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Literacy,
Spiritual Practice, and Women in Beth Daniell
April
2003 ISBN 0-8093-2487-3, $29.50 paper 176 pages, 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 Rhetoric / Wellness / Women's Studies
Studies
in Writing and Rhetoric Robert Brooke, Editor
“In her ‘little narrative’ Beth Daniell makes a big claim, saying that it’s time for composition studies to consider spiritual power alongside its economic, political, intellectual, and social forms. Her detailed and sensitive examination of how spirituality inflects the literacy practices of a group of women in Al-Anon provides the warrant for her claim and adds a new and needed dimension to our understanding of literacy.” —Anne
Ruggles Gere, author of Intimate
Practices: Literacy and Cultural Work in U.S. Women’s Clubs, 1880–1920 “The connections that Beth Daniell makes between these two elements—literacy and spirituality—are particularly important in a time when people are expected to demonstrate their literate abilities and are electing to speak out about the spiritual nature of their private and social lives.” —Juan
C. Guerra, author of Close
to Home: Oral and Literate Practices in a Transnational Mexicano Community
Drawing
on interviews and an array of scholarly work, Beth Daniell maps out the
relations of literacy and spirituality in A
Communion of Friendship: Literacy, Spiritual Practice, and Women in
Recovery.
Daniell
tells the story of a group of women in “Mountain City” who use reading
and writing in their search for spiritual growth. Diverse in socioeconomic
status, the Mountain City women are, or have been, married to alcoholics.
In Al-Anon, they use literacy to practice the Twelve Steps of Alcoholics
Anonymous in order to find spiritual solutions to their problems.
In
addition, Daniell demonstrates that in the lives of these women, reading,
writing, and speaking are intertwined, embedded in one another in rich and
complex ways. For the women, private literate practice is of the utmost
importance because it aids the development and empowerment of the self.
These women engage in literate practices in order to grow spiritually and
emotionally, to live more self-aware lives, to attain personal power, to
find or make meaning for themselves, and to create community. By looking
at the changes in the women’s reading, Daniell shows that Al-Anon
doctrine, particularly its oral instruction, serves as an interpretive
tool. This discussion points out the subtle but profound transformations
in these women’s lives in order to call for an inclusive notion of
politics.
Foregrounding
the women’s voices, A Communion of
Friendship addresses a number of issues important in composition
studies and reading instruction. This study examines the meaning of
literacy within one specific community, with implications both for
pedagogy and for empirical research in composition inside and outside the
academy. Beth
Daniell is an associate professor of English at Clemson University,
where she has served as the director for both composition studies and
undergraduate studies. |
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