Authoring: An Essay for the English Profession on Potentiality and Singularity
The postmodern conviction that meaning is indeterminate and self is an illusion, though fascinating and defensible in theory, leaves a number of scholarly and pedagogical questions unsatisfied. Authoring-the phenomenological act or felt sense of creating a text-is "a remarkably black box," say Haswell and Haswell, yet it should be one of the central preoccupations of scholars in English studies. Not only can the study of authoring accommodate the "social turn" since postmodernism, they argue, but it accommodates as well conceptions of, and the lived experience of, personal potentiality and singularity. Without abandoning the value of postmodern perspectives, Haswell and Haswell use their own perspective of authorial potentiality and singularity to reconsider staple English-studies concerns such as gender, evaluation, voice, character, literacy, feminism, self, interpretation, assessment, signature, and taste. The essay is unique as well in the way that its authors embrace often competing realms of English studies, drawing examples and arguments equally from literary and compositionist research. In the process, the Haswells have created a Big Idea book, and a critique of the field. Their point is clear: the singular person/mysterious black box/author merits deeper consideration than we have given it, and the book's crafted and woven explorations provide the intellectual tools to move beyond both political divisions and theoretical impasses.
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Authoring: An Essay for the English Profession on Potentiality and Singularity
The postmodern conviction that meaning is indeterminate and self is an illusion, though fascinating and defensible in theory, leaves a number of scholarly and pedagogical questions unsatisfied. Authoring-the phenomenological act or felt sense of creating a text-is "a remarkably black box," say Haswell and Haswell, yet it should be one of the central preoccupations of scholars in English studies. Not only can the study of authoring accommodate the "social turn" since postmodernism, they argue, but it accommodates as well conceptions of, and the lived experience of, personal potentiality and singularity. Without abandoning the value of postmodern perspectives, Haswell and Haswell use their own perspective of authorial potentiality and singularity to reconsider staple English-studies concerns such as gender, evaluation, voice, character, literacy, feminism, self, interpretation, assessment, signature, and taste. The essay is unique as well in the way that its authors embrace often competing realms of English studies, drawing examples and arguments equally from literary and compositionist research. In the process, the Haswells have created a Big Idea book, and a critique of the field. Their point is clear: the singular person/mysterious black box/author merits deeper consideration than we have given it, and the book's crafted and woven explorations provide the intellectual tools to move beyond both political divisions and theoretical impasses.
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Authoring: An Essay for the English Profession on Potentiality and Singularity

Authoring: An Essay for the English Profession on Potentiality and Singularity

Authoring: An Essay for the English Profession on Potentiality and Singularity

Authoring: An Essay for the English Profession on Potentiality and Singularity

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Overview

The postmodern conviction that meaning is indeterminate and self is an illusion, though fascinating and defensible in theory, leaves a number of scholarly and pedagogical questions unsatisfied. Authoring-the phenomenological act or felt sense of creating a text-is "a remarkably black box," say Haswell and Haswell, yet it should be one of the central preoccupations of scholars in English studies. Not only can the study of authoring accommodate the "social turn" since postmodernism, they argue, but it accommodates as well conceptions of, and the lived experience of, personal potentiality and singularity. Without abandoning the value of postmodern perspectives, Haswell and Haswell use their own perspective of authorial potentiality and singularity to reconsider staple English-studies concerns such as gender, evaluation, voice, character, literacy, feminism, self, interpretation, assessment, signature, and taste. The essay is unique as well in the way that its authors embrace often competing realms of English studies, drawing examples and arguments equally from literary and compositionist research. In the process, the Haswells have created a Big Idea book, and a critique of the field. Their point is clear: the singular person/mysterious black box/author merits deeper consideration than we have given it, and the book's crafted and woven explorations provide the intellectual tools to move beyond both political divisions and theoretical impasses.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780874217629
Publisher: Utah State University Press
Publication date: 03/01/2010
Edition description: 1
Pages: 290
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.80(d)
Age Range: 3 Months to 18 Years

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

Introduction: English Studies and Black Boxes 1

1 Authoring Accepted 11

Interchapter: Potentiality and Alice Sheldon 29

2 Potentiality and the Teaching of English 32

3 Potentiality and Gendership 47

4 Potentiality, Gendership, and Teacher Response 56

5 Potentiality, Gendership, Teacher Response, and Student Voices 63

6 Potentiality, Reading, and George Yeats 75

7 Potentiality, Life-Course, Academic Course, and Unpredictability 97

Interchapter: Singularity and Alice Sheldon 105

8 Singularity and the Teaching of English 108

9 Singularity and Narrative: Character, Dignity, Recentering 131

10 Singular Authorial Offerings: Lifestories, Literacy Narratives, and the Shatterbelt 156

11 Singularity, Feminism, and the Politics of Difference and Identity 177

12 Singularity, Self-Loss, and Radical Postmodernism 194

13 Singularity and Diagnostics: Disposements, Interpretations, and Lames 213

Interchapter: Authoring and Alice Sheldon 233

14 Authoring Neglected 236

Envoi: Hospitality and Alice Sheldon 260

References 263

Index 274

About the Authors 280

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