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Changing
the Subject in English Class Discourse
and the Constructions of Desire Marshall W. Alcorn Jr.
March
2002 ISBN
0-8093-2427-X,
$29.50 paper 176
pages, 6 x 9 “[P]rovocative in the best sense of that word, . . . this book is a gift to so many scholars and students in the field who direly need its explanations and insights, [and] is of the utmost importance to our field if it is to grow and really begin to practice the self-critique that it so highly values.” —Victor J. Vitanza, editor of Writing Histories of Rhetoric Drawing
on the theoretical work of Jacques Lacan, Marshall W. Alcorn Jr.
formulates a systematic explanation of the function and value of desire in
writing instruction.
Alcorn
argues that in changing the subject matter of writing instruction in order
to change student opinions, composition instructors have come to adopt an
insufficiently complex understanding of subjectivity. This
oversimplification hinders attempts to foster cultural change. Alcorn
proposes an alternative mode of instruction that makes effective use of
students’ knowledge and desire. The resulting freedom in
expression—personal as well as political—engenders the recognition,
circulation, and elaboration of desire necessary for both human
communication and effective politics.
Responding
to James Berlin’s reconception of praxis in the classroom, Theresa
Ebert’s espousal of disciplined instructions, and Lester Faigley’s
introduction of a postmodern theory of subjectivity, Alcorn follows both
Lacan and Slavoj Žižek in insisting desire be given free voice and
serious recognition. In composition as in politics, desire is the ground
of agency. Competing expressions of desire should generate a dialectic in
social-epistemic discourse that encourages enlightenment over cynicism and
social development over authoritarian demands.
With
clarity and personal voice, Alcorn explains how discourse is rooted in
primitive psychological functions of desire and responds to complex
cultural needs. In its theoretical scope this book describes a new
pedagogy that links thought to emotion and the personal to the social. Marshall
W. Alcorn Jr. is
an associate professor of English, Humanities, and the Program in the
Human Sciences at George Washington University. He is the author of Narcissism
and the Literary Libido. |
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