Approaches

As we've suggested, Inventio authors can document the process of creating a webtext through individual production choices and through editorial feedback. Another approach to Inventio is through key topics in new media scholarship, several of which we discuss below. An Inventio author might decide to focus on one of these (or other) issues as it has come into play in the process of creating and publishing a webtext.

Collaboration

Because of all that's involved in producing digital scholarship, authors of webtexts often work collaboratively. The nature and process of this collaboration could be profitably explored in Inventio.

For instance, "Decentered, Disconnected, and Digitized," authored by Beth Brunk-Chavez and Shawn Miller and published in Kairos 11.2, includes in the webtext itself a range of related materials that underscore the collaborative nature of its production: discussions about the initial conference proposal out of which the webtext developed; email correspondence between the authors; comments from the Kairos' editorial board reviewers.

This kind of contextualizing and scaffolding can help us learn more about how collaboration works in new media scholarship.

Tools

With a bewildering and seemingly ceaseless flood of new software, media formats, and other production technologies hitting the market every day, the choices for composing new media scholarship become ever more complex.

Inventio authors can discuss the use of specific tools and technologies, media and file formats, providing insight into the rewards and drawbacks that emerged in the process of creating a webtext. In other words, authors can consider how a particular tool or technology, in light of its price, features, availability, and file format, contributes to or limits rhetorical action within a work of digital scholarship.

Daniel Anderson, for instance, provides a useful discussion of prosumer tools, even as he uses these tools--digital cameras and digital video editing applications--to produce his webtext, "Prosumer Approaches to New Media Composition."

Technological/Rhetorical Causes

As we and our students use the Web and digital technologies for our writing, issues of access, sustainability, and ownership become increasingly important. For many scholars, these technological and rhetorical causes have become critical to their teaching and research. Of particular interest is the use of open source file formats, production technologies, and languages--and how those sometimes must be negotiated against the features and capabilities of proprietary software.

It's also the case that a webtext advance or enact a certain rhetorical cause in the sense that it pushes the limits of scholarly practice and pushes readers into new kinds of interpretive practices. We're thinking here of webtexts like Adrian Miles's "Violence of Text" and Anne Wysocki's "A Bookling Monument." Works like these promote a different way of thinking about the role of aesthetics and interactivity in scholarly writing.

In the process of creating a webtext, one of these causes might emerge as critical. Authors can use Inventio as a venue for meta-commentary on the issue, highlighting the particular strategies and resources he or she used in the webtext.

The Before and After of One Webtext

We're sure that Inventio will evolve as researchers in our field experiment with different kinds of multimedia scholarship and as technology changes to allow for new possibilities in digital communication and interaction. The model we're proposing at the outset involves working with Inventio authors as they produce a webtext and then present it in a way that integrates materials that discuss its production and comment on its meaning.

Let me (that is, Madeleine) use my own Kairos webtext as an example of what Inventio might accomplish.

New-fangled Clustering?

This little Flash file lets you explore the intersections of some key terms in new media scholarship by moving text and randomly sized circles on the screen. How is new media scholarship related to tenure and promotion? Where do technology and publication intersect with rhetoric? Perhaps this little interactive piece that Madeleine designed and programmed can stimulate your thoughts on these issues.

The Contexts of Invention

Underlying Inventio is our belief that new media offer new ways for thinking about invention. As Janice Lauer demonstrates in Invention in Rhetoric and Composition, theoretical and pedagogical approaches to invention have been subject to historical shifts and to debates about the nature, purpose, and underlying epistemology of this rhetorical canon. New media scholarship provides yet another new context for invention, and one in which audience, purpose, and meaning-making strategies are being re-envisioned.