- 112 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About This Book
Anyone who laments the demise of print text would find a sympathetic listener in Andrea A. Lunsford. Anyone who bemoans the lack of respect for blogs, graphic novels, and other new media would find her no less understanding. Lunsford is at home in both camps because she sees beyond writing's ever-changing forms to the constancy of its power to "make space for human agencyâor to radically limit such agency."
Lunsford is a celebrated scholar of rhetoric and composition, and many undergraduates taking courses in those subjects have used her textbooks. Here she helps us see that writing is not just a mode of communication, persuasion, and expression, but a web of meanings and practices that shape our lives. Lunsford tells how she gained a new respect for our digital culture's three v'sâvocal, visual, verbalâwhile helping design and teach a course in multimedia writing. On the importance of having a linguistically pluralistic society, Lunsford draws links between such varied topics as the English Only movement, language extinction, Ebonics, and the text messaging shorthand "l33t."
Lunsford has seen how words, writing, and language enforce unfair power relationships in the academy. Most classroom settings, she writes, are authority based and stress "individualism, ranking, hierarchy, and thereforeâwe have belatedly come to understandâexclusion." Concerned about the paucityâstillâof tenured women and minority faculty, she urges schools to revisit admission and retention practices. These are tough and divisive problems, Lunsford acknowledges. Yet if we can see that writing has the power to help prolong or solve themâthat writing mattersâthen we have a common ground.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- ONE. Key Questions for a New Rhetoric
- TWO. Notes on Language Wars in the USA
- THREE. âAuthorityâ in the Writing Classroom
- FOUR.Thoughts on Graduate Education in English
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index