8 research outputs found
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Praxis Vol 13, No 1: From the Editors, Special Issue on The Future of Writing Center
We are enormously proud to be publishing this issue. While previous issues have always included one or two articles, columns or features focused on what could be considered non-traditional or non-typical subject matter for the study of writing center research and practice, this issue takes as its focus just that: the non-typical. It is worth asking, though, what we mean by ‘typical.’ Merriam-Webster’s defines ‘typical’ as “normal for a person, thing, or group,” “average or usual,” “constituting or having the nature of a type” or “conforming to a type.” From this we can see that being normal, being average, conforming or constituting a type is what makes one typical, while being non-typical is doing fewer or none of these things. People with dis/abilities are, as various authors in this issue note, defined as Other against exactly this ‘type,’ which is assumed to be ‘able’ in body and mind, and which has for too long formed the imagined average user of the writing center around and for whom writing center services are designed. This issue asks us to question what we perceive to be typical, what we value as average and treat as the norm, and what the effects on non-conforming people are.University Writing Cente
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Praxis, Volume 12, No. 02: The Writer in/and the Writing Center
Contents: Why Writing Centers Work / by Lester Faigley -- Long Night Against Procrastination: A Collaborative Take on an International Event / by Elizabeth Kiscaden and LeAnn Nash -- The Problem of “Opportunity”: Negotiating a Writing Center Administrator’s WAC(ky) Public Identity / by Andrea Deacon -- A Compelling Collaboration: The First Year Writing Program, Writing Center, and Directed Self-Placement / by Becky Lynn Caouette and Claudine Griggs -- Exploring the Representation of Scheduling Options and Online Tutoring on Writing Center Websites / by Amanda Metz Bemer -- Book Review: "Multilingual Writers and Writing Centers by Ben Rafoth" / reviewed by Brianna HyslopUniversity Writing Cente
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From Winckelmann to Wilde : masculinity and the historical poetics of nineteenth-century British Hellenism
This dissertation is a survey of nineteenth-century British Hellenism in texts authored between 1768 and 1895 by elite, bourgeois, and working-class people both female and male. Beginning in 18th-century Germany, the dissertation tracks the influence of Johann Joachim Winckelmann on nineteenth-century British Hellenism, asserting that there is a characteristic cluster of representational attributes visible in British Hellenist texts that display a shared ideological emphasis. Winckelmann, who rose from humble beginnings to become the Vatican’s prefect of antiquities, bequeathed a systematic art-historical approach to classical Greek art that became an idealist discourse of British Greekness through the influence of the annual lectures given by Sir Joshua Reynolds, founding president of the Royal Academy of Art, to students between 1768 and 1792. Posthumously the ‘Grand Style’ aesthetics Reynolds promulgated became highly politicized, its influence clear in the debates surrounding the parliamentary purchase of the Parthenon Marbles from Lord Elgin in 1816, in the poetry, prose, art and architecture of the 1820s and 1830s, in specific exhibits at the Great Exhibition of 1851, in the anthropological debates touched off by Darwin’s Origins of Species after 1859, and in Oscar Wilde’s fin-de-siécle advocacy of Dress Reform and his reformed, Reynoldsian aesthetic idealism. Particularly during Oscar Wilde’s 1895 trials, the political valence of nineteenth-century British Hellenism is inescapable, being explicitly enunciated in Wilde’s famous “The Love That Dare Not Speak Its Name” speech, but I argue throughout that nineteenth-century British Hellenism tends to create ‘enfigurations’ of subjectivity that constrain those who adopt them through insistent reference to an ideal subjectivity that is embodied in white, abled, elite, heterosexual male bodies resembling those found in classical Greek art. Thus I show that while the political valence of nineteenth-century British Hellenism could be contested, the terms of the debate remained fixed around an unmarked yet hypervisible central term, which fixity acted to foreclose radical political change throughout the nineteenth century, and particularly in the 1890s, when British sexological debates made the figure of the modern male homosexual visible at the same time that campaigns for tolerance of homosexuality were energetically quashedEnglis
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Praxis Vol 12, No 2: From the Editors, The Writer In/ And The Writing Center
The publication of this issue of Praxis follows the 2015 South Central Writing Center Association (SCWCA) conference held at the University of Texas at Austin in February of this year. The address, articles, column, and book review contained in the current issue vary in their focus and emphases, but all take the theme of the 2015 SCWCA conference, ‘What Starts Here Writes the World,’ as their central argument.University Writing Cente
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Praxis, Volume 13, No. 01: Dis/Ability in the Writing Center
Contents: From the Editors -- Equity and Ability: Metaphors of Inclusion in Writing Center Promotion -- The Online Writing Center: Reaching Out to Students with Disabilities -- English for All: The Importance of Pedagogical Strategies for Students with Learning -- Disabilities in the Writing Center -- Disability in the Writing Center: A New Approach (That’s Not So New) -- Psychological Disability and the Director’s Chair: Interrogating the Relationship Between -- Positionality and Pedagogy -- Writing Centers and Disability: Enabling Writers Through an Inclusive Philosophy -- Opening Closed Doors: A Rationale for Creating a Safe Space for Tutors Struggling with Mental Illness Concerns or Illnesses -- Disabilities in the Writing CenterUniversity Writing Cente
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Praxis, Volume 13, No. 02: New Approaches to Old Ideas
Contents: From the Editors -- The Dangerous Method, or “Can Procrastination Ever Be a Good Thing?” -- Disclosure Concerns: The Stigma of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder in Writing Centers -- (Re)Examining the Socratic Method: A Lesson in Tutoring -- When “Editing” Becomes “Educating” in ESL Tutoring Sessions -- Generation 1.5 Writing Center Practice: Problems with Multilingualism and Possibilities via Hybridity -- Are Our Workshops Working? Assessing Assessment as Research -- The Peer Perspective and Undergraduate Research -- Using Citation Analysis in Writing Center Tutorials to Encourage Deeper Engagement with Sources -- What do Graduate Students Want from the Writing Center? Tutoring Practices to Support Dissertation and Thesis WritersUniversity Writing Cente