Writing Games

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A01=Christine Pears Casanave
academic
academic discourse analysis
Academic Enculturation
academic literacy case studies
Academic Literacy Practices
Academic Writing Practices
academics
Author Editor Relationship
Author_Christine Pears Casanave
bilingual
Bilingual Academics
Case Study
Category=CFC
Category=CJCW
Category=JBSL1
Category=JNM
Common Sense
David's Class
David's Students
David’s Class
David’s Students
Disciplinary Enculturation
enculturation
English Medium Setting
eq_bestseller
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
fields
Freshman Composition Class
Game Metaphor
Game Strategies
higher education pedagogy
Lawlike Statements
legitimate
literacy
MA Paper
MA Program
MA Student
multilingual writing research
narrative inquiry methods
Novice Academic Writers
peripheral
PhD Program
playing
practices
Professional Development
qualitative ethnography
sociocultural identity formation
TESOL Program
Undergraduate Students
Writing Games
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805835311
  • Weight: 620g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Apr 2002
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book explores how writers from several different cultures learn to write in their academic settings, and how their writing practices interact with and contribute to their evolving identities as students and professionals in academic environments in higher education.

Embedded in a theoretical framework of situated practice, the naturalistic case studies and literacy autobiographies include portrayals of undergraduate students and teachers, master's level students, doctoral students, young bilingual faculty, and established scholars, all of whom are struggling to understand their roles in ambiguously defined communities of academic writers.

In addition to the notion of situated practice, the other powerful concept used as an interpretive framework is captured by the metaphor of "games"--a metaphor designed to emphasize that the practice of academic writing is shaped but not dictated by rules and conventions; that writing games consist of the practice of playing, not the rules themselves; and that writers have choices about whether and how to play.

Focusing on people rather than experiments, numbers, and abstractions, this interdisciplinary work draws on concepts and methods from narrative inquiry, qualitative anthropology and sociology, and case studies of academic literacy in the field of composition and rhetoric. The style of the book is accessible and reader friendly, eschewing highly technical insider language without dismissing complex issues. It has a multicultural focus in the sense that the people portrayed are from a number of different cultures within and outside North America. It is also a multivocal work: the author positions herself as both an insider and outsider and takes on the different voices of each; other voices that appear are those of her case study participants, and published authors and their case study participants. It is the author's hope that readers will find multiple ways to connect their own experiences with those of the writers the book portrays.

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