Welcome to the Cross-Cultural Rhetoric Workshop Professor Olga Kovbasyuko and Professor Carolyn Ross...

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Welcome to the Cross-Cultural Rhetoric Workshop Professor Olga Kovbasyuko and Professor Carolyn Ross and their students January 15/16, 2009 Khabarovsk State Academy of Economics and Law, Russia Stanford University, USA

Transcript of Welcome to the Cross-Cultural Rhetoric Workshop Professor Olga Kovbasyuko and Professor Carolyn Ross...

Page 1: Welcome to the Cross-Cultural Rhetoric Workshop Professor Olga Kovbasyuko and Professor Carolyn Ross and their students January 15/16, 2009  Khabarovsk.

Welcome to the Cross-Cultural Rhetoric Workshop

Professor Olga Kovbasyuko and Professor Carolyn Ross

and their students

January 15/16, 2009

Khabarovsk State Academy of Economics and Law, Russia

Stanford University, USA

Page 2: Welcome to the Cross-Cultural Rhetoric Workshop Professor Olga Kovbasyuko and Professor Carolyn Ross and their students January 15/16, 2009  Khabarovsk.

Focus on Cultural Identities

One of 400 captioned drawings from indigenous Andean Felipe Guaman Poma de Ayala’s 800-page letter to King Philip III of Spain, The First New Chronicle and Good Government, Cuzco (Peru), 1613. Although Guaman

Poma delivered his letter, King Phillip never read it. (From Mary Pratt, “Arts of the Contact Zone,” Profession 91. New York: MLA, 1991. 33-40.)

Page 3: Welcome to the Cross-Cultural Rhetoric Workshop Professor Olga Kovbasyuko and Professor Carolyn Ross and their students January 15/16, 2009  Khabarovsk.

- Mary Pratt, from “Arts of the Contact Zone,” Profession 91. New York: MLA, 1991. 33-40.)

I use this term to refer to social spaces where cultures meet, clash, and grapple with each other, often in contexts of highly asymmetrical relations of power,

such as colonialism, slavery, or their aftermaths as they are lived out in many parts of the world today.

The “contact zone”…

What makes a “contact zone” encounter positive and productive?

Page 4: Welcome to the Cross-Cultural Rhetoric Workshop Professor Olga Kovbasyuko and Professor Carolyn Ross and their students January 15/16, 2009  Khabarovsk.

Goals of Today’s Workshop:

•To get to know students from across the world

•To understand diverse cultural communities and identities

•To learn how texts (visual/expressive) are situated rhetorically & culturally

Page 5: Welcome to the Cross-Cultural Rhetoric Workshop Professor Olga Kovbasyuko and Professor Carolyn Ross and their students January 15/16, 2009  Khabarovsk.

Model Analysis: Image 1

Cybelle in Japan with male maids

Page 6: Welcome to the Cross-Cultural Rhetoric Workshop Professor Olga Kovbasyuko and Professor Carolyn Ross and their students January 15/16, 2009  Khabarovsk.

Model Analysis: Image 2

Demonstration for Tibet in Dharamsala, India

Page 7: Welcome to the Cross-Cultural Rhetoric Workshop Professor Olga Kovbasyuko and Professor Carolyn Ross and their students January 15/16, 2009  Khabarovsk.

Model Analysis: Image 3

Julia in Rajasthan, India

Page 8: Welcome to the Cross-Cultural Rhetoric Workshop Professor Olga Kovbasyuko and Professor Carolyn Ross and their students January 15/16, 2009  Khabarovsk.

Model Analysis: Image 3

Carolyn’s coffee cup made of ceramic and rubber

Page 9: Welcome to the Cross-Cultural Rhetoric Workshop Professor Olga Kovbasyuko and Professor Carolyn Ross and their students January 15/16, 2009  Khabarovsk.

Your Team’s Task Today

1. Introduce yourself and your team’s blog2. Explain your reasons for your post choices3. Share your cultural artifact4.Exchange and Answer questions!

After the Video Conference – continue the conversation on the CCR Blog!