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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Darin Payne , Daphne DesserPublisher: Lexington Books Imprint: Lexington Books Dimensions: Width: 16.30cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 23.90cm Weight: 0.435kg ISBN: 9780739167960ISBN 10: 0739167960 Pages: 178 Publication Date: 29 December 2011 Recommended Age: From 22 from 22 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents"Foreword by Rachel Riedner and Randi Grey Kristensen Acknowledgments Chapter 1: Pedagogy of the Globalized: Education as a Practice of Intervention, by Darin Payne Chapter 2: Nga Tamatoa and the Rhetoric of Brown Power: Re-Situating Collective Rhetorics in Global Colonialism, by Sharon Stevens and Lachlan Paterson Chapter 3: Think Global, Eat Local: Teaching Alternative Agrarian Literacy in a Globalized Age, by Eileen Schell Chapter 4: Globalization and the Composition Program: The WPA as Broker, by Bruce Horner Chapter 5: Anxieties of Globalization: Networked Subjects in Rhetoric and Composition Studies, by Rebecca Dingo and Donna Strickland Chapter 6: Mapping Everyday Articulations: Gender, Blackness, and Urban Revolution in Washington, D.C., by L. Hill Taylor, Jr. Chapter 7: ""The People's Challenge"": Rhetorics of Globalization from Above and Below, by Daphne Desser Chapter 8: Worldwide Composition: Virtual Uncertainties, by Chris Anson"ReviewsA rich, nuanced discussion of the ways that composition can sustain a radically democratic globalization from below. These essays trace the oppositional literacies and rhetorics of solidarity informing the movements struggling against the global network of sweatshops where poisoned workers toil twelve or fourteen hours for ten dollars a day. -- Marc Bousquet, Santa Clara University Teaching Writing in Globalization investigates competing meanings of 'globalization' to explore ways of using writing and the teaching of writing to negotiate the economic, geo-political, cultural, institutional, and disciplinary relations impacting our lives. Offering perspectives from some of the leading voices in rhetoric and composition, it provides a necessary and welcome opening into the multiple and specific ways we might (re)write and (re)read the global-local. -- Min-Zhan Lu, University of Louisville A rich, nuanced discussion of the ways that composition can sustain a radically democratic globalization from below. These essays trace the oppositional literacies and rhetorics of solidarity informing the movements struggling against the global network of sweatshops where poisoned workers toil twelve or fourteen hours for ten dollars a day. -- Bousquet, Marc Teaching Writing in Globalization investigates competing meanings of 'globalization' to explore ways of using writing and the teaching of writing to negotiate the economic, geo-political, cultural, institutional, and disciplinary relations impacting our lives. Offering perspectives from some of the leading voices in rhetoric and composition, it provides a necessary and welcome opening into the multiple and specific ways we might (re)write and (re)read the global-local. -- Lu, Min-Zhan A rich, nuanced discussion of the ways that composition can sustain a radically democratic globalization from below. These essays trace the oppositional literacies and rhetorics of solidarity informing the movements struggling against the global network of sweatshops where poisoned workers toil twelve or fourteen hours for ten dollars a day. -- Bousquet, Marc Teaching Writing in Globalization investigates competing meanings of globalization to explore ways of using writing and the teaching of writing to negotiate the economic, geo-political, cultural, institutional, and disciplinary relations impacting our lives. Offering perspectives from some of the leading voices in rhetoric and composition, it provides a necessary and welcome opening into the multiple and specific ways we might (re)write and (re)read the global-local. -- Lu, Min-Zhan Author InformationEditors: Darin Payne is a professor of English at the University of Hawi'i. Daphne Desser is a professor of English at the University of Hawi'i. Contributors: Chris M. Anson Daphne Desser Rebecca Dingo Bruce Horner Darin Payne Lachlan Paterson Eileen Schell Sharon M. Stevens Donna Strickland Hill Taylor, Jr. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |