Workshop Leaders
Leading From Our Expertise: Writing Studies and Institutional AI Decision-Making
Co-Facilitators:
Crystal Fodrey, Haverford College
Kristi Girdharry, Babson College
Magdelyn Hammond Helwig, Furman University
Christopher Basgier, Auburn University
As colleges and universities rapidly develop policies and initiatives around generative AI, writing studies and WAC/WID expertise is often unevenly represented in institutional decision-making. This two-day symposium brings together WPAs, WAC/WID leaders, and faculty involved in campus AI efforts to examine how disciplinary knowledge about writing, learning, labor, and equity is shaping—or being sidelined in—these conversations. Through structured collaboration, participants will work collaboratively to document and analyze how writing studies knowledge circulates—or fails to circulate—within institutional AI conversations and developed shared frameworks for future leadership work. This will lay the groundwork for a collective publication focused on writing studies leadership in the age of AI.
Making Our Work Visible: Writing Center Administrators as Campus Leaders
Co-Facilitators:
Kem Roper, Athens State University
Wonderful Faison, Langston University
Candis Bond, Augusta University
Joy Bracewell, Georgia College and State University
Although Writing Center directors are leaders, they are rarely acknowledged as such--neither within nor outside of writing center discourse. This two-day symposium is designed to help attendees think through how to make the invisible work of writing center administrators (WCAs) more visible. These sessions will help WCAs and aspiring WCAs to:
(1) cultivate clear leadership identities that guide decision-making;
(2) externalize their emotional labor and develop strategies for obtaining institutional advocacy that prevent burnout;
(3) prioritize anti-racist practices that benefit all institutional stakeholders, and
(4) build compelling budget proposals that identify institutional priorities, align writing center outcomes with accreditation and retention metrics, and use qualitative and quantitative evidence to demonstrate unmet needs.
Attendees should leave with a clear sense of how their unique leadership skills can be applied to both personal and professional goals.
Rhetorics, Embodiments, Environments
Co-Facilitators:
Scot Barnett- University of Indiana-Bloomington
Nathaniel Rivers- Saint Louis University
This workshop invites participants to think rhetoric environmentally and, in particular, the forms rhetoric takes–and may take–in sensitizing us to climate change in distinctly embodied ways. Rather than develop a rhetoric of the environment, this workshop seeks to imagine what rhetoric is and what it may become as a matter of environmental concern–that is, as part of the very environments we seek to understand and protect.
The workshop will be a mix of seminar-style discussion and field work focused on the invention of new methods and modes for doing rhetoric in the midst of global environmental crises and mass extinctions. Our goal for the workshop is not simply to perform and master already existing methods for environmental rhetoric but to see how many methods we can invent over the course of our time together.
To this end, we will read and discuss works from both inside and outside of rhetorical studies, ranging across sociology, anthropology, and environmental biology. Potential authors may include Anne Berthoff, Bruno Latour, Stephen J. Gould & Elisabeth Vrba, Ursula K. LeGuin, Donna Haraway, Peter Sloterdijk, Erin Manning, Stacey Alaimo, Phaedra C. Pezzullo, Debra Hawhee, Megan Poole, Joshua Trey Barnett, Jennifer Clary-Lemon, and Noah Roderick.
Our field work will enable participants to experiment with various modes of composing sensitivities or “ecological feelings”: e.g., expository and fiction writing, encomia, photography, digital video, poetry, collage, drawing, and/or choreography/movement. Each field work outing will iterate existing or previous modes produced during the workshop in the hope of collectively building a novel repertoire of techniques for environmental rhetorics to come.
Engaging the Senses in Rhetorical History
Co-Facilitators:
Alex Mueller, University of Massachusetts-Boston
Megan Poole, University of Texas-Austin
Vessela Valiavitcharska- University of Maryland-College Park
Engaging in conversation. “Being there” with your subjects of study. Conveying a rich sensory experience through writing. This workshop examines how a focus on the senses achieves the kind of historical scholarship often associated with field or community-engaged research. Participants interested in rhetorical history and/or sensory rhetoric will consider: How have the senses shaped notions of style? How have style and aesthetic regimes shaped the senses? Why do theories of vision feature so prominently in histories of rhetoric? How does the dust and ephemera of archives bring history into presence?
Working together in structured, small-group collaborations, participants will apply each session’s theories, methods, or frameworks to their current works-in-progress. Session themes include 1) Education of the Senses; 2) Rhythm & Sound; 3) Proximity & Sight; 4) Agency & Touch.
Readings and topics may feature, but are not limited to, the colors of rhetoric, the art of listening, ancient theories of vision, arts of poetry, eastern medieval public ritual, and the materiality of archival records. At the close of the symposium, participants will be invited to share back their project ideas to a larger audience of rhetoric scholars that includes workshop participants from the “Pan-Historiography” workshop.
Panhistoriography Revisited: The Act and Art of Writing Capacious Histories
Co-Facilitators:
Christa J. Olson, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Debra Hawhee, Penn State University
This workshop takes as its starting point the book chapter, “Panhistoriography: The Challenges of Writing History across Time and Space” (published in Theorizing Histories of Rhetoric, ed. M. Bailiff) in which the authors theorize the usefulness of writing sprawling, capacious histories. In the dozen plus years since that chapter appeared, rhetoric scholars have enacted, elaborated, and extended panhistoriography.
Many of these histories grapple with contemporary crises, demonstrating the usefulness of histories that span right to the present moment and beyond. Indeed, Alex Mueller, at the outset of his own capacious history, calls for the production of histories that refuse “to accept the past as so far gone and to accept the future as inevitable.” In that spirit, this workshop will investigate not only what has become possible via panhistoriographic methods to date but also what new pathways might be created now. In doing so, this workshop continues discussions begun at the U of L’s spring (2026) symposium on Pan-history. Participants will burrow into recent panhistories of rhetoric and then consider further possibilities for panhistoriographic encounters with archives, for writing decolonized histories, and for cultivating histories across not only time and space but also medium and mode.
Workshop sessions will include:
1. Overview: panhistoriography enacted recent pan-histories
2. Archival panhistoriography
3. Decolonial panhistoriography
4. Modal panhistoriography
The final session (modal panhistoriography) will include an opportunity to gather and swap ideas with colleagues in the “Engaging the Senses in Rhetorical History” workshop.
Participants will, we hope, leave with generative, flexible tools for writing expansive histories.
Next Conference
The next Watson Conference is on the horizon. Stay connected for announcements about themes, calls for proposals, and registration.