• DocumentCode
    1733110
  • Title

    Introducing rhetoric into usability: applying burke´s pentad

  • Author

    Sadler, Victoria ; Bellew, Kenneth

  • Author_Institution
    Metropolitan State University
  • fYear
    2009
  • Firstpage
    1
  • Lastpage
    5
  • Abstract
    This paper supports recent calls for acknowledging rhetoric\´s relationship to the usability field and for the role that technical communicators can play in creating knowledge via a "long and wide view of usability." An expanded view of usability-as an art supported by scientific research-recognizes how technical communicators work in tandem with engineers to connect science and culture [1, 320; 328]. More specifically, the authors argue for using Kenneth Burke\´s concept of the dramatistic pentad as an analytical tool for seeing and understanding a usability situation from multiple and alternate viewpoints. We propose the pentad as a way of approaching how we theorize and conceptualize usability. Through the lens of the pentad (act, agent, agency, scene, purpose) we conceptualize a usability test as the agency through which agents (actors) act or behave. This leads to exploration of one of the pentadic "ratios:" agent-agency.
  • Keywords
    Art; Companies; Context; Human factors; Layout; Lenses; Positron emission tomography; Rhetoric; Testing; Usability; usability, rhetoric, dramatism, pentad;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Professional Communication Conference, 2009. IPCC 2009. IEEE International
  • Conference_Location
    Waikiki, HI
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-4357-4
  • Electronic_ISBN
    978-1-4244-4358-1
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/IPCC.2009.5428217
  • Filename
    5428217