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Cultural Studies and Composition Pedagogies

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Gamson article (L board) / Jerry Springer (R board) Beautiful, beautiful BRAINSTORMING ... Review the connections they made between Gamson and Jerry Springer. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cultural Studies and Composition Pedagogies


1
Cultural Studies and Composition Pedagogies
2
Pop Culture Goes Academic
  • Focus on popular culture (both dominant and
    subcultural)
  • Analyzes a diversity of texts and practices
    advertising, music, film, TV, hypertext, poems,
    speeches, architecture, art, shopping,
    hairstyling, graffiti, drag shows

3
CS Analytic Questions
  • How do cultural texts and practices intervene in
    the construction of identities?
  • In what ways do particular cultural texts and
    practices resist and/or reinforce social
    hierarchies (of class, race, gender, sexuality,
    ability)?
  • How do people resist or revise dominant cultural
    texts, creating a multiplicity of readings?
  • How can we design academic research and
    pedagogical methods that contribute to social
    change?
  • How can textual analysis and ethnography be
    combined in the study of culture?

4
Originary Myths / Evolving Histories
  • Born at Birmingham Center for Contemporary
    Cultural Studies (1950s)
  • Initial focus on class
  • Turn towards broader analysis of difference

5
Sounds fun, but what does all this have to do
with composition?
  • Allows students to write and to read persuasive
    academic discourse about familiar, engaging
    topics.
  • Like feminist and critical pedagogy, CS seeks to
    empower students to read their world critically
    and to act as agents of social change.
  • A great, fun way to teach students about rhetoric
    (the construction of arguments/appeals, the
    social contexts and material effects of
    discourse)

6
But, there are some caveats!
  • Some students may not be familiar with popular
    culture texts.
  • Students may resist critically analyzing texts in
    which they have strong personal investments.
  • Cultural studies is so fun that we could forget
    to keep the focus on teaching writing.

7
Sounds great, but I have a syllabus to write in
the next couple of days!
  • Some practical suggestions for using cultural
    studies to teach personal, academic, and public
    discourses

8
Unit One Personal Discourse Student Identity
and Cultural Studies.
  • Objective To enable students to draw from and
    write about their personal experiences in
    relation to culture.

9
1st Week ReadingObjective To expose
students to personal narratives set in particular
cultural context.
  • Who are these writers writing for?
  • What are the writers responding to? What are the
    issues?
  • How do writers resist or affirm cultural
    representations of their social identities?

10
Possible Selections
  • 1) Paul Austers Why Write? Lars Eighners
    On Dumpster Diving
  • 2) Judy Syfers Bradys Why I Want a
  • Wife.Kurt Fernslers Why I Want a
    Husband.
  • 3) Daphne Scholinskis The Last Time I Wore A
    Dress.

11
2nd Week Analysis
  • Objective encourage students to break down
    texts to see how writers use style, tone, the
    appeals, and assumptions to express and situate
    their personal narratives.

12
3rd Week Writing
  • Objective Embark on the invention process, get
    the students to start writing their personal
    narratives in response to a cultural event or
    text that shapes their world view.

13
Cultural Studies in the Academy
14
Teaching from a CS perspective
  • The academy has its own culture and discourse
  • Students must situate themselves within that
    discourse
  • Teachers and students come to the academy from a
    variety of cultures and discourses

15
Inventing the University
The student has to appropriate or be
appropriated by a specialized discourse.
Commonplaces control our composition textbooks
which not only insist on a set view of
expository writing, but a set view of public
life.
A writer does not write, but is himself written
by languages available to him.
16
Education has failed

. . . Education has failed to involve students
in scholarly projects. . . that allow
students to act as though they were colleagues
in an academic enterprise. . . . They are
expected to admire and report on what we do,
rather than inside that discourse, where they
can do its work. . .
17
I dont know what the teacher wants from us
What happens when cultures clash?
How do we negotiate The space between cultures?
. . . the teacher gives us these notes on John
Milton and then he asks us if we have any
questions and we cant have any questions because
we dont know what to ask and so we are quiet and
then he gets mad at us,
18
Approaching a solution
Realize the differences in expectations with
which the teacher and student enter the academy.
Open a dialogue about the markers that define
each discourse. What are they? Why are they
important to us?
19
Cultural Studies Unit IIIPublic Discourse á
la Jerry Springer
20
Setting up the activity (aka convincing your
students that you do have a point you will get
there eventually)
  • Unit III Writing to analyze evaluate
  • Cultural studies public discourse ??
  • Done in tandem with Paul Gamsons article, Why I
    Love Trash (WL, p463-477)

21
Beautiful, beautiful BRAINSTORMING
Gamson article (L board) / Jerry Springer (R
board)
  • Gamsons points
  • Talk shows reflect the environment they are
    rooted in
  • Shift lines between public and private, muddy
    waters of normality (what exactly is the public
    sphere?)
  • Misson? To exploit need for visibility and voice.
    Draw lines between us and them

22
And now, for connectionsBegin to discuss,
making notes connections on board.
  • Gamson
  • Talk shows reflect the environment they are
    rooted in
  • Shift lines between public and private, muddy
    waters of normality (what exactly is the public
    sphere?)
  • Misson? To exploit need for visibility and voice
  • Draw lines between us them
  • Springer
  • Guests are freaks of nature
  • Pits two groups against each other
  • Violence
  • Controversial topics
  • Multiple audiences?
  • People having private conversations in public

23
The Finishing Touches
  • Review the connections they made between Gamson
    and Jerry Springer. Talk about any you (or they)
    feel are especially important.
  • CS sees students as culture producers. Ask
    students to freewrite a paragraph or two.

24
Additional Resources
  • Berlin, James. Poststructuralism, Cultural
    Studies, and the Composition Classroom
    Postmodern Theory in Practice. The Allyn Bacon
    Sourcebook for College Writing Teachers. Ed.
    James C. McDonald. Boston Allyn and Bacon, 1996.
    37-52. After briefly outlining postmodern and
    social-epistemic theories, Berlin uses one of his
    cultural studies classes as a backdrop to
    highlight what he feels are the salient markers
    of the genre and encourages instructors to teach
    writing as an inherently political act involving
    a complex set of cultural codes. He concludes
    that competent writers and readers are those who
    have learned to contest, resist, and/or negotiate
    these codes.
  • Hirsch, E. D., Cultural Literacy. Writing
    Lives/Reading Communities. Eds. Kate Halasek, et.
    al. Boston Pearson Custom Publishing, 2000.
    267-273. In this essay, Hirsch posits that the
    solution to raising national literacy levels Is
    to educate our students within a very specific
    framework of cultural knowledge. A national
    standards organization would be formed to define
    What is contained in this framework. An excerpt
    from the appendix to Hirschs book directly
    follows this article in Writing Lives. These two
    texts would be extremely useful in starting a
    discussion on what aspects of culture are
    important enough to be part of a shared American
    vocabulary.
  • McComiskey, Bruce. Social-Process Rhetorical
    Inquiry Cultural Studies Methodologies for
    Critical Writing about Advertisements. JAC 17.3
    (1997) 381-401. McComiskey explores both the
    theory and practice of teaching critical writing
    about advertisements in a cultural studies
    composition course. In analyzing advertisements,
    McComiskey focuses on three crucial issues
    cultural production (the creation of social
    values by and through advertising), contextual
    distribution (the notion that advertisements both
    construct and are constructed by the assumptions
    of the audiences at whom they are directed), and
    critical consumption (or the ways in which
    consumers critically read advertisements, at
    times resisting their cultural messages).
    Ultimately by having students engage these three
    crucial issues in their discussion of and
    critical writing about advertisements, McComiskey
    seeks to teach students strategies for
    rhetorically intervening in advertisings
    production of social values. This article could
    be useful to teachers of 110 because it provides
    a complex theoretical model for the analysis of
    the public discourse of advertisements as well as
    a helpful appendix which outlines potential
    assignments/lesson plans based on this model.
  • McQuade, Donald and Christine McQuade. Teaching
    Seeing and Writing. Boston Bedford St. Martins,
    2000. This compendium of eight chapters consists
    of engaging and productive instructional
    resources. It provides a wealth of strategies and
    exercises that will enable you to extend your
    specific instructional purposes. Each chapter,
    covering large thematic discourse (gender, race,
    pop icons, body image, etc)breaks into various
    authors, titles, followed by a summary of the
    written work, and the four rubrics of generating
    class discussion and in-class writing additional
    writing topics connections with other texts and
    suggestions and further instructions. Because
    such a resource provides a lot of potential, it
    demands that the instructor discriminately tailor
    the activities to fit time constraints.
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