Language Awareness: Readings for College Writers / Edition 12

Language Awareness: Readings for College Writers / Edition 12

by Paul Eschholz
ISBN-10:
1457697971
ISBN-13:
2901457697974
Pub. Date:
04/07/2016
Publisher:
Bedford/St. Martin's
Language Awareness: Readings for College Writers / Edition 12

Language Awareness: Readings for College Writers / Edition 12

by Paul Eschholz
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Overview

This book features readings on a wide range of language topics, from code-switching and multilingualism to fake news and the rise of AI

Product Details

ISBN-13: 2901457697974
Publisher: Bedford/St. Martin's
Publication date: 04/07/2016
Edition description: Twelfth Edition
Pages: 656
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Paul Eschholz and Alfred Rosa are professors emeriti of English at the University of Vermont. They have directed statewide writing programs and conducted numerous workshops throughout the country on writing and the teaching of writing.  Eschholz and Rosa have collaborated on a number of best-selling texts for Bedford/St. Martin's, including Subject & Strategy; Outlooks and Insights: A Reader for College Writers; with Virginia Clark, Language Awareness; and, with Virginia Clark and Beth Simon, Language: Readings in Language.
 
Virginia Clark was a professor of English at the University of Vermont and served as chair of the English department. With Paul Eschholz and Alfred Rosa, she is the coauthor of Language Awareness.

Table of Contents

* New to this edition
PART 1

Chapter 1. Reading Critically
Getting the Most Out of Your Reading
Be Specific, Natalie Goldberg
Practice Reading, Annotating, and Analyzing
Whats in a Name?, Henry Louis Gates Jr.
Reading as a Writer

Chapter 2. Writing in College and Beyond
Developing an Effective Writing Process
Mixed Results, Mya Nunnally (student essay)

Chapter 3. Writers on Reading and Writing
Reading to Write, Stephen King
Shitty First Drafts, Anne Lamott
The First Sentence, Iman Humaydan
The Makers Eye: Revising Your Own Manuscripts, Donald M. Murray
How Scribbling in the Margins Transformed My Reading, Robert Rubsam *

Chapter 4. Writing with Sources
What Does It Mean to Write with Sources?
Write with Sources
Learn to Summarize, Paraphrase, and Quote from Your Sources
Integrate Borrowed Material into Your Text
Avoid Plagiarism
Can America Prescribe English with a Clear Conscience?, Jake Jamieson (student essay)

Chapter 5. A Brief Guide to Writing a Research Paper
Establish a Realistic Schedule
Locate and Use Print and Online Sources
Evaluate Your Sources
Analyze Your Sources
Develop a Working Bibliography of Your Sources
Take Notes
Document Your Sources
MLA-Style Documentation
APA-Style Documentation

PART 2

Chapter 6. Understanding the Power of Language: How We Find Our Voices
Coming into Language, Jimmy Santiago Baca
The Day Language Came into My Life, Helen Keller
The Transformation of Silence into Language and Action, Audre Lorde
Surrendering, Ocean Vuong *
On and On: Appalachian Language and Academic Power, Meredith McCarroll
Address at the Youth Takeover of the United Nations, Malala Yousafzai

Chapter 7. Language Communities: Where Do We Belong?
Speech Communities, Paul Roberts
All-American Dialects, Richard Lederer
Code-Switching Is Not Trying to Fit in to White Culture, It’s Surviving It, Ida Harris *
Sign of the Times, Sara Novic
Mother Tongue, Amy Tan
I Am, in Italian, a Tougher, Freer Writer, Jhumpa Lahiri *

Chapter 8. Language Evolution: How and Why Does Language Change?
Words on the Move, John McWhorter
How New Words Are Born, Andy Bodle
What are Gender Pronouns and Why is it Important to Use the Right Ones?, Glen Hosking *
Textspeak Is Modernizing the English Language (*English), Lauren Collister
The (Sometimes Unintentional) Subtext of Digital Conversations, Deborah Tannen
How A Visual Language Evolves as Our World Does, Amanda Morris *

Chapter 9. Language That Manipulates: Politics, Advertising, and Doublespeak
Propaganda: How Not to Be Bamboozled, Donna Woolfolk Cross
Selection, Slanting, and Charged Language, Newman P. Birk and Genevieve B. Birk
Fake News Starts with the Title, Benjamin Horne
The Headlines That Are Covering Up Police Violence, Sarah J. Jackson *
Weasel Words: The Art of Saying Nothing at All, William Lutz
The Ways of Silencing, Jason Stanley

Chapter 10. The Language of Discrimination: Hate, Prejudice, and Social Justice
The Language of Prejudice, Gordon Allport
The F Word, Firoozeh Dumas
A History of ‘Wokeness’: How a Black Activist Watchword Got Co-Opted in the Culture War, Aja Romano *
The Racist Trope That Won’t Die, Brent Staples
The Fight Over the Words of Immigration, Jeff Gamage
Nobody Mean More to Me Than You, June Jordan

Chapter 11. Language and Gender: Power, Abuse, and Equality
We’re All Mad Here: Weinstein, Women, and the Language of Lunacy, Laurie Penny
The Careless Language of Sexual Violence, Roxane Gay
Happy Feminist, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
How “Ma’am” Went from Being a Respectful Word for Some—But Polarizing for Others, Janelle Davis *
The Language We Use to Talk about Pregnancy and Abortion Is Changing. But Not Everyone Welcomes the Shift, Harmeet Kaur *
How to Refer to My Husband-Wife, Michelle Tea

Chapter 12. The Language of Lying: Ethics, White Lies, and Fraud
The Truth about Lying, Judith Viorst
Lying Words, James Pennebaker
Learning to Lie, Po Bronson
Is Lying Bad for Us?, Richard Gunderman
Psychology of Fraud: Why Good People Do Bad Things, Chana Joffe-Walt and Alix Spiedel
How Self-Deception Allows People to Lie, David Robson *

Chapter 13. The Language of Conflict Resolution: Dignity, Apology, and De-escalation
Resolve Current and Future Conflicts with Dignity, Donna Hicks
How Those Who Want to Divide Us Use Language to Stoke Violence, H. Colleen Sinclair *
The Language of Online Argument, Ian Leslie *
The Five Ingredients of an Effective Apology, Guy Winch *
Further Adventures of Flex Cop, Michael Gardner
Stalling for Time, Gary Noesner

Chapter 14. Contemporary Language Issues
THE GREAT SINGULAR THEY DEBATE
We Need the Singular They, Stephanie Golden
The Tragedy of the Singular They, Tom Flynn *
LATINX: YES OR NO?
What Does ‘Latinx’ Mean? A Look at the Term That’s Challenging Gender Norms, Yesenia Padilla
Stop Using ‘Latinx’ if You Really Want to Be Inclusive, Melissa K. Ochoa *
WHO’S AFRAID OF CHATGPT?
How ChatGPT Robs Students of Motivation to Write and Think for Themselves, Naomi S. Baron *
Why I’m Not Scared of ChatGPT, Christopher Grobe *

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