This title is no longer available from this publisher at this time. To let the publisher know you are interested in the title, please email bv-help@uchicago.edu.
Listening to Our Elders: Working and Writing for Change
edited by Samantha Blackmon, Cristina Kirklighter and Steve Parks
Utah State University Press, 2011 Paper: 978-0-87421-856-5 | eISBN: 978-0-87421-857-2 Library of Congress Classification PE11.N33.L57 2011 Dewey Decimal Classification 428.0071073
ABOUT THIS BOOK | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
In 2011, the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) turned one hundred years old. But our profession is endlessly beginning, constantly transforming itself and its purpose as new voices and identities claim their rights in our classrooms and in our country. The recognition of such claims, however, does not occur without a struggle, without collective work. Listening to our Elders attempts to capture the history of those collective moments where teachers across grade levels and institutions of higher education organized to insure that the voices, heritages, and traditions of their students and colleagues were recognized within our professional organizations as a vital part of our classrooms and our discipline. In doing so, Listening to Our Elders demonstrates this recognition was not always easily given. Instead, whether the issue was race, sexuality, class, or disability, committed activist organizations have often had to push against the existing limits of our field and its organizations to insure a broader sense of common responsibility and humanity was recognized. Listening to Our Elders features interviews with Malea Powell (Native American Caucus), Joyce Rain Anderson (Native American Caucus), Jeffery Paul Chan (Asian/Asian American), James Hill (Black Caucus), James Dolmage (Committee for Disability Issue in College Composition), Geneva Smitherman (Language Policy Commitee), Carlota Cárdenas de Dwyer (Latino/a Caucus), Victor Villanueva (Latino/a Caucus), Louise Dunlap (Progressive Caucus), Karen Hollis (Progressive Caucus), Louie Crew (Queer Caucus), William Thelin (Working Class Culture and Pedagogy SIG), Bill Macauley (Working Class Culture and Pedagogy SIG).
REVIEWS
"Listening to Our Elders is a valuable collection for any English instructor who seeks to work and write for change within the
field and beyond."
—Patricia Wilde, TETYC
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Introduction Listening to Our Elders
American Indian Caucus “We wanted to have an open and welcoming space”
“Work to be done”: Native Americans and Visibilityin English Studies
Asian/Asian-American Caucus A Career of Acting “Ill-Mannered”
Black Caucus
Committee on Disability Issues in College Composition “I simply gave up trying to present at CCCC...”
Language Policy Committee “Talkin’ ‘Bout a Revolution”
This title is no longer available from this publisher at this time. To let the publisher know you are interested in the title, please email bv-help@uchicago.edu.
Listening to Our Elders: Working and Writing for Change
edited by Samantha Blackmon, Cristina Kirklighter and Steve Parks
Utah State University Press, 2011 Paper: 978-0-87421-856-5 eISBN: 978-0-87421-857-2
In 2011, the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) turned one hundred years old. But our profession is endlessly beginning, constantly transforming itself and its purpose as new voices and identities claim their rights in our classrooms and in our country. The recognition of such claims, however, does not occur without a struggle, without collective work. Listening to our Elders attempts to capture the history of those collective moments where teachers across grade levels and institutions of higher education organized to insure that the voices, heritages, and traditions of their students and colleagues were recognized within our professional organizations as a vital part of our classrooms and our discipline. In doing so, Listening to Our Elders demonstrates this recognition was not always easily given. Instead, whether the issue was race, sexuality, class, or disability, committed activist organizations have often had to push against the existing limits of our field and its organizations to insure a broader sense of common responsibility and humanity was recognized. Listening to Our Elders features interviews with Malea Powell (Native American Caucus), Joyce Rain Anderson (Native American Caucus), Jeffery Paul Chan (Asian/Asian American), James Hill (Black Caucus), James Dolmage (Committee for Disability Issue in College Composition), Geneva Smitherman (Language Policy Commitee), Carlota Cárdenas de Dwyer (Latino/a Caucus), Victor Villanueva (Latino/a Caucus), Louise Dunlap (Progressive Caucus), Karen Hollis (Progressive Caucus), Louie Crew (Queer Caucus), William Thelin (Working Class Culture and Pedagogy SIG), Bill Macauley (Working Class Culture and Pedagogy SIG).
REVIEWS
"Listening to Our Elders is a valuable collection for any English instructor who seeks to work and write for change within the
field and beyond."
—Patricia Wilde, TETYC
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Introduction Listening to Our Elders
American Indian Caucus “We wanted to have an open and welcoming space”
“Work to be done”: Native Americans and Visibilityin English Studies
Asian/Asian-American Caucus A Career of Acting “Ill-Mannered”
Black Caucus
Committee on Disability Issues in College Composition “I simply gave up trying to present at CCCC...”
Language Policy Committee “Talkin’ ‘Bout a Revolution”