Synopses & Reviews
Path-breaking research on women and literacy in the past decade established conventions and advanced innovative methods that push the making of knowledge into new spheres of inquiry. Taking these accomplishments as a point of departure, this volume emphasizes the diversity—of approaches and subjects—that characterizes the next generation of research on women and literacy. It builds on and critiques scholarship in literacy studies, composition studies, rhetorical theory, gender studies, postcolonial theory, and cultural studies to open new venues for future research.
Contributors discuss what literacy is—more precisely, what literacies are—but their strongest interest is in documenting and theorizing women’s lived experience of these literacies, with particular attention to:
*the diversity of women’s literacies within the U.S., including but not limited to the varying relations that exist among women, literacy, economic position, class, race, sexuality, and education;
*relations among women, literacy, and economic contexts in the U.S. and abroad, including but not limited to changes in women’s private and domestic literacies, the evolution of technologies of literacy, and women’s experience of the commodification of literacies; and
*emergent roles of women and literacy in a globally interdependent world.
This broad, significant work is a must-read for researchers and graduate students across the fields of literacy studies, composition studies, rhetorical theory, and gender studies.
About the Author
Beth Daniell is director of composition and associate professor at Kennesaw State University in the Atlanta suburbs. She is author of
A Communion of Friendship: Literacy, Spiritual Practice, and Women in Recovery (2003).
Peter Mortensen is an associate professor of English and associate provost fellow at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is author of Imagining Rhetoric: Composing Women of the Early United States (with Janet Carey Eldred, 2002) and editor of Ethics and Representation in Qualitative Studies of Literacy (with Gesa E. Kirsch, 1996). At UIUC, he is co-director of the Ethnography of the University initiative, and for seven years was director of rhetoric in the department of English.
Table of Contents
Contents: Preface.
P. Mortensen, B. Daniell, Introduction:
Researching Women and Literacy: Usable Pasts, Possible Futures.
Part I: Women’s Literacies Situated Locally: Past, Present, and Future.
D. Strickland, Feeling Literate: Gender, Race, and Work in Dorothy West’s “The Typewriter”.
R.E. Lathan, Crusader: Ethel Azalea Johnson’s Use of the Written Word as a Weapon of Liberation.
K.M. Powell, Virginia Mountain Women Writing to Government Officials: Letters of Request as Social Participation.
K. Donehower, Reconsidering Power, Privilege, and the Public/Private Distinction in the Literacy of Rural Women.
C. Hogg, Sponsoring Clubs: Cultivating Rural Identities Through Literacy.
H. Roskelly, K. Ronald, Literacy on the Margins: Louisa May Alcott’s Pragmatic Rhetoric.
K.T. Flannery, “Diverse in Sentiment and Form”: Feminist Poetry as Radical Literate Practice, 1968-1975.
B.K. Smith, Branding Literacy: The Entrepreneurship of Oprah’s Book Club.
Part II: Women’s Literacies in a Globally Interdependent World.
S. Watson, M. Young, Professing “Western” Literacy: Globalization and Women’s Education at the Western College for Women.
K. Walters, Considering the Meanings of Literacy in a Postcolonial Setting: The Case of Tunisia.
G.E. Hawisher, C.L. Selfe, with K. Coffield and S. El-Wakil, Women and the Global Ecology of Digital Literacies.
I.W. Crawford, The Emotional Effects of Literacy: Vietnamese Women Negotiating the Shift to a Market Economy.
M.K. DeShazer, Postapartheid Literacies: South African Women’s Poetry of Orality, Franchise, and Reconciliation.
G. Gong, Gender and Literacies: The Korean “Comfort Women’s” Testimonies.
C.L. Hobbs, The Outlook for Global Women’s Literacy. Segue.
M-Z. Lu, Afterword: Reading Literacy Research Against the Grain of Fast Capitalism.