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DeVoss, Danielle Nicole – College English, 2013
In this review, I look back to the first issue of College English, and then across the years to trace the ways in which "Intellectual Property" (and this distinction from intellectual property is important) has been addressed by authors in the pages of the journal. I distinguish two periods of time marked by different approaches to IP issues, and…
Descriptors: College English, English Instruction, Intellectual Property, Journal Articles
Bloom, Lynn Z.; White, Edward M.; Enoch, Jessica; Hawk, Byron – College English, 2013
This symposium explores the role(s) College English has (or has not) had in the scholarly work of four scholars. Lynn Bloom explores the many ways College English influenced her work and the work of others throughout their scholarly lives. Edward M. White examines four articles he has published in College English and draws connections between…
Descriptors: Scholarship, College English, Conferences (Gatherings), Role of Education
Ballenger, Bruce – College English, 2008
Toward the end of his life, Donald Murray felt that his approach to writing instruction was no longer appreciated by journals in his field. Nevertheless, his emphasis on encouraging students to surprise themselves through informal writing still has considerable value. (Contains 1 note.)
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing Strategies, Writing (Composition), Intellectual History
Nowacek, David M.; Nowacek, Rebecca S. – College English, 2008
Taking the emergence of the organic foods system as a case study, the authors aim to demonstrate both how the discursive richness of the organic foods system offers a challenge to the traditional operations of the market and how activity systems theory as understood in English studies can productively be tied to and enriched by theories of social…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Systems Approach, Social Organizations, Agricultural Production
Thompson, Roger – College English, 2007
In this article, the author argues that Emerson repudiated the formalism of nineteenth century belletristic, mechanistic, reason-centered, American rhetoric influenced by Hugh Blair. Instead Emerson promoted a rhetoric with imagination at its center, which calls for civic duty. (Contains 33 notes.)
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Imagination, Rhetorical Invention, Rhetorical Criticism
"I Pay for All": The Cultural Contradictions of Learning and Labor at Illinois Industrial University
Middleton, Holly – College English, 2007
Focusing on students' responses to an 1876 writing assignment at Illinois Industrial University (which would ultimately become the University of Illinois), the author analyzes ideological tensions that occurred as the United States found itself revising the pastoral image of the farmer in an increasingly industrial age. (Contains 9 notes.)
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Ideology, Intellectual History, Historical Interpretation

Harris, Wendell V. – College English, 1983
Suggests that contemporary critical literary theories such as hermaneutics, reader-response, speech-act, structuralism, and deconstructionism share with pre-Platonic Eleatic thought a distrust of cause-and-effect reasoning and an emphasis on paradox. (MM)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Intellectual History, Literary Criticism, Literature Appreciation

Fischer, Michael – College English, 1979
Discusses the emergence of a new kind of criticism which has as its philosophical starting point the rejections of mimesis, and traces the process leading up to the development of this critical theory--a process which began in English criticism of the romantic period. (DD)
Descriptors: English Instruction, Higher Education, Intellectual History, Literary Criticism

Dowling, William C. – College English, 1987
Notes that many literature students have disliked studying eighteenth century literature and reflects on the positive effect New Criticism has had on the teaching of it. Compares Kramnick's and Pocock's views with those of the New Criticism. (JC)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College English, Eighteenth Century Literature, Higher Education

Thomas, Brook – College English, 1987
Reflects on the role of New Historicism in teaching literature and remarks on the lack of historical awareness in students today. Offers suggestions for connecting history, as well as other disciplines, to literature to combat currently fragmented college educations. (JC)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College English, Higher Education, History Instruction

Matalene, H. W. – College English, 1984
Shows how a significant literary question of preindustrial Europe--What causes one person to listen to another?--is still of major importance in a nuclear age. (MM)
Descriptors: Attention, Communication (Thought Transfer), Communication Skills, Futures (of Society)