Technical communication has long acknowledged that documents can be unethical and even oppressive and harmful. But not all forms or experiences of oppression are equivalent or similar, and it can be instrumental to analyze in particular how certain groups are wounded by specific documents. In this article, the authors use Ahmed's queer phenomenology to analyze institutional and government documents and demonstrate the ways that these technical documents create failed orientations. Then, through a focused analysis of a federal proposal policy, they show how these documents can produce failures for trans people in particular. The authors close by suggesting courses of actions for redressing these failures.
CITATION STYLE
Moeggenberg, Z. C., Edenfield, A. C., & Holmes, S. (2022). Trans Oppression Through Technical Rhetorics: A Queer Phenomenological Analysis of Institutional Documents. Journal of Business and Technical Communication, 36(4), 403–439. https://doi.org/10.1177/10506519221105492
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