This volume explores how a political and social theory of
writing can inform pedagogy, including an analysis of how students'
educational histories limit teacher and student roles, and how we
might work to enlarge both. Through a critique of ethnography and
an exploration of Friere's Pedagogy of the Oppressed, the author
develops an interactive theory of teaching writing. In three
central chapters, the volume treats gender, class and race issues
in the teaching of writing by examining case studies of freshman
writers. Within the case studies, the author shows how an
interactive pedagogy helps students see how socially-held values,
such as beauty, objectivity, upward mobility, and assimilation
deeply affect how students write. The case studies give a sense of
actuality to the author's ideas. Finally, the author argues that
interpretation should replace evaluation as the central activity of
writing courses.
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