Learning to Write: Ploughing and Hoeing, Labour and Essaying

    Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

    Abstract

    In this paper Amanda Fulford addresses the issue of student writing in the university, and explores how the increasing dominance of outcome‐driven modes of learning and assessment is changing the understanding of what it is to write, what is expected of students in their writing, and how academic writing should best be supported. The starting point is the increasing use of what are termed “technologies” of writing — “handbooks” for students that address issues of academic writing — that systematize, and smooth the work of writing in, Fulford argues, an unhelpful way. This leads to a reconsideration of what it means to write in the university, and what it is to be a student who writes. Fulford explores etymologically the concept of “writing” and suggests that it might be seen metaphorically as physical labor. Writing as physical labor is explored further through the agricultural metaphors in Henry David Thoreau's Walden and through Stanley Cavell's reading of that text. In making a distinction between writing‐as‐plowing and writing‐as‐hoeing, Fulford argues that some technologies of writing deny voice rather than facilitate it, and she concludes by offering a number of suggestions for the teaching and learning of writing in the university that emphasize the value of being lost (in one's subject and one's work) and finding one's own way out. These “lessons” are illustrated with reference to Thoreau's text Walden and to American literature and film.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages519-534
    Number of pages15
    Publication statusPublished - 26 Aug 2016
    EventSixth Annual Educational Theory Summer Institute (ETSI) 2015: Technologies of Reading and Writing - University of Illinois, Illinois, United States
    Duration: 17 Aug 201519 Aug 2015

    Other

    OtherSixth Annual Educational Theory Summer Institute (ETSI) 2015
    Country/TerritoryUnited States
    CityIllinois
    Period17/08/1519/08/15

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