Reading List

WR 230  WOU

1.    Bartholomae, David.  “Inventing the University.”  Reprinted in  Cross-Talk in Comp Theory.  2nd ed.  p623-654.

2.    Bartholomae, David.  “Writing with Teachers: A Conversation with Peter Elbow.”  College Composition and Communication 46.1 (February 1995).  p62-71.

3.    Beech, Jennifer.  “Redneck and Hillbilly Discourse in the Writing Classroom.” 

College English 67.2 (November 2004).  p172-186.

4.    Bialostosky, Don.  “Romantic Resonances.”  College Composition and Communication 46.1 (February 1995).  p92-96.

5.    Bitzer, Lloyd.  “The Rhetorical Situation.”  Philosophy and Rhetoric 1.1 (Winter 1968). p1-14.

6.      Downs, Douglas and Elizabeth Wardle.  “Teaching About Writing, Righting

Misconceptions.”  College Composition and Communication 58.4 (June 2007).  p552-584.

7.    Ede, Lisa and Andrea Lunsford.  “Audience Addressed/Audience Invoked.” 

College Composition and Communication 35.2 (May 1984).  p155-171.

8.    Elbow, Peter.  “Being a Writer vs. Being an Academic.”  College Composition and Communication 46.1 (February 1995).  p72-73

9.    Emig, Janet.  “Writing as a Mode of Learning.”  College Composition and

Communication 28.2 (May 1977).  p122-128.

10. Fulkerson, Richard.  “Composition at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century.” 

College Composition and Communication 56.4 (June 2005).  p654-687.

11. Geisler, Cheryl.  “How Ought We to Understand the Concept of Rhetorical

Agency?  Report from the ARS.”  Rhetoric Society Quarterly 34.3 (2004), 9-18.

12. Geisler, Cheryl.  “Teaching the Post-Modern Rhetor: Continuing the Conversation on Rhetorical Agency.”  Rhetoric Society Quarterly 35.4 (2005), 107-113. Available At http://library.wou.edu/search/r?SEARCH=WR+230

13. Johnson, Robert R.  “Craft Knowledge: of Disciplinarity in Writing Studies.” College Composition and

Communication 61.4 (June 2010).  p673-690.

14. Lindquist, Julie.  “Class Affects, Classroom Affectations.”  College English 67.2

(November 2004).  p187-209.

15. Lundberg, Christian and Joshua Gunn.  “‘Ouija Board, Are There and

Communications?’  Agency, Ontotheology, and the Death of the Humanist Subject, or Continuing the ARS Conversation.”  Rhetoric Society Quarterly 35.4 (2005), 83-106. Available at http://library.wou.edu/search/r?SEARCH=WR+230

16. Ong, Walter.  “The Writer’s Audience is Always a Fiction.”  PMLA 90.1 (January

1975).  p9-21.

17. Vatz, Richard.  “The Myth of the Rhetorical Situation.”  Philosophy and Rhetoric 6.3. (Summer 1973). p.154-161.