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Enoch, Jessica; Jack, Jordynn – College English, 2011
Remembering Sappho, from a pedagogical perspective, usually means that teachers bring recovered women's rhetorics into the classroom, prompting students to come to know women as rhetorical agents by analyzing the rhetorical strategies they used to make their voices heard. Teaching women's rhetorics in this way works toward the ultimate goal of…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Rhetoric, Females, Feminism
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Wu, Hui – College English, 2010
Identifying the specific complexities and historical context of post-Mao Chinese literary women's rhetoric, along with ways they have been misread, the author argues in general that Western feminist critics need to be cautious about applying their concepts to non-Western women's literature. (Contains 7 notes.)
Descriptors: Feminism, Rhetoric, Females, Rhetorical Theory
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Fand, Roxanne J. – College English, 2009
Ayn Rand's novel "The Fountainhead" can be a useful text in an undergraduate English class, helping students think through issues of individualism. Rand's own concept of the self, however, ignores its social dimensions. (Contains 7 notes.)
Descriptors: Novels, Individualism, Ethics, Self Concept
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Wang, Bo – College English, 2010
Examining two particular texts and applying modifications of Western feminist concepts, the author argues that early twentieth-century Chinese women's writing contains feminist thoughts and textual strategies far more complex and nuanced than conventional wisdom has led one to expect. (Contains 6 notes.)
Descriptors: Feminism, Rhetoric, Females, Gender Issues
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Kulbaga, Theresa A. – College English, 2008
In her audio essay for the the National Public Radio's series "This I Believe," Iranian-American author and professor Azar Nafisi celebrates the affective power of empathy. In the essay, Nafisi refers to actual people in Darfur, Afghanistan, Iraq, Algeria, Rwanda, and North Korea, but she turns to classic nineteenth-century American novel to…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Foreign Countries, Empathy, Radio
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Dingo, Rebecca – College English, 2008
In this article, the author investigates the circulation and appropriation of representations of women in public policy. The author effectively mobilizes the metaphor of the network to examine the discursive intersections and transnational links between U.S. welfare programs and the World Bank gender mainstreaming policies. Her analysis reveals…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Females, Figurative Language, Rhetorical Criticism
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Champagne, John – College English, 1996
Investigates a broad question in light of the author's own background: what is it that educators think they are doing while teaching postcolonial literature? Investigates an analogy between postcolonial and gay and lesbian studies by looking at the author's reading and teaching approach to Mariama Ba's novel "So Long a Letter." (TB)
Descriptors: Feminism, Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Teacher Student Relationship
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Robbins, Sarah – College English, 2003
Recent, highly productive discussions of intellectual property and authorship in English studies have concentrated on two broad areas of inquiry. Scholars have repeatedly asserted fair use principles to mobilize resistance against the legal trends restricting texts' circulation. At the same time, growing appreciation of student writing and other…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Writing (Composition), Intellectual Property, Feminism