© 2020 The Authors. Reading Research Quarterly published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Literacy Association The authors considered the capacious feeling that emerges from saying no to literacy practices, and the affective potential of saying no as a literacy practice. The authors highlight the affective possibilities of saying no to normative understandings of literacy, thinking with a series of vignettes in which children, young people, and teachers refused literacy practices in different ways. The authors use the term capacious to signal possibilities that are as yet unthought: a sense of broadening and opening out through enacting no. The authors examined how attention to affect ruptures humanist logics that infor...
What does reading look like? Can learning to read be reduced to the acquisition of a set of isolable...
Capacious has wisely positioned itself as a journal for “emerging affect inquiry . . . across any an...
This article explores reading in the English classroom through a cognitive linguistic lens. In parti...
This paper considers the capacious feeling that emerges from saying ‘no’ to literacy practices, and ...
Education has a responsibility to respond to the threat of deteriorating democracies (DeLuca & Chris...
Existing work on literacy and affect has posed important questions for how we think about meanings a...
Purpose This paper aims to draw from work in the field of English that questions the “limits of crit...
Is there space for greater affective engagement with poetry in the English Literature university cla...
This is an invited paper based on the keynote presentation that Professor Ralf St Clair made at the ...
The purpose of this post-qualitative study was to examine the rhizomatic functioning of youth’s enga...
Critical research in education is not what it used to be. It must now engage with a differently stru...
The authors of this chapter collaborated across two continents, two philosophical stances, and numer...
Through a consideration of literacies in theory and international policy, this article pushes at the...
In this paper, I argue that critical literacy is essentially a rationalist activity that does not su...
Purpose: Our study focuses on regulation of emotions in critical literacy, its resulting racial oppr...
What does reading look like? Can learning to read be reduced to the acquisition of a set of isolable...
Capacious has wisely positioned itself as a journal for “emerging affect inquiry . . . across any an...
This article explores reading in the English classroom through a cognitive linguistic lens. In parti...
This paper considers the capacious feeling that emerges from saying ‘no’ to literacy practices, and ...
Education has a responsibility to respond to the threat of deteriorating democracies (DeLuca & Chris...
Existing work on literacy and affect has posed important questions for how we think about meanings a...
Purpose This paper aims to draw from work in the field of English that questions the “limits of crit...
Is there space for greater affective engagement with poetry in the English Literature university cla...
This is an invited paper based on the keynote presentation that Professor Ralf St Clair made at the ...
The purpose of this post-qualitative study was to examine the rhizomatic functioning of youth’s enga...
Critical research in education is not what it used to be. It must now engage with a differently stru...
The authors of this chapter collaborated across two continents, two philosophical stances, and numer...
Through a consideration of literacies in theory and international policy, this article pushes at the...
In this paper, I argue that critical literacy is essentially a rationalist activity that does not su...
Purpose: Our study focuses on regulation of emotions in critical literacy, its resulting racial oppr...
What does reading look like? Can learning to read be reduced to the acquisition of a set of isolable...
Capacious has wisely positioned itself as a journal for “emerging affect inquiry . . . across any an...
This article explores reading in the English classroom through a cognitive linguistic lens. In parti...