Professing Multiculturalism: The Politics of Style in the Contact Zone
1994; National Council of Teachers of English; Volume: 45; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês
10.2307/358759
ISSN1939-9006
Autores Tópico(s)Global Education and Multiculturalism
ResumoLouise Pratt points out that while colleges and universities have increasingly deployed a rhetoric of diversity in response to the insistence of non-mainstream groups for fuller participation, the import of remains for grabs across the ideological spectrum (39). I begin with Pratt's reminder because I want to call attention to the images of grabbing and import. These depict as a construct whose importmeanings, implications, and consequences-is available only to those willing to expend the energy to grab it: to search, envision, grasp, articulate, and enact it. And these images conjure up the act of importing-of bringing in-perspectives and methods formerly excluded by dominant institutions. I want to articulate one import of multiculturalism here by exploring the question of how to conceive and practice teaching methods which invite a multicultural approach to style, particularly those styles of student writing which appear to be ridden with errors. And I situate this question in the context of English Studies, a discipline which, on the one hand, has often proclaimed its concern to profess multiculturalism but, on the other hand, has done little to combat the ghettoization of two of its own cultures, namely composition teaching and student writing. My inquiry is motivated by two concerns which I believe I share with a significant number of composition teachers. The first results from a sense of division between the ways in which many of us approach style in theory and in our teaching practices. I have in mind teachers who are aligned in theory with a view of composition which contests the separation of form and meaning and which also argues against a conception of academic
Referência(s)