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William Kurlinkus

Will Kurlinkus

Teaching Faculty III | Business Communications
3259 Grainger Hall

About Will

Dr. Will Kurlinkus is a business communication faculty member in the Wisconsin School of Business and affiliate faculty with the Holtz Center for Science & Technology Studies. He is a communication scholar whose research examines how nostalgia shapes persuasion and decision-making across politics, marketing, technological design, and professional communication. His work focuses on how appeals to ideal pasts influence trust, adoption, and resistance—particularly in moments of technological or social change.

His monograph, for example, Nostalgic Design: Rhetoric, Memory, and Democratizing Technology has chapters on nostalgia’s role in client communication; UX design from Disney parks to Ikea furniture; vaccine legislation; and participatory research methods. Across these contexts, Dr. Kurlinkus's research shows how nostalgia can function not only as a persuasive strategy, but also as a resource for challenging the status quo and supporting more equitable forms of innovation.

Kurlinkus joined the business communication faculty in fall 2024 after a decade as an English Professor and the Director of Technical Writing and Communication at the University of Oklahoma. Before that he received his PhD in rhetoric, composition, and literacy with a focus on digital media studies from the Ohio State University. He currently acts as a communication and grant writing consultant as well as a manuscript reviewer for several journals and presses including the University of Pittsburgh Press series on Composition, Literacy, and Culture and the WPA Clearing House Practices & Possibilities Series.

Selected Published Journal Articles

Kurlinkus, W. (2021). Nostalgic Design: Making Memories in the Rhetoric Classroom Rhetoric Society Quarterly

Kurlinkus, W. (2019). Nostalgic Design: Rhetoric, Memory, and Democratizing Technology

Kurlinkus, W. (2019). Track Changes: A Literary History of Word Processing. By Matthew G. Kirschenbaum Technology and Culture

Kurlinkus, W. (2018). “Coal Keeps the Lights On”: Rhetorics of Nostalgia for and in Appalachia. College English

Kurlinkus, W. (2017). Memorial Interactivity: Planning for Nostalgic User Experiences Rhetoric and Experience Architecture

Kurlinkus, W. (2014). Crafting Designs: An Archaeology of “Craft” as God Term Computers and Composition

Kurlinkus, W. (2013). An Ethics of Attentions: Three Continuums of Classical and Contemporary Stylistic Manipulation for the 21st Century Composition Classroom. The Centrality of Style

Practitioner-Oriented Publications

Kurlinkus, W. (2023). Teaching ChatGPT for Grant Writing: An English Department Senior Capstone Writers: Craft and Context

Presentations

College Conference on Composition and Communication (2023) Millennial Neostalgia: The Rhetoric of Futures that Could Have Been

Modern Language Association (2023) Entangling Career Education in Classes and the Curriculum

Rhetoric Society of American (2022) “Meat Packers are Still Working, What Makes You So Special?”: Essential Workers as Nostalgic Others in Anti-Lockdown Rhetoric

College Conference on Composition and Communication (2022) Teaching Memory During a Pandemic: Nostalgic Redesigns of Unjust Remembrance

Modern Language Association (2020) Preparing Students in Composition’s Design Turn

Editorial and Reviewing Activities

Journal of Political Power – November 2025 – December 2025
Ad Hoc Reviewer

Practices & Possibilities Series – Since January 2023
Editorial Board Member

University of Pittsburgh Press series on Composition, Literacy, and Culture – Since January 2021
Invited Manuscript Reviewer

College Composition and Communication – January 2020 – December 2024
Ad Hoc Reviewer

American Quarterly – January 2019 – December 2019
Ad Hoc Reviewer

College English – January 2019 – December 2019
Ad Hoc Reviewer