ISBN:
0739172573
,
9780739172575
Language:
English
Pages:
1 Online-Ressource (x, 275 p)
Series Statement:
Cultural studies/pedagogy/activism
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als Unsustainable
DDC:
302.2/2440973
Keywords:
Service learning
;
Literacy Social aspects
;
Community and college
;
LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES ; Literacy
;
Community and college
;
Literacy ; Social aspects
;
Service learning
;
United States
Abstract:
Acknowledgments; Introduction: Taking Stock of Our Past and Assessing the Future of Community Writing Work; I: Short-Lived Projects, Long-Lived Value; Chapter One: After Tactics, What Comes Next?; Chapter Two: Tales from the Crawl Space: Asserting Youth Agency within an Unsustainable Education System; Chapter Three: Strategic Speculations on the Question of Value: The Role of Community Publishing in English Studies; Chapter Four: Everyone Loved It and Still It Closed: When a Writing Program Isn't a Core Mandate; II: Community Literacy, Personal Contexts.
Abstract:
Chapter Five: Sustainability Deferred: The Conflicting Logics of Career Advancement and Community EngagementChapter Six: Hope and Despair, Risk and Struggle: (j)WPA Work, Service-Learning, and the Case for Baby Steps; Chapter Seven: Mobile Sustainability: An Adjunct's Development of a Permanent Practice; III: Pedagogy; Chapter Eight: Assessing Sustainability: The Class That Went Terribly Wrong; Chapter Nine: The Idea of a Literacy Dula; IV: Calls for Transnational Sustainability; Chapter Ten: No More Than Fire Belongs to Prometheus: Techne, Institutions, and Intervention in Local Public Life.
Abstract:
Chapter Eleven: Mastery, Failure, and Community Outreach as a Stochastic Art: Lessons Learned with the Sudanese Diaspora in PhoenixConclusion: Rejecting Binaries and Rethinking Relationships; Afterword; Index; About the Authors.
Abstract:
Unsustainable: Re-imagining Community Literacy, Public Writing, Service-Learning, and the University, edited by Jessica Restaino and Laurie Cella, explores short-lived university/community writing projects in an effort to rethink the long-held "gold standard" of long-term sustainability in community writing work. Contributors examine their own efforts in order to provide alternate models for understanding, assessing, and enacting university/community writing projects that, for a range of reasons, fall outside of traditional practice
Note:
Includes bibliographical references
URL:
Volltext
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