Hlustaðu og lestu

Stígðu inn í heim af óteljandi sögum

  • Lestu og hlustaðu eins mikið og þú vilt
  • Þúsundir titla
  • Getur sagt upp hvenær sem er
  • Engin skuldbinding
Prófa frítt
is Device Banner Block 894x1036

Beyond Progress in the Prison Classroom: Options and Opportunities

Sería

1 of 13

Tungumál
enska
Format
Flokkur

Óskáldað efni

Through a mix of history, theory, and story, Anna Plemons explores the fate of the Arts in Corrections (AIC) program at New Folsom Prison in California in order to study prison education in general as well as the disciplinary goals of rhetoric and composition classrooms.

When viewed as a microcosm of the broader enterprise, the prison classroom highlights the way that composition and rhetoric as a discipline continues to make use of colonial ways of knowing and being that work against the decolonial intentions of the field. Plemons suggests that a truly decolonial turn in composition cannot be achieved as long as economic logics and rhetorics of individual transformation continue to be the default currency for ascribing value in prison writing programs specifically and in out-of-school writing communities more generally. Indigenous scholarship provides the theoretical basis for Plemons’s proposed intervention in the ways it both pushes back against individualized, economic assessments of value and describes design principles for research and pedagogy that are respectful, reciprocal, and relational.

Beyond Progress in the Prison Classroom includes narrative selections from the author and current and former AIC participants, inviting readers into the lives of incarcerated authors and demonstrating the effects of relationality on prison-scholars, ultimately upending the misconception that these writers and their teachers exist apart from the web of relations beyond the prison walls. With contributions from incarcerated prison-scholars Ken Blackburn, Bryson L. Cole, Harry B. Grant Jr., Adam Hinds, Hung-Linh "Ronnie" Hoang, Andrew Molino, Michael L. Owens, Wayne Vaka, and Martin Williams.

About the CCCC Studies in Writing & Rhetoric (SWR) Series In this series, the methods of studies vary from the critical to historical to linguistic to ethnographic, and their authors draw on work in various fields that inform composition—including rhetoric, communication, education, discourse analysis, psychology, cultural studies, and literature. Their focuses are similarly diverse—ranging from individual writers and teachers, to classrooms and communities and curricula, to analyses of the social, political, and material contexts of writing and its teaching.

© 2019 National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) (Rafbók): 9780814100295

Útgáfudagur

Rafbók: 3 november 2019

Merki

    Aðrir höfðu einnig áhuga á...

    Veldu áskrift

    • Yfir 900.000 hljóð- og rafbækur

    • Yfir 400 titlar frá Storytel Original

    • Barnvænt viðmót með Kids Mode

    • Vistaðu bækurnar fyrir ferðalögin

    Vinsælast

    Unlimited

    Besti valkosturinn fyrir einn notanda

    3290 kr /mánuði
    3 dagar frítt
    • 1 aðgangur

    • Ótakmörkuð hlustun

    • Yfir 900.000 hljóð- og rafbækur

    • Engin skuldbinding

    • Getur sagt upp hvenær sem er

    Prófaðu frítt

    Family

    Fyrir þau sem vilja deila sögum með fjölskyldu og vinum.

    Frá 3990 kr/mánuði
    3 dagar frítt
    • 2-6 aðgangar

    • 100 klst/mán fyrir hvern aðgang

    • Yfir 900.000 hljóð- og rafbækur

    • ‎Engin skuldbinding

    • Getur sagt upp hvenær sem er

    2 aðgangar

    3990 kr /á mánuði
    Prófaðu frítt