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Teaching Through the Archives: Text, Collaboration, and Activism [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 354 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x32 mm, weight: 230 g, 16 illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Jun-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Southern Illinois University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0809338572
  • ISBN-13: 9780809338573
  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 48,21 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 354 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x32 mm, weight: 230 g, 16 illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Jun-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Southern Illinois University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0809338572
  • ISBN-13: 9780809338573
"Teaching Through the Archives explores how working in the archives can foster rhetorical awareness and enhance rhetorical strategies; how archival work can support social change, activism, and community engagement; and how archivists, instructors, and community organizations can establish mutually beneficial relationships"--

Disruptive pedagogies for archival research

In a cultural moment when institutional repositories carry valuable secrets to the present and past, this collection argues for the critical, intellectual, and social value of archival instruction. Graban and Hayden and 37 other contributors examine how undergraduate and graduate courses in rhetoric, history, community literacy, and professional writing can successfully engage students in archival research in its many forms, and successfully model mutually beneficial relationships between archivists, instructors, and community organizations.

Combining new and established voices from related fields, each of the book’s three sections includes a range of form-disrupting pedagogies. Section I focuses on how approaching the archive primarily as text fosters habits of mind essential for creating and using archives, for critiquing or inventing knowledge-making practices, and for being good stewards of private and public collections. Section II argues for conducting archival projects as collaboration through experiential learning and for developing a preservationist consciousness through disciplined research. Section III details praxis for revealing, critiquing, and intervening in historic racial omissions and gaps in the archives in which we all work. 

Ultimately, contributors explore archives as sites of activism while also raising important questions that persist in rhetoric and composition scholarship, such as how to decolonize research methodologies, how to conduct teaching and research that promote social justice, and how to shift archival consciousness toward more engaged notions of democracy. This collection highlights innovative classroom and curricular course models for teaching with and through the archives in rhetoric and composition and beyond.



In a cultural moment when institutional repositories carry valuable secrets to the present and past, this collection argues for the critical, intellectual, and social value of archival instruction. Graban and Hayden and 37 other contributors examine how undergraduate and graduate courses in rhetoric, history, community literacy, and professional writing can successfully engage students in archival research in its many forms, and successfully model mutually beneficial relationships between archivists, instructors, and community organizations.
List of Illustrations and Tables
ix
Foreword: The Archives of Epistemic Possibility xi
Ryan Skinnell
Acknowledgments xvii
A Critical Introduction: Teaching Rhetoric and Composition through the Archives 1(30)
Wendy Hayden
Tarez Samra Graban
SECTION I Archives as Text
1 Using the Archives to Teach Slow Research and Create Local Connections
31(15)
Lisa Mastrangelo
2 Cultivating a Feminist Consciousness in the University Archive
46(14)
Lisa Shaver
3 Arranging Our Emotions: Archival Affects and Emotional Responses
60(16)
Jane Greer
4 Creative Storytelling: Archives as Sites for Nonfiction Research and Writing
76(15)
Katherine E. Tirabassi
5 Assembled Trajectories, Perishable Performances, and Teaching from the Harvard Archives
91(16)
James P. Beasley
SECTION II Archives as Collaboration
6 Internships as Techne: Teaching the Archive through the Museum of Everyday Writing
107(14)
Jennifer Enoch
Megan Keaton
Ellen Cecil-Lemkin
Travis Maynard
7 Listening Rhetorically to Build Collaboration and Community in the Archives
121(15)
Shirley K Rose
Glenn C. W. Newman
Robert P. Spindler
8 Recursion and Responsiveness: Archival Pedagogy and Archival Infrastructures in the Same Conversation
136(22)
Jenna Morton-Aiken
Robert Schwegler
9 <Ex>Tending Archives: Digital Archival Practices and Making the Work of Technical Communicators Visible to Students
158(20)
Erin Brock Carlson
Michelle McMullin
Patricia Sullivan
10 Professional Writing for the Archives: Collaboration and Service Learning in a Proposal Writing Class
178(19)
Jonathan Buehl
Tamar Chute
Laura Kissel
SECTION III Archives as Activism
11 Delinking Student Perceptions of Place with/in the University Archive
197(15)
Laura Proszak
Ellen Cushman
12 Archives as Resources for Ethical In(ter)vention in Community-Based Writing
212(15)
Michael-John DePalma
13 Learning to (Re)Compose Identities: Creating and Indexing the JHFE Jewish Kentucky Oral History Repository with Undergraduate Researchers and Jewish Rhetorical Practices
227(21)
Janice W. Fernheimer
Beth L. Goldstein
Sarah Dorpinghaus
Douglas A. Boyd
14 "Flagged for Deletion": Wikipedia, the Federal Writers' Project, and First-Year Composition
248(15)
Courtney Rivard
15 Is Anyone Sitting Here?: Mirroring Gaillet's "Survival Steps" in a Community-Based, Justice-Focused Classroom
263(16)
Jeanne Law-Bohannon
Shiloh Gill Garcia
16 "Loving Blackness" as a First-Year Composition Student Learning Outcome in the Archives
279(16)
Michelle S. Hite
Tiffany Atwater Lee
Holly A. Smith
Andrea Jackson Gavin
Afterword; Why Teach through the Archives? 295(12)
Lynie Lewis Gaillet
Katherine H. Adams
Appendix A "Creative Storytelling": Creative Nonaction Archival Research Project 307(2)
Appendix B ENC 6700 Studies in Composition Theory 309(2)
Appendix C Documents Illustrating the IHR Workshop Process 311(6)
Appendix D Spelman College English Composition Shared Student Learning Outcomes 317(2)
Contributors 319(8)
Index 327