This qualitative study traces different articulations of the public, emotional honesty, and economic advantage in the literacy sponsorship of detained writer Lil’ Purp by The Beat Within, a publication for incarcerated youth and adults. Findings are compared to The Beat’s own account of Purp’s progress, revealing a set of practices reminiscent of Socratic parrhêsia that revise understanding of literacy sponsorship by expanding it to a philosophical register. Because The Beat also becomes a site of affective solidarity among detained writers in a way that resists the directional logic of writing toward civic participation, the study supports thinking about affect in public writing not as a process that moves toward political action, but rath...
Feeling Engaged: College Writers as Literacy Tutors brings together scholarship in the rhetoric of e...
This chapter explores the centrality of the imprisoned writer to the identity and advocacy work of w...
This paper presents some initial findings from an analysis of published anthologies written by priso...
Critical race theory's dire account of the prison-slave throws the hopeful pragmatisms of rhetoric a...
This paper addresses the experience of juvenile participation in the Beat Within detention center wr...
Considering the situated complexities and competing interest of exploitation and hope inherent in co...
This paper unpacks the contradiction between the benefits of literacy and the punitive prison polici...
This essay argues that while fostering individual and collaborative literacy can indeed promote self...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Department of English, Washington State UniversityThis dissertation will demonstrate...
Incarcerated adolescents deserve and need an aggressive literacy program which draws upon their pers...
Using a Third Space theoretical framework, this paper investigates how incarcerated juveniles are im...
This action research project describes the impact a love for reading and access to books had on inca...
A vibrant live performance, spoken word poetry has enhanced people’s lives worldwide. Yet, it contin...
This qualitative dissertation argues that women\u27s prison writing workshops are potential spaces f...
Although this qualitative group case study of a youth poetry team competing in a statewide Poetry Sl...
Feeling Engaged: College Writers as Literacy Tutors brings together scholarship in the rhetoric of e...
This chapter explores the centrality of the imprisoned writer to the identity and advocacy work of w...
This paper presents some initial findings from an analysis of published anthologies written by priso...
Critical race theory's dire account of the prison-slave throws the hopeful pragmatisms of rhetoric a...
This paper addresses the experience of juvenile participation in the Beat Within detention center wr...
Considering the situated complexities and competing interest of exploitation and hope inherent in co...
This paper unpacks the contradiction between the benefits of literacy and the punitive prison polici...
This essay argues that while fostering individual and collaborative literacy can indeed promote self...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Department of English, Washington State UniversityThis dissertation will demonstrate...
Incarcerated adolescents deserve and need an aggressive literacy program which draws upon their pers...
Using a Third Space theoretical framework, this paper investigates how incarcerated juveniles are im...
This action research project describes the impact a love for reading and access to books had on inca...
A vibrant live performance, spoken word poetry has enhanced people’s lives worldwide. Yet, it contin...
This qualitative dissertation argues that women\u27s prison writing workshops are potential spaces f...
Although this qualitative group case study of a youth poetry team competing in a statewide Poetry Sl...
Feeling Engaged: College Writers as Literacy Tutors brings together scholarship in the rhetoric of e...
This chapter explores the centrality of the imprisoned writer to the identity and advocacy work of w...
This paper presents some initial findings from an analysis of published anthologies written by priso...