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[Commlist] Assistant Professor (tenure-track) in Environmental Rhetoric, and/or Communication - UNC Chapel Hill
Fri Oct 04 10:45:42 GMT 2024
The Department of Communication at the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill seeks to hire an *Assistant Professor (tenure-track) in
Environmental Rhetoric, and/or Communication*. Candidates should have a
Ph.D. or a completion date of a Ph.D. by July 1, 2025 and be qualified
to teach undergraduate and graduate Environmental Rhetoric courses,
contribute to the core courses in the graduate program, develop
specialized undergraduate and graduate courses reflecting their research
interests. We are particularly interested in a colleague whose research
and teaching emphasizes the intersection of environmental rhetoric and
advocacy, democracy, identity, power, critical practice, media and/or
public culture. In addition, we welcome candidates whose work
complements existing departmental strengths.
Qualifications: A Ph.D. in Communication, Composition, or another
discipline engaging rhetoric and/or the rhetorical traditions, broadly
defined. Candidates should have a record of, or potential for,
outstanding research, teaching and service in keeping with the tenure
expectations of a department at a research institution. We especially
welcome candidates with experience in graduate advising and mentorship.
About the Department of Communication The Department of Communication is
one of 44 departments and curricula in the College of Arts & Sciences.
As the largest unit on campus, the College of Arts & Sciences forms the
academic core of the Carolina experience. Through teaching, research,
and service, the Department of Communication addresses how communication
functions to create, sustain, and transform personal life, social
relations, political institutions, economic organizations, and cultural
and aesthetic conventions in society. Faculty conduct research and teach
within a broad range of communication disciplines, including performance
studies, media and technology studies, rhetoric, media arts production
and new media, and organizational and interpersonal communication.
Recognized for significant contributions to the profession, University,
state, and nation, the Department houses a PhD program, a major in
Communication, an interdisciplinary major in Cultural Studies, and a
minor in Writing for the Screen and Stage. It serves as the intellectual
home for 30 faculty members, 50 graduate students, and nearly 700
undergraduates. The Department’s doctoral program offers a theoretically
rich, interdisciplinary, problem-based approach to education and
research that enables graduate students to define their own research in
response to the changing demands of a constantly evolving communicative
and cultural world. The Department’s majors, as well as the hundreds of
pan-University non-majors seek out our classes for a set of critical
capacities that contribute to an engaged, creative, and critical 21st
century citizen. The department’s website provides a detailed look at
our activities, mission, and values.
About Rhetoric at UNC: Rhetoric refers to the means by which people
create shared meaning to deliberate about contested issues such as the
common good. Rhetorical Studies, a cornerstone of the liberal arts
tradition, aspires to understand precisely how rhetoric shapes public
life, while also inviting scholars to re-imagine the possibilities of
both. Students concentrating in Rhetorical Studies can pursue an array
of courses in rhetorical production, theory, and criticism. Over their
course of study, students learn how to speak and write ethically with
rhetorical dexterity; analyze and evaluate the discursive phenomena
circulating across public culture; and reason through challenging issues
with argumentative rigor. The concentration prepares students for
numerous career paths including law, speech writing, public advocacy,
community organizing, business leadership, political consulting,
marketing, and advertising. Rhetorical Studies prepares students to
thrive intellectually in whichever situations they might encounter,
while also expanding their capacities to reflect on the human condition
and serve the public good.
Applications must be submitted electronically by *November 15,
2024* Interested candidates should send (1) a cover letter that
addresses all minimum and any preferred qualifications met; (2)
curriculum vitae; (3) a description of teaching philosophy and
approaches; (4) a representative sample of research; and (5) three
letters of recommendation.
Applicants should demonstrate how their research and teaching interests
align with two or more of the department’s interdisciplinary pathways in
communication & everyday life, rhetoric, advocacy & activism, media
arts, performance & critical practice, media technologies & public
culture, and organizations, communication & work. Applicants can learn
more about these pathways and our new undergraduate curriculum by
visiting the department’s website. For questions regarding the search,
please email the chair of the search committee, Dr. Christian Lundberg @
(clundber /at/ email.unc.edu).
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