2(221-235)Online publication date: 9-Dec-2014
    • (2014)Component Content Management and Quality of Information Products for Global Audiences: An Integrative Literature ReviewIEEE Transactions on Professional Communication10.1109/TPC.2014.237391157:4(325-339)Online publication date: Dec-2014
    • (2009)Design for Effective Support of User Intentions in Information-Rich InteractionsJournal of Technical Writing and Communication10.2190/TW.39.2.d39:2(177-194)Online publication date: 10-Mar-2009
    • (2009)Starter EcologiesJournal of Business and Technical Communication10.1177/105065190933314123:3(251-262)Online publication date: 8-Jun-2009
    • Show More Cited By

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