James I. Wynn

Office AddressHome Address

145M Baker Hall6822 Thomas Blvd.

CarnegieMellonUniversityPittsburgh, PA15208Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3890 (202) 413-6117

(412) 268-9765

Education

2006 Ph.D. English literature and language, University of Maryland, CollegePark, Maryland

Dissertation: “Life’s Rich Pattern: The Role of Probability and Statistics in 19th Century Argumentation for Theories of Evolution, Variation, and Heredity,” directed by Jeanne Fahnestock

2000M.A. Literature, CaseWestern ReserveUniversity, Cleveland, Ohio

Thesis: “A Cognitive Approach to Prepositional Usage in English as a Second LanguageAcquisition,” directed by Todd Oakley

1994B.S. English language and literature, 1994, cum laude,EasternMichiganUniversity,

Ypsilanti, Michigan

Employment

2006-2010CarnegieMellonUniversity / Dept. of English / Pittsburgh, PA /Assistant Professor

2002-2005University of Maryland/ Dept. of English / College Park, MD / Lecturer and Teaching Assistant

2003JohnsHopkinsUniversity/ Dept. of Business Communication / WashingtonD.C. / Adjunct

2001-2002MontgomeryCollege/ English as Second Langauge / Rockville, MD / Instructor

1998-2000CaseWestern ReserveUniversity/ Dept. of English / Cleveland, OH / Teaching Assistant

1998-2000CuyahogaCommunity College/ English as Second Langauge / Cleveland, OH / Instructor

1997-1998ELS Language School/ Cleveland, OH / Associate Instructor

1995-1997Peace Corps/ BertoldBrechtLanguageSchool / Pazardjik, Bulgaria / English as

a Second Language Instructor

Publications

Books

Evolution by Numbers: The Origins of Mathematical Argument in Biology. West Lafayette:

Parlor P. (Forthcoming, July 2011)

Refereed Journal Papers

“A New Species of Argument: The Role of Mathematics in Darwin’s The Origin of Species.” 19th

Century Prose 38.1(2011): 59-98.

“Arithmetic of the Species: Darwin and the Role of Mathematics in his Argumentation.”

Rhetorica 27.1 (2009): 76-100.

“Alone in the Garden: How Gregor Mendel’s Inattention to Audience May have Affected the

Reception of His Theory of Inheritance in ‘Experiments in Plant Hybridization’.” Written Communication 24.1 (2007): 3-27.

(Nominated for a NTCE Technical and Scientific Communication Award for 2008 in the category of historical studies.)

Reviews

Review of Alan Gross’ The Scientific Literature: A Guided Tour in Rhetoric Society

Quarterly 38.2 (2008): 234-37.

Review of Alan Gross’ Starring the Text in ISIS 98.2 (2007): 433-34.

Academic Honors, Awards, and Grants

2007Berkman Faculty Development Grant ($3,500) for archival research work in England

2007Falk Grant ($2,657) for archival research work in England

2004University of Maryland Center for Teaching Excellence; Distinguished Teaching

Assistant Award

2000Fulbright research grant, Bulgaria, for field research into the influence of ethnicity and

language on market transactions

Conference Papers

“It’s True but It Won’t Happen,” National Communication Association (NCA), San

Francisco, CA Nov. 12-15, 2010.

“Counted Out: The neutralization of science with probability in the debate over nuclear

Safety,” Rhetoric Society of America Conference (RSA), Minneapolis, MN May 28-31, 2010

“From Analogy to Reality: The Importance of Mathematical Analogy in the Development of Gregor

Mendel’s Plant Hybridization Experiments,” Rhetoric Society of America Conference (RSA),

Seattle, WA, May 23-26, 2008

“The Role of Mathematics in the Study of Heredity and Evolution,” 35th Annual Western Pennsylvania Symposium on World Literatures “In the Footsteps of Darwin,” Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, April, 10 2008

“Glory Days: Maintaining Disciplinary Identity in Mathematics in a Time of Decline,” Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC), New York, New York, March 21-24, 2007

“Persuasion and the Birth of the Mendelian Genetic Paradigm,” Rhetoric Society of America Conference (RSA), Memphis, Tennessee, May 26-29, 2006

“Arguing With Numbers: Mathematics and Scientific Argumentation in

Evolutionary Biology 1865-1965,” International Society for the History of

Rhetoric (ISHR) Conference, Los Angeles, California,July 12-17, 2005

“Science Begotten: H.G. Wells, Evolution, and Fantasia,” MMLA Conference, St. Louis,

Missouri, November 4-7, 2004

“A Cognitive Approach to Rhetorical Theory: Integrating Audience,” 24th Annual

Conference of the Poetics and Linguistics Association (PALA), New York, New York, July 25-28, 2004

“Rhetoric and the 19th-Century African-American Novel: A Discussion of Argumentation

in Frank Webb’s The Garies and Their Friends,” Penn State Conference on Rhetoric and Composition, State College, Pennsylvania, July 6-8, 2003

“Through the Looking Glass: Scientific Progress and Descriptive Adaptation in

Microscopic Observation from 1665 to 1900,” Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC) New York, New York, March 19-23, 2003

“Through the Looking Glass: Scientific Progress and Descriptive Adaptation in

Microscopic Observation from 1665 to 1900,” Midwestern Modern Language Association (MMLA) Conference, Minneapolis, Minnesota, November 8-10, 2002

“Market Forces and Language: The Effect of Economic Pressure on the Preservation of

the Status of Turkish as a Language of Commerce in the Southern Rhodopies,”

Bulgarian Fulbright Commission Conference, Sofia, Bulgaria, May, 2002

Invited Talks

Featured Guest Speaker“The Science of Stories, the Stories of Science” Washington and

Jefferson University, Washington, PA, March 5, 2010

Panel Participant: Supersession on Rhetoric of Science, Rhetoric Society of America

Conference, Seattle, WA 2008

Seminars and Colloquia

Workshop Director: Rhetoric Society of America, Biannual Summer Institute, “Science and Its

Publics,” State College, PA, June 26-28, 2009

Courses Taught at CMU

  • ENG 76-271 Introduction to Professional and Technical Writing (Fall/Spring 2006-present)
  • ENG 76-476/876 Rhetoric of Science (Fall 2006, ‘07, ‘08, ‘09)
  • ENG 76-492/892 Rhetoric of Public Policy in the 19th Century (Spring 2007)
  • ENG 76-492/892 Rhetoric of Public Policy and Nuclear Power (Spring 2009, ‘10)
  • ENG 76-425/825 Rhetoric, Science, and the Public Sphere (Fall 2010)

Students Supervised

Ph.D. Committees (Chair)

  • Daniel Dickson-Laprade (estimated date of graduation 2015)

Ph.D. Committees (Committee Member)

  • Tom Mitchell
  • Dan Baumgartner

Professional Service

University and College Service

Director of the Pittsburgh Consortium for Rhetoric and Discourse Studies 2010

Faculty Senate 2007-2009

Department Service

Graduate Committee 2007-2010

M.A. Admissions Committee 2010

Literary and Cultural Studies Search Committee 2008-09

Professional Activities

Participant: RSA biennial conference weekend workshop “The Rhetoric of Scientific

Revolutions,” 2005

Participant: International Fulbright Conference, Frankfurt, Germany, 2001

Session Moderator: Lowell, Jarrell, and Bishop Conference, Case Western Reserve

University, Cleveland, Ohio, 2000

Professional Memberships

  • Rhetoric Society of America
  • National Communication Association
  • Association for the Rhetoric of Science and Technology

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