Writing against the Curriculum: Anti-Disciplinarity in the Writing and Cultural Studies Classroom

Author:   Randi Gray Kristensen ,  Ryan M. Claycomb
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
ISBN:  

9780739128008


Pages:   244
Publication Date:   05 November 2009
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Writing against the Curriculum: Anti-Disciplinarity in the Writing and Cultural Studies Classroom


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Author:   Randi Gray Kristensen ,  Ryan M. Claycomb
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Imprint:   Lexington Books
Dimensions:   Width: 16.20cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 24.00cm
Weight:   0.513kg
ISBN:  

9780739128008


ISBN 10:   0739128000
Pages:   244
Publication Date:   05 November 2009
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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.

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This volume is the guide book to anti-disciplinary living and teaching we've been waiting for. Composition and cultural studies come together here to expose the fractures in the corporate university, with its efforts to streamline production, contain difference, and turn out recognizable, disciplined commodities. Writing against such a limited curriculum, the scholar-activists included in this volume collectively seek to unleash all that is excessive and unruly about learning, teaching, and writing. In doing so, they position the writing classroom not as a mere gateway to disciplinarity and professionalization. Instead, the writing classroom here becomes a resistant location where new forms of knowledge, new ways of thinking and writing, and unexpected but vital forms of critical conviviality are generated.--Robert Mcruer


Writing against the Curriculum makes a significant and timely contribution to critical conversations about the place and status of the fields/areas of composition, rhetoric, and cultural studies. This collection is especially timely given substantial institutional pressures to rationalize writing, inquiry, and pedagogy into commodifiable and assessable forms; and, by demands to professionalize and package these fields as 'disciplines.' While Kristensen and Claycomb accurately refer to their collection as border writing (in Giroux's sense of the term), the text also has the critical, creative, and resistant energy of an affinity group-struggling within the nexus of classrooms, academic institutions, and neoliberalism. Writing against the Curriculum is a must read for students and faculty devoted to, in the words of Kristensen and Claycomb, making space for the unruly, the resistant, and the radical in composition, rhetoric, and cultural studies. -- Kevin Mahoney, Associate Professor and Coordinator of Composition, Kutztown University This volume is the guide book to anti-disciplinary living and teaching we've been waiting for. Composition and cultural studies come together here to expose the fractures in the corporate university, with its efforts to streamline production, contain difference, and turn out recognizable, disciplined commodities. Writing against such a limited curriculum, the scholar-activists included in this volume collectively seek to unleash all that is excessive and unruly about learning, teaching, and writing. In doing so, they position the writing classroom not as a mere gateway to disciplinarity and professionalization. Instead, the writing classroom here becomes a resistant location where new forms of knowledge, new ways of thinking and writing, and unexpected but vital forms of critical conviviality are generated. -- Robert Mcruer, author of Crip Theory: Cultural Signs of Queerness and Disability and is a professor of English at George Washington University


Author Information

Randi Gray Kristensen is assistant professor of university writing at The George Washington University. Ryan Claycomb is assistant professor of English at West Virginia University.

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