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The End of Composition Studies David W. Smit Foreword by Doug Hesse
December 2004 cloth,
0-8093-2585-3, $50.00 256 pages, 6 x 9
In
this provocative and persuasive treatise, David W. Smit calls for an end
to the hegemony of writing instruction as an academic field. Setting forth
an innovative new model for what it means to be a writing teacher in the
era of writing across the curriculum, The End of Composition Studies urges
a reconceptualization of graduate work in rhetoric and composition,
systematically critiques the limitations of current pedagogical practices
at the postsecondary level, and proposes a reorganization of writing
instruction to make it the responsibility of all academic units.
The
End of Composition Studies calls
into question two major assumptions of the field: that writing is a
universal ability and that college-level writing is in some sense
foundational to advanced learning. Instead, Smit upholds, writing involves
a wide range of knowledge and skill beyond the sentence level that cannot
be solely learned in writing classes but must be acquired by immersion in
various discourse communities in and out of academic settings. In other
words, students do not learn to write in order to prepare themselves to
write in a particular community; they need to be part of the community in
order to learn how to write in that community.
Smit
proposes that the field of composition should recognize the conceptual
limits of what instructors may be able to know about how people learn to
write by offering writing instruction in academic units most closely
associated with the knowledge and genres students want or need to learn.
Scholars, he says, should be trained to live in two worlds: one of
composition theory and pedagogy and another of the discourse practices of
particular communities. Similarly, they should be trained both as writers
of the discourses they teach and as social critics of the communities they
will help students join.
The
End of Composition Studies
also analyzes the limits of six major concepts in the field: what writing
is, how writing is learned, how we compose, writing as a social practice,
writing as thinking, and writing as the transfer of abilities from one
context to another. These concepts, along with other paradigms and models
that are used to understand how people write, are already known and widely
accepted, making a complete reconceptualization of writing unlikely. As a
result, Smit asserts, future research in the field will be what many
scholars characterize as postmodern: research will be historicized,
contextualized, and contingent, limited in what it may tell about writing
and its instruction.
In response to these limitations, The End of Composition Studies provides a compelling rhetoric and rationale for eliminating the field and reenvisioning the profession as truly interdisciplinary—a change that is necessary in order to fulfill the needs and demands of students, instructors, administrators, and our democratic society.
David
W. Smit, a
professor of English and the director of the Expository Writing Program at
Kansas State University, is the author of The Language of a Master:
Theories of Style and the Later Style of Henry James. His articles
have appeared in Journal of Advanced Composition, Rhetoric Review,
Rhetoric Society Quarterly, and other journals.
Available through booksellers everywhere or directly from Southern Illinois University Press
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