This article examines what a pedagogy of public rhetoric and community literacy might look like based on an understanding of twentieth century Mexican American civil rights rhetoric. The inductive process of examining archival materials and conducting oral histories informs this discussion on the processes and challenges of gaining civic inclusion. I argue that writing can be both a healing process and an occasion for exercising agency in a world of contingency and uncertainty. To illustrate, I describe several key events shaping the evolution of the post-World War II Mexican American civil rights movement in New Mexico. Taking a case study approach, I begin this chapter by examining the civic discourses of one prominent New Mexico leader i...
In Tactics of Hope, Paula Mathieu (2005) claims “Writing alone is insufficient to change the world, ...
This article is theoretical in focus, contrasting a legalized citizenship of membership (the citizen...
Literacy is often understood as the acquisition of individual skills and knowledge. In this essay, I...
This article examines what a pedagogy of public rhetoric and community literacy might look like base...
Activists, Immigrants, Citizens: Grounding Rhetorical Conceptions of Literacy creates a genealogy o...
This dissertation uses archival research, Chicana/o Studies scholarship and a rhetorical framework t...
American poet William Carlos Williams once wrote, "It is difficult to get the news from poems, but m...
In this dissertation, I conduct teacher-research and discourse analysis to examine the intersection ...
<p>My dissertation examines the rhetorical and discursive strategies embraced by African Americans d...
text"Mexican Americans Write Toward Justice in Texas, 1973 - 1982" examines literature produced in t...
The recovery of a movement is explored in this project inspired by the New Mexico Highlands Universi...
Public writing, or writing in the public sphere, is being heralded as the next step in composition s...
1990 was International Literacy Year. A decade later, both our essential understandings of what 'lit...
This dissertation is based on a qualitative case study of four adults who attend a literacy center w...
Critical race theory's dire account of the prison-slave throws the hopeful pragmatisms of rhetoric a...
In Tactics of Hope, Paula Mathieu (2005) claims “Writing alone is insufficient to change the world, ...
This article is theoretical in focus, contrasting a legalized citizenship of membership (the citizen...
Literacy is often understood as the acquisition of individual skills and knowledge. In this essay, I...
This article examines what a pedagogy of public rhetoric and community literacy might look like base...
Activists, Immigrants, Citizens: Grounding Rhetorical Conceptions of Literacy creates a genealogy o...
This dissertation uses archival research, Chicana/o Studies scholarship and a rhetorical framework t...
American poet William Carlos Williams once wrote, "It is difficult to get the news from poems, but m...
In this dissertation, I conduct teacher-research and discourse analysis to examine the intersection ...
<p>My dissertation examines the rhetorical and discursive strategies embraced by African Americans d...
text"Mexican Americans Write Toward Justice in Texas, 1973 - 1982" examines literature produced in t...
The recovery of a movement is explored in this project inspired by the New Mexico Highlands Universi...
Public writing, or writing in the public sphere, is being heralded as the next step in composition s...
1990 was International Literacy Year. A decade later, both our essential understandings of what 'lit...
This dissertation is based on a qualitative case study of four adults who attend a literacy center w...
Critical race theory's dire account of the prison-slave throws the hopeful pragmatisms of rhetoric a...
In Tactics of Hope, Paula Mathieu (2005) claims “Writing alone is insufficient to change the world, ...
This article is theoretical in focus, contrasting a legalized citizenship of membership (the citizen...
Literacy is often understood as the acquisition of individual skills and knowledge. In this essay, I...