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Showing 1 to 15 of 517 results Save | Export
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Koehler, Adam – College English, 2013
This article identifies and examines a digital arm of creative writing studies and organizes that proposal into four categories through which to theorize the "craft" of creative production, each borrowed from Tim Mayers's "(Re)Writing Craft: Composition, Creative Writing, and the Future of English Studies": process, genre, author, and…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Handicrafts, Creative Writing, Rhetorical Invention
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Fosso, Kurt; Harp, Jerry – College English, 2012
We set out to investigate Miller's curious assertion--curious for a deconstructionist committed to a critique of the old metaphysics of presence--that literary works preexist their being written down. We find a basis for this sense of the preexistence of the literary work in Miller's insights about the performative dynamics of reading and writing.…
Descriptors: Literature, Theories, Literary Criticism, Reader Text Relationship
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Logie, John – College English, 2013
Roland Barthes's "The Death of the Author" is a foundational text for scholars who are addressing questions of authorship and textual ownership in English studies and its neighboring disciplines. Barthes's essay is typically presented without significant attention to the circumstances and context surrounding its initial English…
Descriptors: Authors, Scholarship, Intellectual Property, Copyrights
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Rice, Jeff – College English, 2013
This essay questions the digital humanities' dependence on interpretation and critique as strategies for reading and responding to texts. Instead, the essay proposes suggestion as a digital rhetorical practice, one that does not replace hermeneutics, but instead offers alternative ways to respond to texts. The essay uses the Occupy movement as an…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Humanities, Reading Strategies, Hermeneutics
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Lockhart, Tara – College English, 2012
This article excavates how style in writing was represented and taught in the under-investigated mid-twentieth century. I trace four editions of the textbook "Modern Rhetoric" (1949-1979), authored by Cleanth Brooks and Robert Penn Warren; I detail how the book was surprisingly innovative for the time, despite its eventual re-entrenchment to a…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Educational History, Writing Instruction, Literary Styles
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Upadhyay, Samrat; Schilb, John – College English, 2012
This article presents an interview with the noted Nepali American fiction writer Samrat Upadhyay. Samrat Upadhyay's fiction is mostly about his native country of Nepal, but he writes mainly for an Anglo-American audience. In the interview, Upadhyay not only discusses his own work, but he also examines samples of prose by other Asian or Asian…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Audiences, Foreign Countries, Asian Americans
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Weissman, Gary – College English, 2010
Through an account of how his own students analyzed Ira Sher's short story "The Man in the Well," the author calls for teachers of literature to value and attend to their classes' misreadings rather than replace them with corrective interpretations. He argues that probing these misreadings enables one to see the limits imposed by any single…
Descriptors: Literary Criticism, Misconceptions, Teacher Attitudes, Perspective Taking
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Cain, Mary Ann – College English, 2009
As a field, creative writing must reject its traditional image of "uselessness" and realize its anticapitalist, antiprivatizing potential as a creator of public space. In part, this move would involve teaching students to question traditional notions of influence, as well as the modernist concept of the author as a lone, autonomous individual.
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Criticism, Higher Education, Social Influences
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Wu, Hui – College English, 2010
Identifying the specific complexities and historical context of post-Mao Chinese literary women's rhetoric, along with ways they have been misread, the author argues in general that Western feminist critics need to be cautious about applying their concepts to non-Western women's literature. (Contains 7 notes.)
Descriptors: Feminism, Rhetoric, Females, Rhetorical Theory
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Ingham, Patricia Clare – College English, 2010
Trauma theory has been and continues to be important to critical work in every period of literary study. This essay argues that the subtle literary strategies of one fourteenth-century poem can help to address a blockage about representation current in that theory. Geoffrey Chaucer's "Troilus and Criseyde" meditates upon trauma by rendering…
Descriptors: Poetry, Figurative Language, Literary Criticism, Conflict
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Baca, Damian – College English, 2009
In 1992, more than 20 artists showcased their work in a traveling exhibit, "Chicano Codex: Encountering Art of the Americas." Each piece creatively resembled Mesoamerican amoxtli, the pictographic "codex books" that were destroyed by European combatants as a strategy for subjugating indigenous minds. Spain's campaign of…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Land Settlement, Rhetorical Criticism, Foreign Countries
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Weissman, Gary – College English, 2009
In her influential 1988 essay, "Fighting Words," Jane Tompkins argued that the arguments typically made by literary critics are characterized by an aggressive competitiveness that amounts to violence. But, as Tompkins's own rhetorical strategies demonstrate, at least as deplorable are the practices whereby critics render certain people anonymous.…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Criticism, Interprofessional Relationship, Competition
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Thompson, Roger – College English, 2007
In this article, the author argues that Emerson repudiated the formalism of nineteenth century belletristic, mechanistic, reason-centered, American rhetoric influenced by Hugh Blair. Instead Emerson promoted a rhetoric with imagination at its center, which calls for civic duty. (Contains 33 notes.)
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Imagination, Rhetorical Invention, Rhetorical Criticism
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Bahri, Deepika – College English, 2008
The collection of articles in featured in the special issue of the "College English" focus on the virtues of rhetorical analysis in understanding global concerns. In this article, the author offers her views about these articles. The author contends that neither feminism nor rhetorical analysis should be considered mere supplements in the study of…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Rhetorical Criticism, Global Approach, Feminism
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Mendenhall, Annie S. – College English, 2011
This essay provides an account of The Ohio State University's (OSU) rhetoric department during the tenure of Joseph Villiers Denney, arguing that he appropriated and repurposed national trends in education and rhetoric in ways that complicate the narrative of rhetoric and composition's decline in the late nineteenth century. In this essay, the…
Descriptors: Land Grant Universities, College Faculty, Reputation, Writing (Composition)
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