|
New in paperback Rescuing the Subject A Critical Introduction to Rhetoric and the Writer Susan Miller New Foreword by Thomas P. Miller
November 2004 paper, 0-8093-2600-0, $29.50s 240 pages, 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 Winner of the W. Ross Winterowd Award
“Susan
Miller has orchestrated a rich interplay of themes from discourses that
needed, sooner or later, to come together if the field of
composition—alive as it may be with ideological counterpoint—was not
to die regardless from intellectual boredom . . . . [D]aring, inventive,
and badly needed. What is really rescued here . . . is the subject of
composition studies.” —JAC “This
book should stir great interest, perhaps even controversy, among all
theorists of twentieth-century rhetoric because it aims to untangle the
usually snarled threads of classical oral rhetoric and of modern written
composition.” —Choice “Miller’s
ability to range across historical traditions and to address contemporary
issues through an analysis of the individual writer in the contemporary
era provides for an intriguing and creative way of looking at the
dimensions and implications of the composing process.” —Freshman English News
When
it was first published in 1989, Susan Miller’s Rescuing the Subject:
A Critical Introduction to Rhetoric and the Writer established a
landmark pedagogical approach to composition based on the importance of
the writer and the act of writing in the history of rhetoric. Widely used
as an introduction to rhetoric and composition theory for graduate
students, the volume was the first winner of the W. Ross Winterowd Award
from JAC and is still one of the most frequently cited books in the
field.
This
first paperback edition includes a new introductory chapter in which
Miller addresses changes in the field since the first edition, outlines
new research, and surveys positions she no longer supports. A new foreword
by Thomas P. Miller assesses the proven impact of Rescuing the Subject on
the field of rhetoric and composition.
Situating
modern composition theory in the historical context of rhetoric, Miller
notes that throughout the eighteenth century, rhetoric referred to oral,
not written, discourse. By contrast, her history of rhetoric contends oral
and written discourse were related from the beginning. Taking a thematic
rather than chronological approach, she shows how actual acts of writing
comment on both rhetoric and composition.
Miller also asserts that contemporary composition study is the necessary cultural outcome of changing conditions for producing discourse, describing the history of rhetoric as the gradual and unstable relocation of discourse in conventions that only written language can create. She maintains teachers and historians of rhetoric must recognize that the contemporary writing they analyze and teach demands their attention to a “textual rhetoric” that allows theorizing the writer as always symbolically a student of situated meanings.
Susan
Miller is a
professor of English at the University of Utah. She is the author of Textual
Carnivals: The Politics of Composition, which received the Mina P.
Shaughnessy Prize from the MLA, the NCTE/CCCC Outstanding Book Award, and
the W. Ross Winterowd Award, Assuming the Positions: Cultural Pedagogy
and the Politics of Ordinary Writing, which received the NCTE/CCCC
Outstanding Book Award and was named a Choice Outstanding Academic
Title, Writing: Process and Product; and four other textbooks.
Available through booksellers everywhere or directly from Southern Illinois University Press |
|