ABSTRACT

This collection calls for improved technical communication for the public through an embodied, situated understanding of environmental risk that promotes social justice.

In addition to providing a series of chapters about recent issues on risk communication, this volume offers a diverse look at methodological practices for students, researchers, and practitioners looking to address embodied aspects of crisis and risk that incorporate UX, storytelling, and dynamic text. It includes chapters that bring embodiment to the forefront of risk communication, highlighting the cycle of content creation, dissemination, public response and decision making, continuing iterations of educational efforts, and recovery, toward increasing adaptive capacity as a whole. In addition, this work directs necessary attention to overcoming perceptual difficulties, memory lapses, definitional differences, access issues, and pedagogical problems in the communication of risks to diverse publics.

This collection is essential reading for scholars and can be used as a supplemental text or casebook for courses in technical communication, environmental communication, risk and crisis communication, science communication, and public health.

chapter 1|16 pages

Introduction

part I|79 pages

Representations of the Human Body

chapter 2|21 pages

Toward an Audience-Centered Approach

Rhetorical Analysis of University Crisis Communication Emails

chapter 4|19 pages

Judging the Unprecedented

Common Sense and Risk During COVID-19

part III|94 pages

Representations of Human Beings and Earth Together

chapter 10|22 pages

Reconciling Gestures

Overcoming Obstacles to Transcultural Risk Communication in South African Coal Mines

chapter 11|17 pages

Reanimating Risks

Forest Giants and their Role in Technical Communication

chapter 12|17 pages

Technical Writing as Embodiment

iFixit

chapter 13|20 pages

Changing Places

Understanding Climate Change Risk Communication and Comprehension through Socially Constructed Features of Place