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Gregory PalermoAffiliated Faculty | EnglishAssistant Teaching Professor | Emory Writing Program

Biography

Gregory Palermo (he/they) is an Assistant Teaching Professor in the Emory University Writing Program. He specializes in the rhetorics of data, algorithms, and disciplinary formation. His teaching and research bridge the fields of writing, rhetoric, and digital humanities, focusing on data transformation and visualization as rhetorical practices. 
 
Palermo brings research on citation analysis and metaphor into the classroom for students to work with data reflexively and transparently. Moreover, he teaches students to use data-driven methods to draw from and synthesize multiple academic traditions in their writing. His current project recuperates early methodology of co-citation analysis, a method for mapping the “landscape” of academic fields based on “networks” of published scholarship. This project offers an approach to co-citation for tactically linking distinct research areas with shared values and practices, as well as for supporting citational justice. He has additional interests in narrative approaches to inquiry, such as evocative autoethnography.
 
His work has appeared in the Journal of Writing Analytics and Digital Humanities Quarterly (DHQ). Most recently, he is collaborating on DHQ’s Biblio project and co-edited an issue of The Journal of Interactive Technology and Pedagogy (JITP) with a forum on “Data and Computational Pedagogy” (2020). He serves on the JITP Editorial Collective, where he is currently Co-Editor of Reviews.

Education

  • MA, English, Northeastern University, 2019
  • BA, English, Physics, State University of New York College at Geneseo, 2014

Research

  • Data rhetoric
  • Quantitative literacy
  • Computational pedagogy
  • Network analysis
  • Digital humanities

Teaching

  • QTM/ENGRD 302W: Technical Writing for Data Science