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Writing Youth: Young Adult Fiction as Literacy Sponsorship shows
how many young adult novels model for young people ways to manage
the various media tools that surround them. Jonathan Alexander
examines not only young adult texts and their media ecologies but
also young people's multiliterate media making in response to their
favorite texts and stories. As such, this book will be of interest
to anyone concerned about young people's literacies and the
relationship between literacy development and the culture
industries.
First published in 1986. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
In 1995, George Haggerty and Bonnie Zimmerman's landmark volume
Professions of Desire: Lesbian and Gay Studies in
Literature-followed by William Spurlin's Lesbian and Gay Studies
and the Teaching of English (2000)-began addressing the esoteric
discussions complicating the intersections among gender, sexuality,
and other identity constructs within the English classroom. Given
the perpetuation of heteronormativity in the educational system,
Haggerty encourages instructors to help LGBT students "learn about
the politics of oppression in their own lives as well as in the
cultural context that, after all, determines what they mean when
they call themselves lesbian or gay." Approaches to Teaching LGBT
Literature is designed to help teachers address what it means to
teach LGBT literature. How can pre-service teacher educators
prepare their students to teach LGBT literature? How should
teachers introduce different bodies of students to these texts?
Those interested in starting LGBT-themed courses and/or thinking
about how LGBT literatures might fit into the broader undergraduate
curriculum will benefit from this scholarship addressing the
history and evolution of LGBT literature courses in different
contexts and providing a diverse set of example courses, projects,
and activities that would help an array of faculty to implement
such courses on their campuses.
Where others have explored the teaching of LGBTQ literature
courses, Curricular Innovations: LGBTQ Literatures and the New
English Studies explores the impact that queer writers and their
works are having across the broader undergraduate curriculum of
English departments, as well as beyond those department spaces.
While courses that focus on queer texts provide more space for
students to think about the complexities of queer lives, this book
breaks out of the specialized LGBTQ classroom to consider how we
might also restructure and reframe a diverse set of undergraduate
courses by paying attention to the contributions that LGBTQ writers
make. Beyond simply including a text or two to represent
"difference," contributors to this volume take a more structural
approach in order to demonstrate ways of theming or designing
courses around language, desire, and sexuality. They also
demonstrate what happens when queer texts are given freedom to
shape other classroom spaces, discussions, and reading/writing
practices. This collection offers a practical intervention into
conversations about the purposes and places of LGBTQ literatures by
making good on the challenges that queer theories have posed to
higher education over the last forty years.
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