From its origins in clay tablets to its future on digital tablets, Martin Puchner has thought about writing in all its forms. In this episode, John and Elizabeth talk to Martin, the Byron and Anita Wien Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Harvard. They begin with a discussion of a very early writerly text-the epic of Gilgamesh, a version of which has been Englished by Elizabeth's father. They discuss the different stages of world writing-from the time of the scribes to the time of great teachers like Confucius, Socrates and Jesus Christ, who had a very complicated relationship to writing. Are we on the cusp of a new transformation in the way in which writing occurs in the world? This transformation might have to do with codin...
Invention should be privileged in the writing classroom. This is the most important implication resu...
In this episode, John and Elizabeth speak with Lisa Gitelman, a professor in the departments of Engl...
Writing surrounds us in the modern world - but how did it develop into the systems we use today, and...
RTB listeners already know the inimitable Martin Puchner from that fabulous RTB episode about his "d...
The history of writing is an epic that spans six thousand years, from the valleys of the tigris and ...
A collaborative project working with stage two BA(Hons) Graphic Design students at Falmouth Universi...
Introduction: Setting the questions. By any measure, the creation and development of writing was a c...
In a world where teens send 100s of text messages a week, has literacy changed? In this episode, hea...
Novel Dialogue sits down with Michael Johnston of Purdue University and George Saunders, master of t...
Have you noticed how much you’ve been writing lately? How many emails, texts, and Facebook posts you...
Today, teachers of English are faced with the problem of developing new vantage points from which to...
This special issue of the Journal of Creative Writing Studies centers on how creative writing change...
Writing Talk includes interviews with nineteen well-known contemporary writers, exploring the ways i...
The state of writing abilities throughout the United States presents an urgent issue. Low student ac...
This study considers the contemporary post-literacy moment and its kinship to the historical change ...
Invention should be privileged in the writing classroom. This is the most important implication resu...
In this episode, John and Elizabeth speak with Lisa Gitelman, a professor in the departments of Engl...
Writing surrounds us in the modern world - but how did it develop into the systems we use today, and...
RTB listeners already know the inimitable Martin Puchner from that fabulous RTB episode about his "d...
The history of writing is an epic that spans six thousand years, from the valleys of the tigris and ...
A collaborative project working with stage two BA(Hons) Graphic Design students at Falmouth Universi...
Introduction: Setting the questions. By any measure, the creation and development of writing was a c...
In a world where teens send 100s of text messages a week, has literacy changed? In this episode, hea...
Novel Dialogue sits down with Michael Johnston of Purdue University and George Saunders, master of t...
Have you noticed how much you’ve been writing lately? How many emails, texts, and Facebook posts you...
Today, teachers of English are faced with the problem of developing new vantage points from which to...
This special issue of the Journal of Creative Writing Studies centers on how creative writing change...
Writing Talk includes interviews with nineteen well-known contemporary writers, exploring the ways i...
The state of writing abilities throughout the United States presents an urgent issue. Low student ac...
This study considers the contemporary post-literacy moment and its kinship to the historical change ...
Invention should be privileged in the writing classroom. This is the most important implication resu...
In this episode, John and Elizabeth speak with Lisa Gitelman, a professor in the departments of Engl...
Writing surrounds us in the modern world - but how did it develop into the systems we use today, and...