Addressing the current and growing interest in the personal, the self, and the autobiographical not only in the teaching of writing, but also across many disciplinary and subject fields, Relocating the Personal describes a rich array of practical approaches to teaching the personal in settings where it has been excluded.
The author argues for the teaching of writing as a political project in schools and communities, and for a notion of the personal which is not simply equated with voice. The construct of narrative is preferred, because it allows teachers to examine all personal writing as a representation and not the same thing as the writer’s life. Strategies are developed for examining how experience is portrayed and how it might be written differently, with material effects on both the personal text and the writer’s person.
The book incorporates the latest theories of critical and genre literacy as it develops four teaching cases in different education contexts (secondary, undergraduate, graduate, and adult/community).
Зміст
Foreword
Preface
1. Space, Time, Embodied Texts
2. Relocating Voice And Transformation
3. Stories of Ageing
4. Who Said Argumentative Writing Isn’t Personal?
5. Critical Spaces for Learning to Teach Writing
6. Language, Gender, Writing
7. The Politics of the Personal: New Metaphors, New Practices
Bibliography
Index
Про автора
Barbara Kamler is Associate Professor of Education at Deakin University in Burwood, Australia. She is the editor of
Constructing Gender and Difference: Critical Research Perspectives on Early Childhood.