The Ph.D. in Communication, Rhetoric, and Digital Media brings together a diverse and accomplished faculty from across the university, both established senior faculty and younger faculty in new areas. Some will teach the required core courses in the program, and some will teach electives and special topics courses within their own departments. All will be available to serve on advisory committees for students. There are two categories of faculty associated with the doctoral program, Program Faculty and Affiliated Faculty.
Program Faculty
The Program Faculty are full and associate graduate faculty in the Departments of English and Communication who have an expressed interest, a record of research and scholarship in relevant areas, and the ability to teach core courses or courses in the disciplinary areas (see Curriculum). Program faculty will teach the core courses, direct dissertations, serve on advisory committees, and elect the Program Committee that governs the program.
Associate Professor

- Jameson, J. K., Bodtker, A. M., Porch, D., & Jordan, W. (2010). Exploring the role of emotion in conflict transformation. Conflict Resolution Quartery, 27(2) 167-192.
- Jameson, J. K.,Bodtker, A. M, & Linker, T. (2010). Facilitating conflict transformationthrough attention to emotion: Mediator strategies for eliciting emotionalappraisal and reappraisal. NegotiationJournal, 26(1), 25-48.
- Jameson, J. K. (2004). Negotiating autonomy and connection through politeness: A dialectical approach to organizational conflict management. Western Journal of Communication, 68(3), 257-277.
- Melinda Leonardo (Chair)

- Kinsella, W. J., Kelly, A. R., & Kittle Autry, M. (2013). Risk, regulation, and rhetorical boundary work: Claims and challenges surrounding a purported nuclear renaissance. Communication Monographs, 80(3), in press.
- Kinsella, W. J. (Ed.) (2012). Forum: Communicative action in response to a nuclear crisis—Representations of Fukushima across communication contexts. Environmental Communication: A Journal of Nature and Culture, 6(2), 250-284.
- Kinsella, W. J. (2012). Environments, risks, and the limits of representation: Examples from nuclear energy. Environmental Communication: A Journal of Nature and Culture, 6(2), 251-259.
- Kinsella, W. J. (Ed.) (2011). Special issue: Learning from the 2008-09 global financial crisis. Electronic Journal of Communication, 21(no. 3-4).
- Kinsella, W. J. (2011). Research on nuclear energy in an international context: Challenges for empirical research design and preliminary findings. Technikfolgenabschätzung: Theorie und Praxis (Technology Assessment: Theory and Practice), 20(2), 84-89.
- Kinsella, W. J. (2010). Risk communication, phenomenology, and the limits of representation. Catalan Journal of Communication and Cultural Studies, 2(2), 267-276.
- President, Environmental Communication Division, National Communiucation Association, 2009-2010
- Christian Casper (member)
- Nick Temple (member)
- David Gruber (member)
- Ashley Kelly (member)
- Meagan Kittle Autry (member)
- Melinda Leonardo (member)
- Kate Maddalena (chair)
- Brian Bulla (Forestry & Natural Resources, member)
- Autumn Thoyre (Geography, UNC-Chapel Hill, member)
Assistant Professor
- “Orator-Machine: Autonomist Marxism and William D. 'Big Bill' Haywood’s Cooper Union Address." Philosophy and Rhetoric 45 (2012), in press.
- “Hobo Orator Union: Class Composition and the Spokane Free Speech Fight of the Industrial Workers of the World.” Quarterly Journal of Speech 97 (2011) 155-177.
- “Corruption and Empire: Notes on Wisconsin.” Journal of Communication Inquiry 35 (2011): 342-348. (with Ronald W. Greene)
- “Let us Be Realistic and Demand the Impossible: Defining Kairos in Contemporary Marxism.” in S. Jacobs, Ed. Concerning Argument (Washington, DC: National Communication Association and the American Forensic Association, 2009): 515-523.
- “Spinoza and Class Struggle.” Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies 6 (2009): 294-298.
Affiliated Faculty
Other graduate faculty in English, Communication, and other departments with allied interests may be appointed as Affiliated Faculty; they serve on advisory/dissertation committees and teach elective courses.
Agnes Bolonyai, Assistant Professor of English and Linguistics, College of Humanities and Social Sciences. [website]
Meredith Davis, Professor of Graphic Design, College of Design. [website]
Denis Gray, Professor of Psychology, College of Humanities and Social Sciences. [website]
Brad Mehlenbacher, Associate Professor of Training and Development, College of Education. [website]
Devin Orgeron, Associate Professor of English and Film Studies, College of Humanities and Social Sciences. [website]
Marsha Orgeron, Associate Professor of English and Film Studies, College of Humanities and Social Sciences. [website]
Maria Pramaggiore, Associate Professor of English and Film Studies, College of Humanities and Social Sciences. [website]
Michael Rappa, Alan T. Dickson Distinguished University Professor of Technology Management, College of Management. [website]
Robert St. Amant, Associate Professor of Computer Science, College of Engineering. [website]
Eric Wiebe, Associate Professor of Graphic Communications, College of Education. [website]
Michael Wogalter, Professor of Psychology and Director, Cognitive Ergonomics Laboratory, College of Humanities and Social Sciences. [website]
Walt Wolfram, William C. Friday Distinguished Professor of English and Linguistics, College of Humanities and Social Sciences. [website]
Michael Young, Assistant Professor of Computer Science, College of Engineering. [website]
"Digital technologies, tied to the Internet, could produce a vastly more competitive and vibrant market for building and cultivating culture; that market could include a much wider and more diverse range of creators; those creators could produce and distribute a much more vibrant range of creativity … all so long as the RCAs of our day don’t use the law to protect themselves against this competition."
—Lawrence Lessig, Free Culture
