Best of the Independent Journals in Rhetoric and Composition 2012, The. Группа авторов
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Название: Best of the Independent Journals in Rhetoric and Composition 2012, The

Автор: Группа авторов

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Программы

Серия:

isbn: 9781602354975

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ new philosophical and pedagogical point of departure for composition and rhetoric.

      The patterns which Roderick and Veeder focus on bring us back to Mueller’s article, where this introduction began. Mueller analyzes the annual CCCC Chairs’ speeches from 1977 to 2011, using word clouds generated from the published versions of their speeches in order to examine when various terms appear, rise, and recede in these “views from the center,” which Mueller uses as barometers of the field’s intellectual climate. The word cloud methodology Mueller describes allows for a “distant reading” practice that focuses strictly on patterns of word use without examining their context. Word clouds’ “distance” from the meaning of the source texts distinguishes them from Ellen Barton’s and Duane Roen’s thematic analyses of the same texts, providing for a new, digital humanities approach to the field’s intellectual history. Mueller also compares word cloud-based distant reading to article abstracts, which seek to capture the essence of a piece, attempting the kind of explanation Veeder discourages. Because word clouds measure term frequency, Mueller argues that they can capture the “gestural build-ups, micro-turns, and anomalies to the larger patterns” that close thematic reading can miss, thereby harnessing the data-processing power McKee associates with corporate data mining for the benefit of the field. Such a distant reading method offers, therefore, one way to represent and investigate the complex rhetorical situations Roderick describes and even embodies the kind of exploratory (rather than explanatory) Hectic-Zen mode of composition that Veeder advocates. Finally, because Mueller uses customized software to create his word clouds, he includes a detailed description of his methods, providing a model for how to introduce new research tools (whether digital or analog) into rhetoric and composition scholarship.

      By way of bringing the eleven articles highlighted here into conversation with each other, we followed Mueller’s lead and created our own word cloud based on the articles. Some of the major terms across these articles are expected: students, writing, work, rhetoric, Burke. Others, however, are surprising, for example “time,” which may support Rose’s claim that time is becoming an increasingly important consideration for the field. Some of the small-sized “trace”-words—such as Facebook, users, sciences, personal—that come up are illuminating as well in their seeming marginalization, indications of future concerns for the field. As you peruse the collection, consider, as Mueller suggests, what these different snapshot methods say about the current state of the field.

      A Note on Selection Criteria and Methods:

      These eleven articles advance knowledge in composition and rhetoric because they question, challenge, innovate, and re-imagine the field. It is those qualities that reviewers used as criteria for ranking the nominated articles. The major criteria for ranking and selecting the articles are threefold:

      1.Article must demonstrate a broad sense of the discipline, demonstrating the ability to explain how its specific intervention in a sub-disciplinary area intersects and addresses broad concerns of the field.

      2.Article must make an original contribution to the sub-disciplinary field, expanding or rearticulating central premises of that area.

      3.Article must be written in a style which, while disciplinary-based, attempts to engage with a wider audience.

      The editor of each participating journal was invited to submit two articles for consideration. Both articles were reviewed by reading groups at several colleges and universities across the United States. These groups consisted of full-time and part-time faculty, lecturers, and graduate students who read the articles and, according to the criteria listed above, ranked the articles on a scale of 1 to 4 (4 being an article that meets the highest criteria). The editors used these scores to select the final articles that appear here.

      We owe a great debt to our reading groups, whose work made this project possible. We thank them for their careful reading and rankings of the articles. Specifically, we thank all of the associate editors who participated in the reading groups: Sarah Antinora, UC Riverside; Francesca Astiazaran, CSU San Bernadino; Paige V. Banaji, Ohio State University; Jessica Best, UC Riverside; Lindsey Banister, Syracuse University; Chase Bollig; Ohio State University; Matthew Bond, UC Riverside; Bridgette Callahan, CSU San Bernadino; Joanna Collins, University of Pittsburgh; Clare Connors, University of Pittsburgh; Katherine M. DeLuca; Ohio State University; Chloe de los Reyes, CSU San Bernadino; Jennie Friedrich, UC Riverside; Brenda Glascott, CSU San Bernadino; Rochelle Gold, UC Riverside; Ashley Hamilton, CSU San Bernadino; Joel Harris, CSU San Bernadino; Jennifer Herman; Ohio State University; Deborah Kuzawa; Ohio State University; Annie S. Mendenhall; Ohio State University; Peter Moe, University of Pittsburgh; Kristin Noone, UC Riverside; Tamara Isaak, Syracuse University; Emily Maloney, University of Pittsburgh; Lauren Obermark; Ohio State University; Jess Pauszek, Syracuse University; Anne Schnarr, UC Riverside; Karrieann Soto, Syracuse University; Frances Suderman, CSU San Bernadino’ Noel Tague, University of Pittsburgh; Jaclyn Vasquez, CSU San Bernadino.

      Community Literacy Journal

      Community Litearcy Journal is on the Web at http://www.communityliteracy.org/

      The Community Literacy Journal publishes both scholarly work that contributes to the field’s emerging methodologies and research agendas and work by literacy workers, practitioners, and community literacy program staff. We are especially committed to presenting work done in collaboration between academics and community members.

      We understand “community literacy” as the domain for literacy work that exists outside of mainstream educational and work institutions. It can be found in programs devoted to adult education, early childhood education, reading initiatives, lifelong learning, workplace literacy, or work with marginalized populations, but it can also be found in more informal, ad hoc projects.

      For us, literacy is defined as the realm where attention is paid not just to content or to knowledge but to the symbolic means by which it is represented and used. Thus, literacy makes reference not just to letters and to text but to other multimodal and technological representations as well.

      Rhetorical Recipes: Women’s Literacies In and Out of the Kitchen

      We think that Professor White-Farnham’s article presents an excellent and compelling interview methodology for inquiring into “women’s lived experience and the significance of everyday life” and reveals how social and everyday literacies function in several overlapping social and personal spheres and contexts.

      1 Rhetorical Recipes: Women’s Literacies In and Out of the Kitchen

      Jamie White-Farnham

      Drawing on interview data regarding literacy practices done in tandem with housework, this article presents an array of recipe uses among retirement-age women. Given their backgrounds as professionals who came of age during second-wave feminism, the women see little value in “domestic” practices such as cooking literacies (Barton & Hamilton). However, the women’s uses of recipes for a variety of rhetorical purposes, in and out of the kitchen, are valuable material and social reflections of the women’s success in acquiring traditional literacies in school and at work.

      “Resources? For cleaning?! That’s the last thing I think of!” When my research participant Sandra scoffed at the possibility that literacy and housework could intersect, she exemplified the general response of each of my six research participants to my questions about the literacy practices they use in housework: a somewhat protective attitude towards literacy, as if its use to facilitate mundane chores might debase it. Sandra’s reaction is but a single example of the decisive and dichotomous opinions shared in my recent interview study of women of retirement age regarding the relationship between housework СКАЧАТЬ