Vernacular Eloquence: What Speech Can Bring to Writing

Awards:   Commended for PROSE (Language/Linguistics) 2012
Author:   Peter Elbow (Professor of English Emeritus, Professor of English Emeritus, University of Massachusetts, Amherst)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
ISBN:  

9780199782505


Pages:   456
Publication Date:   01 March 2012
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Vernacular Eloquence: What Speech Can Bring to Writing


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Awards

  • Commended for PROSE (Language/Linguistics) 2012

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Peter Elbow (Professor of English Emeritus, Professor of English Emeritus, University of Massachusetts, Amherst)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 23.60cm , Height: 3.60cm , Length: 16.30cm
Weight:   0.774kg
ISBN:  

9780199782505


ISBN 10:   0199782504
Pages:   456
Publication Date:   01 March 2012
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

"PART ONE. What's Best in Speaking And Writing? Introduction: Defining ""Speech"" and ""Writing"" 1. Speech and Writing as They Are Used: The Role of Culture 2. What's Good about Writing 3. Speaking as a Process: What Can It Offer Writing? 4. Speech as a Product: Eight Virtues in Careless Spoken Language that Careful Writing Needs 5. Intonation: A Virtue for Writing Found at the Root of Everyday Speech 6. Can We Really Have the Best of Both Worlds? PART TWO. A Role for the Tongue During the Early Stages of Writing: Treating Speech as Writing Introduction: More Defining 7. What is Speaking Onto the Page and How Does Freewriting Teach it? 8. Where Else Do We See Unplanned Speaking onto the Page? 9. Objections to Speaking onto the Page--And Responses 10. The Need for Care: Unplanned Speaking onto the Page is Never Enough PART THREE. A Role for the Tongue During Late Revising: Reading Aloud and Treating Writing as Speech Introduction 11. Revising by Reading Aloud. What the Mouth and the Ear Know 12. How Does Revising by Reading Aloud Actually Work? 13. Punctuation: Living with Two Traditions 14. Good Enough Punctuation by Reading Aloud and Listening 15. How Speech Can Improve Organization in Writing: Form as Energy 16. Summary Chapter: The Benefits of Speaking onto the Page and Reading Aloud PART FOUR. Vernacular Literacy Introduction: Dante and Vulgar Eloquence 17. Our Present Culture of Proper Literacy and How It Tries To Exclude Speech 18. A New Culture of Vernacular Literacy is on the Horizon Appendix I. How Freewriting Went from Dangerous to No Big Deal in the Composition and Rhetoric Community Appendix II. A list of Publications Written in Nonprestige Nonstandard Versions of English Appendix III. A List of Published Works by Peter Elbow"

Reviews

<br> Whether you aim to improve your own writing, help others improve theirs, understand more about written language, or just want to enjoy enthusiastic, passionate writing at its best, this book is for you. With a disarmingly simple thesis about what spoken language contributes to writing, VernacularEloquence makes major contributions to theory and to practice. --David Barton, author of Literacy: An Introduction to the Ecology of Written Language<p><br> What a wonderful, enticing book! As only he can, Peter Elbow explores the intricate relationship between speech and writing with broad learning, bold thinking, and a finely tuned sensibility. --Mike Rose, author of An Open Language: Selected Writing on Literacy, Learning, and Opportunity<p><br>


""Elbow is his own best argument for speaking onto the page: His voice is both authoritative and affable, conversational and professorial."" --Erin McKean, International Herald Tribune ""it is written in [the author's] wonderfully approachable, affable voice; it emphasizes the need to indulge one's own impetus when writing, to pour oneself into ""freewrites"" ... The book is organized in a unique and purposeful manner ... Highly recommended."" --E. McCourt, Jacksonville University, CHOICE ""...[S]urely some of the best work [Elbow] has done in his long and brilliant career....Elbow's book talks the talk and walks the walk: it is itself a demonstration of his subtitle--what speech can bring to writing....Bravo to Peter Elbow for this learned, provocative, and forward-looking book."" --Andrea A. Lunsford, award-winning author of The St. Martin's Handbook ""Whether you aim to improve your own writing, help others improve theirs, understand more about written language, or just want to enjoy enthusiastic, passionate writing at its best, this book is for you. With a disarmingly simple thesis about what spoken language contributes to writing, Vernacular Eloquence makes major contributions to theory and to practice."" --David Barton, author of Literacy: An Introduction to the Ecology of Written Language ""What a wonderful, enticing book! As only he can, Peter Elbow explores the intricate relationship between speech and writing with broad learning, bold thinking, and a finely tuned sensibility."" --Mike Rose, author of An Open Language: Selected Writing on Literacy, Learning, and Opportunity ""English and speech-communication educators, linguists, cognitive psychologists, and writers will find this book is filled with a multitude of insightful ideas for application--and scholarly research."" --Rosalind Horowitz, editor of Talking Texts: How Speech and Writing Interact in School Learning ""This title should greatly interest English language and linguistics scholars and teachers. Any readers willing either to dig deep or skim and skip will also find fresh ideas and renewed energy for writing."" --Library Journal ""More philosophically rigorous, more historically nuanced, and more socially engaged...and...still delivers the sort of deeply refreshing, commonsensical, practical wisdom about the writing process that has become synonymous with his name."" --Rhetoric Review


Elbow is his own best argument for speaking onto the page: His voice is both authoritative and affable, conversational and professorial. Erin McKean, International Herald Tribune


Author Information

Peter Elbow is Professor of English Emeritus at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst and former director of its Writing Program. He is the author of Writing Without Teachers, Writing With Power, Embracing Contraries, and Everyone Can Write.

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