John  Walter

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ABD from Saint Louis University's English Department with a focus in rhetoric and composition and secondary specialities in medieval literature and rhetoric and orality-literacy studies (oral through digital culture).

I've taught classes in new media and digital composition, rhetorical theory, and first year composition at Saint Louis University; University of North Carolina, Wilmington; and most recently Creighton University. I served as the processing archivist for the Walter J. Ong Collection. I'm also on the editorial board of *Kairos: A Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, and Culture*, and am currently serving my third term on the Conference on College Composition and Communication's Committee on Computers in Composition.

My current research focuses on rhetorical memory, the work of Walter Ong and Marshall McLuhan, and digital composition.

  • Tools for Curation and Exhibition of Digital Archives and Scholarly Editions

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    I’m interested in learning about various resources for the curation and exhibition of digital archives and scholarly editions with extensive critical apparatus. While I have my own project I’m looking to start this summer, which I describe below, I’m interested in general discussion of what’s available, what their strengths and weaknesses are, and how they play with other online resources.

    In particular, I’m looking to create an electronic edition of the 100-page travel journal and accompanying 200 photographs Walter J. Ong kept during the three years he spent traveling throughout Europe doing research his dissertation, which he published as Ramus, Method, and the Decay of Dialogue and The Ramus and Talon Inventory. As these three years were formative for Ong’s academic career (the people he met, a series of lectures he gave in France on behalf of the US State Department, insights he had, and the connections he maintained via correspondence) I’d like to use this route book as a framework for presenting and contextualizing the thousands of pages of material in the Walter J. Ong Manuscript Collection dating to this period.

    Saint Louis University’s Archives currently use Content dm to host digital materials and early on when I was helping process the Collection, we created a web site to make some select items available. I’m finally starting to think of this project seriously and I’m assuming I want something more flexible and elegant than Content dm. Based upon my preliminary searching, I’m assuming Omeka may be the best resource for my needs.