Ecological Rhetorics

Series Editor: Joshua Trey Barnett, Pennsylvania State University

Ecological Rhetorics publishes rigorously researched and eminently readable books that illuminate the dynamic interplay of the ecological and the rhetorical. Volumes in this series bring to light the manifestly diverse ways that collective life on Earth is enabled, constrained, and shaped by rhetorical conditions, practices, and forces. Eschewing both anthropocentrism and anthropoexceptionalism, the series publishes books that light the way toward a more just earthly coexistence for the plurality of Earth’s inhabitants, human and more-than-human alike.

Proposals for the Ecological Rhetorics series should include a description of the book’s main argument, contribution, and/or intervention; a chapter-by-chapter summary of the book; a discussion of competing and/or complementary texts; a description of the book’s audience(s); and technical details, including a projected word count for the manuscript, number and type of figures to be included, and an expected timeline for completion. Proposals should be accompanied by a draft of the introductory chapter and at least one body chapter, as well as the author’s CV. Prospective authors can find additional details here.

Please direct queries about and proposals for this series to Joshua Trey Barnett and Judith Lakamper.

Editorial Board

Emma Bloomfield, University of Nevada – Las Vegas

Jennifer Clary-Lemon, University of Waterloo

Kevin Michael DeLuca, University of Utah

Chris Ingraham, University of Utah

Jenell Johnson, University of Wisconsin – Madison

Madison P. Jones, University of Rhode Island

Bridie McGreavy, University of Maine

Jennifer Peeples, Utah State University

Megan Poole, University of Texas – Austin

Donnie Johnson Sackey, University of Texas – Austin