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Outbursts in Academe: Multiculturalism and Other Sources of Conflict: Crosscurrents

Autor Kathleen Dixon, Dixon
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 31 oct 1998 – vârsta de la 18 până la 21 ani

"Outbursts in Academe" advances a new theoretical notion in the composition classroom: the concept of "outburst" as a single, researchable moment in the lives of teachers and students. "Outbursts are not reducible to 'resistance' to 'oppression'," Kathleen Dixon reminds us in the introduction. "An emotional display made in a classroom or at a conference might feel good at the moment, feel bad later, advance one's cause, and set it back simultaneously. Further, one person's outburst may create the conditions for another person's silence."

This thought-provoking collection is comprised of an introduction that establishes a definition for "outbursts," seven original essays, and seven responses to the essays. Contributors include young scholars from a range of disciplines and interdisciplines such as composition studies, English education, Chicano/a literature and language, socio-linguistics, and Native American studies. In general, more established scholars in composition and English education occupy the role of respondent.

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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780867094770
ISBN-10: 086709477X
Pagini: 176
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Editura: Heinemann Educational Books
Seria Crosscurrents


Descriere

Outbursts in Academe advances a new theoretical notion in the composition classroom: the concept of "outburst" as a single, researchable moment in the lives of teachers and students. "Outbursts are not reducible to 'resistance' to 'oppression'," Kathleen Dixon reminds us in the introduction. "An emotional display made in a classroom or at a conference might feel good at the moment, feel bad later, advance one's cause, and set it back simultaneously. Further, one person's outburst may create the conditions for another person's silence."
This thought-provoking collection is comprised of an introduction that establishes a definition for "outbursts," seven original essays, and seven responses to the essays. Contributors include young scholars from a range of disciplines and interdisciplines such as composition studies, English education, Chicano/a literature and language, socio-linguistics, and Native American studies. In general, more established scholars in composition and English education occupy the role of respondent.

Cuprins

Introduction: Outbursts: The Theory and a Guide to Reading, K. Dixon & W. Archibald
Immodest Proposals
Cyborg Bodies: Race, Class, Gender, and Communications Technology, C. Winkelmann
Macho in the Killing Zone or How to Survive Multicultural Reality, B. Davis
Responses: Whose Icon?, J. Degan ; Beyond Stereotypes: Las Latinas Caught Between Linguas y Culturas, A. Perez ; Responsibility, J. Schilb
Inter-view One: Reading Conflict in English Studies, K. Dixon
Classroom Conflicts
Revisiting White Feminist Authority or Gang Life in the University Classroom, K. Dixon
Essays That Never Were: Deaf Identity and Resistance in the Mainstream Classroom, J. Anderson
A Captivity Narrative: Indians, Mixedbloods, and the "White" Academy, S. Lyons
Responses: "Mixedblood" Rhetorics and the Concept of "Outbursts," P. Bizzell ; Beyond Liberal and Cultural Approaches to Social Justice, E. Flynn
Formations of "Multicultural" Selves and Institutions
Inter-view Two: Lost Outbursts, K. Dixon
Super-Mammy or Super-Sellout? Young, Black, and Female in the Academy, D. Paul
"Lost and Melted in the Pot": Multicultural Literacy in Predominantly White Classrooms, D. Starke-Meyerring
Response: Dangerous Critique: Academic Freedom and Institutional Constraint, S. Dilks

Notă biografică

Kathleen Dixon is an associate professor of English at the University of North Dakota, where she teaches composition and composition theory, women's studies, and cultural studies courses. She is the author of Making Relationships: Gender in the Forming of Academic Community (Peter Lang Publishing, 1997) and has written essays for College Composition and Communication, Composition Studies, and the Journal of Basic Writing.