ABSTRACT

This book analyzes the role that human forms play in visualizing practical information and in making that information understandable, accessible, inviting, and meaningful to readers—in short, "humanizing" it.

Although human figures have long been deployed in practical communication, their uses in this context have received little systematic analysis. Drawing on rhetorical theory, art history, design studies, and historical and contemporary examples, the book explores the many rhetorical purposes that human forms play in functional pictures, including empowering readers, narrating processes, invoking social and cultural identities, fostering pathos appeals, and visualizing data.

The book is aimed at scholars, teachers, and practitioners in business, technical, and professional communication as well as an interdisciplinary audience in rhetoric, art and design, journalism, engineering, marketing, science, and history.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|45 pages

Foundations for Picturing Human Forms

Conventions, Historical Context, and the Confluence of the Fine and Applied Arts

chapter 2|40 pages

Agency and Empowerment

Figures in Action, Both Individual and Collective

chapter 3|34 pages

Narratives with Figures

Temporal Dimensions of Designing Information with Human Forms

chapter 4|44 pages

Figure Design in Cultural Context

Transformations in Visualizing Identity with Human Forms

chapter 5|42 pages

Expressing Emotion with Figures

A Rhetorical Spectrum of Pathos Appeals from Happiness to Distress

chapter 6|44 pages

Humanizing Data Design

The Rhetorical and Perceptual Dynamics of Visualizing Data with Human Forms

chapter |5 pages

Epilogue