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Mattingly, Carol. "Uncovering Forgotten Habits: Anti-Catholic Rhetoric and Nineteenth-Century American Women's Literacy." CCC 58.2 (2006): 160-181.

Abstract:

This article examines the connection between religion and literacy efforts on behalf of girls and young women in the early nineteenth-century United States by looking at the rapid proliferation of Catholic convent academies and the anti-Catholic sentiment that spurred the growth of proprietary academies, such as those of Mary Lyon and Catharine Beecher. It also examines how religious rhetoric influenced the curriculum in both Catholic and proprietor schools.


Heilker, Paul. "Twenty Years In: An Essay in Two Parts." CCC 58.2 (2006): 182-212.

Abstract:

Part I of this essay traces the evolution of my understanding of the exploratory essay as a discursive form and a genre for teaching writing. Part II explores my motivations for advocating a polarized definition of the essay and then concludes with a call to expand the purview of composition beyond first-year courses.


Kill, Melanie. "Acknowledging the Rough Edges of Resistance: Negotiation of Identities for First-Year Composition." CCC 58.2 (2006): 213-235.

Abstract:

In the interest of better understanding the challenges of enacting new pedagogies in the classroom, the following essay focuses on the role of genre and uptake in the relational negotiation of self-presentation. I argue that to bring our teaching practices in line with our best intentions and most progressive pedagogies we need to be aware not only that reliance on the legibility associated with familiar subject positions motivates student resistance in the composition classroom but, moreover, that our interest in securing self-presentations as teachers may motivate everyday interactions that work to maintain the status quo.


Wooten, Judith A. "Riding a One-Eyed Horse: Reining In and Fencing Out." CCC 58.2 (2006): 236-245.

Abstract:


Sommers, Nancy, Carol Rutz, and Howard Tinberg. "Re-Visions: Rethinking Nancy Sommers's 'Responding to Student Writing,' 1982." CCC 58.2 (2006): 246-266.


Dolmage, Jay. "Review Essay. The Teacher, the Body." Rev. of Bodily Arts: Rhetoric and Athletics in Ancient Greece by Debra Hawhee; Embodied Literacies: Imageword and a Poetics of Teaching by Kristie S. Fleckenstein; The Teacher's Body: Embodiment, Authority and Identity in the Academy, Diane P. Freedman and Martha Stoddard Holmes, eds. CCC 58.2 (2006): 267-277.