|
Composition
Studies and the Public Sphere Christian
R. Weisser Foreword
by Gary A. Olson
March
2002 ISBN 0-8093-2416-4, $28.50 paper 176
pages, 6 x 9 “Weisser’s book is a model of clarity. . . . and his treatment of the issue of public writing is the most extensive I have read.” —Patricia Bizzell, College of the Holy Cross
By
positing a theory of the public for composition studies, one which
envisions the public sphere as a highly contested, historically textured,
multilayered, and sometimes contradictory site, Weisser offers a new
approach to the roles that compositionists might assume in their attempts
to initiate progressive political and social change.
After
first providing a historical context that situates composition’s recent
interest in public writing, Weisser next examines recent theories in
composition studies that consider writing an act of social engagement
before outlining a more complex theory of the public based on the work of
Jürgen Habermas. The resulting re-envisioning of the public sphere
expands current conversations in rhetoric and composition concerning the
public.
Weisser
concludes with a holistic vision that places greater political and social
import on addressing public issues and conversations in the composition
classroom and that elucidates the role of the public intellectual as it
relates specifically to compositionists in postmodern society.
Christian R. Weisser is an assistant professor of English at the University of Hawaii (Hilo). He has edited and coauthored several books about writing, including Ecocomposition: Theoretical and Pedagogical Perspectives, Natural Discourse: Toward Ecocomposition, and Electronic Theses and Dissertations: A Sourcebook for Educators, Students, and Librarians. |
|