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On Writtenness

The Cultural Politics of Academic Writing

Professor Joan Turner (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)

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English
Bloomsbury Academic
19 September 2019
This book develops the concept of ‘writtenness’ (historically-formed stylistic and aesthetic values within writing) to highlight the demands, taken-for-granted ideals, institutional frictions, and changing circumstances of academic writing in English in the contemporary international university.

Recognising the political importance of the role that English plays in an increasingly internationalized higher education network, Joan Turner pits writtenness against the contingency and instability of international English in real-life institutional contexts. In doing so, she brings out the theoretical significance of this, as writing becomes a motor of linguistic change and can no longer be seen simply as the repository of academic standards.

Of particular interest to academics and postgraduates in TESOL, applied linguistics, rhetoric and composition, English as a Lingua Franca studies, and the sociolinguistics of writing, as well as to EAP practitioners, this book is among the first to theoretically consider the implications for the cultural homogeneity of the written word. It also offers a unique perspective on the role of writtenness within the broader historical context of leaving the era of print culture. As such, this book is highly recommended for students, researchers, and policy makers alike.

By:  
Imprint:   Bloomsbury Academic
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
Weight:   417g
ISBN:   9781350133044
ISBN 10:   1350133043
Pages:   296
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Undergraduate ,  Primary
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
1. On writtenness and the stability of style: the perennial prerequisite of polished prose 2. On writtenness in English on the geopolitical stage 3. On writtenness and tutor-student interaction in the international university 4. On writtenness as a smooth read: the cultural aesthetics of reading 5. On the intellectual labour of writtenness 6. On theorizing writtenness 7. On writtenness and the ideological role of proofreading 8.On writtenness: a contested pedagogical space 9. On promoting a multi-accented writtenness References Index

Joan Turner is Emeritus Professor in the Department of English and Comparative Literature, and former Director of the Centre for English Language and Academic Writing, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK.

Reviews for On Writtenness: The Cultural Politics of Academic Writing

Written language has long been an orphan in the study of language. Joan Turner, a uniquely qualified voice in this field, shows how detailed attention to it raises fundamental theoretical issues, of consequence for the entire field of language, culture and society. This elegant and compelling text is sure to raise major, and long overdue, crossdisciplinary debates - a rare achievement. -- Jan Blommaert, Professor of Language, Culture and Globalization and Director of the Babylon Center at Tilburg University, the Netherlands In this timely work Joan Turner interrogates the concept of 'writtenness' in its philosophical, historical and sociological contexts ranging from John Locke to Pierre Bourdieu. Not since the textual dichotomy between form and content was opened up and critiqued by Barthes and Derrida has the idea achieved so much scrutiny. Turner successfully demonstrates the highly political implications of this ideological complex within contemporary higher education -- Chris Jenks, Professor of Linguistics and former Vice-Chancellor, Brunel University, UK. I have enormous regard for the originality of Turner's argument around writtenness and the wide-ranging historical, philosophical, theoretical, rhetorical, and pedagogical resources she brings to bear on her examination of this key term. As a practitioner, she reveals a keen understanding of the implications for student writers from differing lingua-cultural backgrounds who may not have had access to the conventions required to produce a smooth read and for tutors whose intellectual work is minimized by demands for proofreading and pristine prose. Turner's book should be a must-read for scholars seeking to understand the complex causes and layers of our expectations for good writing and the virtuous rightness it has come to embody over the centuries. Her argument-that we must replace our expectations for a smooth read with a more open interpretive stance, even though that may mean coping with a rougher ride -will resonate with scholar-teachers engaged in translingual work. -- Terry Myers Zawacki, Emerita Professor of English and Emerita Director Writing Across the Curriculum, George Mason University, USA


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