Writing Across Difference
256 pages, 6 x 6
1
Paperback
Release Date:01 Mar 2022
ISBN:9781646421725
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Writing Across Difference

Theory and Intervention

Utah State University Press
As the nation becomes increasingly divided by economic inequality, racial injustice, xenophobic violence, and authoritarian governance, scholars in writing studies have strived to develop responsive theories and practices to engage students, teachers, administrators, and citizens in the crisis of division and to begin the complicated work of radically transforming our inequitable institutions and society. Writing Across Difference is one of the first collections to gather scholars from across the field engaged in offering theoretical, methodological, and pedagogical resources for understanding, interrogating, negotiating, and writing across difference.
 
No text in composition has made such a sweeping attempt to place the multiple areas of translingualism, anti-racism, anticolonialism, interdisciplinarity, and disability into conversation or to represent the field as broadly unified around the concept of difference. The chapters in this book specifically explore how monolingual ideology is maintained in institutions and how translingual strategies can (re)include difference; how narrative-based interventions can promote writing across difference in classrooms and institutions by complicating dominant discourses; and how challenging dominant logics of class, race, ability, and disciplinarity can present opportunities for countering divisiveness.
 
Writing Across Difference offers writing scholars a sustained intellectual encounter with the crisis of difference and foregrounds the possibilities such an encounter offers for collective action toward a more inclusive and equitable society. It presents a variety of approaches for intervening in classrooms and institutions in the interest of focalizing, understanding, negotiating, and bridging difference. The book will be a valuable resource to those disturbed by the bigotry, violence, and fanaticism that mark our political culture and who are seeking inspiration, models, and methods for collective response.
 
Contributors: Anis Bawarshi, Jonathan Benda, Megan Callow, James Rushing Daniel, Cherice Escobar Jones, Laura Gonzales, Juan Guerra, Stephanie Kerschbaum, Katie Malcolm, Nadya Pittendrigh, Mya Poe, Candice Rai, Iris Ruiz, Ann Shivers-McNair, Neil Simpkins, Alison Y. L. Stephens, Sumyat Thu, Katherine Xue, Shui-yin Sharon Yam
 
‘Perhaps this book’s greatest achievement is how real it makes the complexity and vulnerability, the individuality and institutionality, of writing across difference. This is a key step in being able to celebrate and systemically reward writing across difference instead of merely describing its importance.’
—Laura Aull, University of Michigan
James Rushing Daniel is associate teaching professor at the University of Washington–Seattle. His research has been published in College English, Philosophy and Rhetoric, College Composition and Communication, and other venues. He is also the author of Toward an Anti-Capitalist Composition.
Katie Malcolm is associate director of the Center for Teaching and Learning at the University of Washington.
Candice Rai is associate professor of English at the University of Washington–Seattle. She is coeditor of Field Rhetoric: Ethnography, Ecology, and Engagement in the Places of Persuasion and author of Democracy’s Lot: Rhetoric, Publics, and the Places of Invention.
 
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