Nisha Shanmugaraj (PhD, Carnegie Mellon University) is an Assistant Professor of Writing and Rhetoric with a joint appointment in the Program for Writing and Rhetoric and the English Department at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Working at the intersection of feminist rhetorics, cultural rhetorics, and Asian American rhetorics, her work illuminates and interrogates the “everyday rhetorics” of Asian/American women: how these rhetors employ and interpret communicative acts in their everyday lives. Using qualitative rhetorical methods, Shanmugaraj explores how dominant discourses around race, gender, class, caste, and other identity vectors shape the lived experience of South Asian American women and how these diasporic subjects envision new rhetorical possibilities through imagined, embodied, affective, and interpersonal sites of meaning. She is currently working on a book project on how Indian American women construct narratives of “overcoming” from internalized racism, with an advance contract from The Ohio State University Press. Her work has appeared in venues such as Quarterly Journal of Speech, Composition Forum, and Business and Professional Communication Quarterly and has been recognized by the Coalition of Feminist Scholars in the History of Rhetoric and Composition, the Conference on College Composition and Communication, and more.
keywords
rhetoric, writing studies, communication, intersectional feminist rhetorics, Asian American rhetorics, cultural rhetorics, antiracist composition pedagogy