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This book proposes to expand multiliteracies frameworks in second
language education, by recognizing that learning a new language and
culture involves both designs and desires, the affects and emotions
that feed our responses to particular ways of making meaning. Over
the past two decades, multiliteracies approaches to second language
education have brought attention to the diversity of modes, media,
language varieties, and discourses involved in what we often
shorthand as language learning. A core concept in these discussions
is the idea of meaning design, the idea that languages are dynamic,
culturally-shaped systems of resources for engaging with and making
sense of the world. Building on these discussions and drawing
inspiration and practical examples from a variety of modern
language classes in higher education in the USA, the book
demonstrates how poetic and playful language can be embedded in
multiliteracies pedagogy in ways that foster learners’ and
teachers’ awareness of designs, while also making space for
desires that are harder to script or plan for. In addition to
building a conceptual map around poetics and play for researchers
and teachers in language education, the book offers concrete
examples of what a multiliteracies approach emphasizing designs and
desires can look like in classrooms and curricula.
In this book, Warner examines a number of German-language literary
autobiographies that are connected to diverse social movements of
the last forty years. These books have all received critical
attention from the popular press, topped bestseller lists, and have
been pivotal in discussions of authenticity, subjectivity, and
referentiality. Because of the thematic diversity of these works,
scholars within literary and cultural studies have tended to treat
them separately under topical categories, such as women's
literature, the post-war generation, migration and
multiculturalism, etc. Underlying Warner's analysis is the belief
that the social construction of autobiographical acts is as much a
matter of textuality as it is of topicality i.e., how language
means, rather than what it means, and that a pragmatic-stylistic
approach is well-suited to describing how literary autobiographies
come to function as testimonies to certain collective experiences.
By presenting a model for an integrative stylistics approach, The
Prgamatics of Literary Testimony participates in current
discussions within fields of literary linguistic scholarship, as
well as autobiographical theory. In its analysis of key examples of
German social testimonies from the late twentieth century, this
book incorporates insights from discourse analysis, pragmatics,
cogntive poetics, and sociolinguistics in order to demonstrate that
this diverse body of works constitutes a particular form of textual
practice defined by what the author calls authenticity
effects-feelings of realism, immediacy, exemplarity, genuineness,
and social relevance. Such a study of authenticity as a poetic
effect, can help us to better understand the testimonial glamour
owned by various types of autobiographical narration.
In this book, Warner examines a number of German-language literary
autobiographies that are connected to diverse social movements of
the last forty years. These books have all received critical
attention from the popular press, topped bestseller lists, and have
been pivotal in discussions of authenticity, subjectivity, and
referentiality. Because of the thematic diversity of these works,
scholars within literary and cultural studies have tended to treat
them separately under topical categories, such as women's
literature, the post-war generation, migration and
multiculturalism, etc. Underlying Warner's analysis is the belief
that the social construction of autobiographical acts is as much a
matter of textuality as it is of topicality i.e., how language
means, rather than what it means, and that a pragmatic-stylistic
approach is well-suited to describing how literary autobiographies
come to function as testimonies to certain collective experiences.
By presenting a model for an integrative stylistics approach, The
Prgamatics of Literary Testimony participates in current
discussions within fields of literary linguistic scholarship, as
well as autobiographical theory. In its analysis of key examples of
German social testimonies from the late twentieth century, this
book incorporates insights from discourse analysis, pragmatics,
cogntive poetics, and sociolinguistics in order to demonstrate that
this diverse body of works constitutes a particular form of textual
practice defined by what the author calls authenticity
effects-feelings of realism, immediacy, exemplarity, genuineness,
and social relevance. Such a study of authenticity as a poetic
effect, can help us to better understand the testimonial glamour
owned by various types of autobiographical narration.
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