Since the nineteen forties, when the New Criticism began to re-vitalize the teaching of literature in America, college English programs have typically included an introductory course that combines the close reading of short stories with the writing of analytical essays. While affirming the essential soundness of such a combination of literature and composition, this dissertation proposes a revisionist approach to this course, intended to enhance its strength by incorporating into it the valuable insights of contemporary theories of language and literature. These involve a strongly rhetorical approach to composition, a reader-response approach to literature, and a collaborative learning approach to pedagogy. Part I, rooted in a constructivis...
Literature basically belongs to the nature of teaching. Henceforth, teaching literature has come up ...
Since the first course in rhetoric began at Harvard in the 1890's, college and university English de...
The pen is mightier than the sword only so long as the penman is at least as adept as the swordsman...
The freshman course in "writing about literature" is a metaphor of the profession of English. Politi...
This dissertation is a qualitative study of a college introductory literature-based writing course. ...
This ethnography of two college composition courses focuses on four students in order to question th...
The disciplines of English and composition seem particularly prone to crisis-driven proclamations: o...
textThis dissertation intervenes in a long-simmering debate about whether literature belongs in comp...
grantor: University of TorontoWriting Fiction as a Form of Inquiry: A Defense and Explora...
This course will explore the glorious art and stringent discipline of storytelling through a focus o...
In a time of departmental shifting, it is imperative that our English departments consider how we sh...
The aim of this study is to depict how certain revisions in the traditional methods of approaching s...
This dissertation identifies several reasons that the field of composition studies has largely negle...
This dissertation argues that using rhetorical approaches to outré literature gleaned from popular c...
Perhaps the most distinct difference between the expressivist and the social constructionist in the ...
Literature basically belongs to the nature of teaching. Henceforth, teaching literature has come up ...
Since the first course in rhetoric began at Harvard in the 1890's, college and university English de...
The pen is mightier than the sword only so long as the penman is at least as adept as the swordsman...
The freshman course in "writing about literature" is a metaphor of the profession of English. Politi...
This dissertation is a qualitative study of a college introductory literature-based writing course. ...
This ethnography of two college composition courses focuses on four students in order to question th...
The disciplines of English and composition seem particularly prone to crisis-driven proclamations: o...
textThis dissertation intervenes in a long-simmering debate about whether literature belongs in comp...
grantor: University of TorontoWriting Fiction as a Form of Inquiry: A Defense and Explora...
This course will explore the glorious art and stringent discipline of storytelling through a focus o...
In a time of departmental shifting, it is imperative that our English departments consider how we sh...
The aim of this study is to depict how certain revisions in the traditional methods of approaching s...
This dissertation identifies several reasons that the field of composition studies has largely negle...
This dissertation argues that using rhetorical approaches to outré literature gleaned from popular c...
Perhaps the most distinct difference between the expressivist and the social constructionist in the ...
Literature basically belongs to the nature of teaching. Henceforth, teaching literature has come up ...
Since the first course in rhetoric began at Harvard in the 1890's, college and university English de...
The pen is mightier than the sword only so long as the penman is at least as adept as the swordsman...