| Carl Chatfield home page | Thesis | Bibliography |
Bolter, Jay David. (1991). Writing Space. Hillsdale, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Coney, Mary. (1984). The Implied Author in Technical Discourse. Journal of Advanced Composition, V, 163-172.
---------------. (1987). Contemporary Views of Audience: A Rhetorical Perspective. The Technical Writing Teacher, 14 (3), 319-335.
---------------. (1992). Technical Readers and Their Rhetorical Roles. IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication, 35 (2), 58-63.
Gibson, Walker. (1950). Authors, Speakers, Readers, and Mock Readers. College English, 11, 265-169.
Goodwin, David. (1991). Emplotting the Reader: Motivation and Technical Documentation. Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 21 (2), 99-115.
Gookin, Dan. (1994). Word for Windows 6 for Dummies. San Mateo, CA: IDG Books Worldwide.
Halse, Ronald. (1986). Computer Manuals for Novices: The Rhetorical Situation. Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 16 (1/2), 105-120
Harris, E. (1983). A Theoretical Perspective on 'How To' Discourse. In P. V. Anderson, R. J. Brockman, C. R. Miller (Eds.), New Essays in Technical and Scientific Communication: Research, Theory, Practice, (pp. 139-156). Farmingdale, NY: Baywood.
Houp, Kenneth W. and Pearsall, Thomas E. (1984). Reporting Technical Information (5th ed.). New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.
Iser, Wolfgang. (1974). The Implied Reader. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press.
Kinneavy, James L. (1971). A Theory of Discourse. New York: W. W. Norton & Company.
Macklin, W.R. (1995, November 19). Supertypist Mavis Beacon is really a creation of marketing. The Seattle Times, p. C2.
Microsoft Corporation (1994). Microsoft Word User's Guide. Redmond, WA: Microsoft Corporation.
Nass, C. and Steuer, J. (1993) Voices, Boxes, and Sources of Messages: Computers and Social Actors. Human Communication Research, 19 (4), 504-527.
Ong, Walter. (1975). The Writer's Audience is Always a Fiction. PMLA, 90 , 9-21.
Park, Douglas B. (1982). The Meaning of "Audience." College English, 44 (3), 247-257.
Petrosky, Anthony R. (1982). From Story to Essay: Reading and Writing. College Composition and Communication, 33 (1), 19-36.
Price, Johnathan. (1984). How To Write a Computer Manual. Menlo Park, California: The Benjamin/Cummings Publishing Company, Inc.
Price, Johnathan and Korman, Henry. (1993). How to Communicate Technical Information. Menlo Park, California: The Benjamin/Cummings Publishing Company, Inc.
Staff. (1994, April 24) Top U.S. Computer Book Publishers, Ranked by Revenue and Market Share, 1993 and 1994). BP Report, p. 3.
Simpson, Mark (1989). Users Invoked: How Documents Help Readers Assume User Roles. In SIGDOC 89 Proceedings (pp. 85-92).
Suchman, Lucy A. (1987). Plans and Situated Actions. London, England: Cambridge University Press.
Walters, N. J. and Beck, C. E. (1992). A Discourse Analysis of Software Documentation: Implications for the Profession. IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication, 35 (3), 156-167.