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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
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Fosso, Kurt; Harp, Jerry – College English, 2012
We set out to investigate Miller's curious assertion--curious for a deconstructionist committed to a critique of the old metaphysics of presence--that literary works preexist their being written down. We find a basis for this sense of the preexistence of the literary work in Miller's insights about the performative dynamics of reading and writing.…
Descriptors: Literature, Theories, Literary Criticism, Reader Text Relationship
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Ringer, Jeffrey M. – College English, 2013
This essay considers how a male evangelical Christian in a first-year writing (FYW) course at a state university negotiates his identity in his academic writing for a non-Christian audience. It focuses on how "Austin" casuistically stretches a biblical text to accommodate his audience's pluralistic perspective. Austin's writing thus provides a…
Descriptors: Audiences, Religion, Academic Discourse, Biblical Literature
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Jurecic, Ann – College English, 2011
"Empathy" is a much-discussed term in the humanities these days. While some critics value it and argue that literature desirably promotes it, other critics worry that appeals to this emotion will neglect important matters of social context. In the literature classroom, the best approach is to take time to consider how texts complicate the impulse…
Descriptors: Social Environment, Humanities, Empathy, Literature
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Upadhyay, Samrat; Schilb, John – College English, 2012
This article presents an interview with the noted Nepali American fiction writer Samrat Upadhyay. Samrat Upadhyay's fiction is mostly about his native country of Nepal, but he writes mainly for an Anglo-American audience. In the interview, Upadhyay not only discusses his own work, but he also examines samples of prose by other Asian or Asian…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Audiences, Foreign Countries, Asian Americans
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Marsh, John – College English, 2011
In this article, the author focuses on the possibilities--and the limits--of undergraduate courses on the literature of poverty. He describes an undergraduate course he has taught on U.S. literature about poverty, but he also expresses doubt that such courses can help produce major social change. He argues that something about the literature of…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Poverty, Social Change, Undergraduate Study
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Smith, Karen R. – College English, 2011
The past decade has seen a resurgence of scholarship on world literature. The best-selling successes of "Great Books" arguments contained in Azar Nafisi's memoir "Reading Lolita in Tehran" and in Dai Sijie's novel "Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress" seem to mirror, on the popular front, this scholarly return to the question of world…
Descriptors: World Literature, Introductory Courses, Nationalism, War
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Weissman, Gary – College English, 2010
Through an account of how his own students analyzed Ira Sher's short story "The Man in the Well," the author calls for teachers of literature to value and attend to their classes' misreadings rather than replace them with corrective interpretations. He argues that probing these misreadings enables one to see the limits imposed by any single…
Descriptors: Literary Criticism, Misconceptions, Teacher Attitudes, Perspective Taking
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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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Casey, Janet Galligani – College English, 2008
Undergraduate literature courses tend to neglect American fiction of the 1930s, especially the proletarian novel. Disregard of this particular genre is often based on the assumption that it emphasized a crude Marxist realism opposed to aesthetic modernism. Various examples of the genre are, in fact, worth teaching, especially because they do not…
Descriptors: United States Literature, Role, Novels, Reading Material Selection
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Jarratt, Susan C. – College English, 2009
This article explored the archives of three preeminent southern Historically Black Colleges and Universities founded soon after the end of the war: Fisk, Atlanta, and Howard Universities. The author began by searching their founding documents and catalogues through the turn of the twentieth century. Curricular history provides an articulated…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, College Curriculum, Educational History, Periodicals
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Wilson, Douglas L.; Mailloux, Steven; Johnson, Nan; Stauffer, John; Wolk, Tony; Schilb, John – College English, 2009
2009 is the bicentennial of Abraham Lincoln's birth. Naturally, historians are thrilled. But what about their discipline? Why and how might Lincoln matter to English studies? In this article, the authors reflect on Lincoln and his influence on English studies. They argue that Lincoln has played or can play an important role in the college English…
Descriptors: College English, Historians, English Instruction, Reflection
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Eck, Lisa – College English, 2008
Teaching postcolonial literature to American college students involves taking them through a dialectical process of thinking about identification. In the first stage, students are encouraged to note similarities between their own lives and those of the work's characters. With the second step, students examine how the work's cultural and historical…
Descriptors: College Students, Cultural Literacy, Literature, Cultural Awareness
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Rothschild, Jeffrey M. – College English, 1990
Discusses how narrators (distinct from authors) emerged in English prose works during the last decade of the sixteenth century. Reports that instances of the use of narrators can be found throughout the seventeenth century, but that it was another hundred years before the technique developed fully enough to constitute a recognizable narrative…
Descriptors: English Literature, Literary Criticism, Literary Styles, Narration
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Clements, Clyde C., Jr. – College English, 1973
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, Black Literature, College Curriculum, English Instruction
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