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Taking Stock
The Writing Process Movement in the 90s

Edited by Lad Tobin, Boston College, Thomas Newkirk, University of New Hampshire

ISBN 978-0-86709-346-9 / 0-86709-346-3 / 1994 / 298pp / Paperback
Imprint: Boynton/Cook
Availability: In Stock

Grade Level: College

List Price: $26.50
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Description
    The book is written in a style that is both personal and academic, practical and theoretical-an accessible and timely book.
    —Writing Teacher

Until the late 1960s, English departments were almost exclusively literature departments. The teaching of writing was seen only as an apprenticeship for graduate students and part-timers who hoped to move on soon to more gratifying work, and most students' writing process consisted of "procrastinate, write, hand in, hope for the best."

Taking Stock examines how all of this changed. Advocates of the writing process movement offered a new vision of composition teaching and research. More than twenty-five years after the appearance of their radically new ideas, Taking Stock reassesses the ways that the writing process has been taught, institutionalized, researched, and theorized. A collection of articles drawn from the University of New Hampshire's historic 1992 conference on the writing process movement, Taking Stock presents some of the major figures -- such as Britton, Elbow, Macrorie, Moffett, and Murray -- who reflect on their early contributions in light of developments.

Other contributors offer new answers to persistent questions and new ones -- about gender and authority in process classrooms; about why authors, teachers, and scholars use such different language when they talk about the writing process; about the search for the self in an age of post modernism.

Table of Contents

    Contents:
    Introduction:
    Lad Tobin, How the Writing Process Was Born -- and Other Conversion Narratives I. Reading the Writing Process Movement 1. James Moffett, Coming Out Right 2. Lisa Ede, Reading the Writing Process 3. James Marshall, "Of What Does Skill in Writing Really Consist?" The Political Life of the Writing Process Movement 4. Donald M. Murray, Knowing Not Knowing II. Teaching the Writing Process 5. Ken Macrorie, Process, Product, and Quality 6. Daniel Reagan, The Process of Poetry: Rethinking Literature in the Composition Course 7. Michelle Payne, Rend(er)ing Women's Authority in the Writing Classroom III. Institutionalizing the Writing Process 8. Thomas Newkirk, The Politics of Intimacy: The Defeat of Barrett Wendell at Harvard 9. Charles Moran, How the Writing Process Came to UMass/Amherst: Roger Garrison, Donald Murray, and Institutional Change 10. Mary Minock, The Bad Marriage: A Revisionist View of James Britton's Expressive-Writing Hypothesis in American Practice IV. Deconstructing the Writing Process 11. Peter Elbow, The Uses of Binary Thinking: Exploring Seven Productive Oppositions 12. Robert Yagelski, Who's Afraid of Subjectivity? The Composing Process and Postmodernism or a Student of Donald Murray Enters the Age of Postmodernism 13. Thomas E. Recchio, On the Critical Necessity of "Essaying" V. Narrating the Writing Process 14. Susan Wall, "Where Your Treasure Is": Accounting for Differences in Our Talk About Teaching 15. Wendy Bishop, The Perils, Pleasures, and Process of Ethnographic Writing Research 16. James Britton, There Is One Story Worth Telling

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