Bloom, Lynn.
Donald A.
Daiker, and Edward M. White, eds. Composition Studies in the New
Millennium: Rereading the Past, Rewriting the Future. Carbondale,
IL: Southern Illinois UP, 2003. 304 pp.
A
collection of twenty-four essays assessing and challenging the current
state of writing instruction, Composition Studies in the New Millennium:
Rereading the Past, Rewriting the Future emerges from presentations
given at the national Writing Program Administrators conference held
at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, in 2001. Like its acclaimed and
widely-used predecessor, Composition in the Twenty-First Century:
Crisis and Change, this timely collection by leading scholars in composition
studies responds to concerns about the evolution and future of this
field of study.
Charting new directions, the contributors grapple with seven distinct
questions: What do we mean by composition studies-past, present, and
future? What do and should we teach when we teach composition? Where
will composition be taught, and who will teach it? What theories and
philosophies will undergird our research paradigms, and what will
those paradigms be? How will new technologies change composition studies?
What languages will our students write, and what will they write about?
What political and social issues have shaped composition studies in
the past and will shape this field in the future?
In addressing these queries, the essayists approach composition studies
from perspectives ranging from rhetorical to cultural, political to
economic, administrative to technological; and they do so with a style
and organization appropriate for composition instructors, scholars,
and administrators at all levels, from teaching assistants to college
presidents. The result is an invaluable vision of the future of composition
studies in the new millennium.
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