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Category: 45.1

English Education and the Teaching of Literature

by Jeffrey M. Buchanan (Original)

Abstract

This article discusses ways literature is taught at the university. It describes a gap in the way English is often taught in literature programs and the way future teachers are taught to teach English to secondary students. It argues for teaching literature in ways that might be good for majors in both fields, ways that support the work valued by each sub-discipline

“I Can’t Relate”: Refusing Identification Demands in Teaching and Learning

by Ian Barnard (Original)

Abstract

In literature, composition, and other areas of English Studies, relateability can be an important tool to inscribe marginalized subjects as academic citizens. However, its larger arc reproduces ethnocentric and individualistic ideologies at the national and personal levels that foreclose the true understanding of and engagement with Otherness that defines learning. What are the particular intellectual and other challenges, pleasures, and rewards of refusing the pedagogical imperative to engage and understand through identification? I conclude the article by deploying theorists of difference to ask what it means to understand difference as difference, how this understanding might be facilitated, and what the value of such an understanding might be.

Digital Liminality and Cross-Cultural Re-integration in the Middle East

by Gregory Stephens (Original)

Abstract

This essay develops a theory of “digital liminality” as a way to analyze the role of technology in the classroom, and in students’ lives. It is also a report on the ESL classroom as a site of intercultural exchange between instructors and Muslim students. The role of digital media in higher ed was a question I had to confront at a Middle Eastern University, where students exhibited a strong cell phone addiction. I theorized Saudi students’ immersion in their cells as a liminal phase during a university rite of passage. Digital technology exposed them to things that would be inadmissible when they were later reintegrated into a deeply conservative society. My students wrote about living between “Western freedoms,” and a world of submission, where most of them would work and raise families. In my Freshman English courses, a temporary cell-free zone was established, enabling students to defamiliarize their use of digital technologies. Students investigated their own role as “threshold people” on the verge of a new way of life, critically examining their own digitally mediated liminality. Students then did presentations about the challenges of re-incorporation in a Saudi context. Combining ethnographic fieldwork and ESL theory and practice, I integrate excerpts from student journals, providing a personal perspective on my analysis of digital liminality, and ESL classrooms as intercultural crossroads.

Cartooning as a Creative Classroom Response: Picturing Emily Dickinson and Her Poetry

by Mary Anne Myers (Original)

Abstract

This essay describes an exercise that used cartooning to engage first-year cadets at the United States Military Academy (West Point) with the poetry of Emily Dickinson. It shows how the exercise fit into the overall curriculum and supported course objectives.
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