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- Volume 63, Issue 1, 2011
College Composition & Communication - Volume 63, Issue 1, 2011
Volume 63, Issue 1, 2011
- Articles
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From the Editor: Beyond Blue Eyes
Author(s): Kathleen Blake YanceyThe editor introduces this special issue.
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Indian Ability (auilidad de Indio) and Rhetoric’s Civilizing Narrative: Guaman Poma’s Contact with the Rhetorical Tradition
Author(s): Abraham RomneyThis essay invites a critique of contact zone theory and rhetoric’s origin story based on a reading of Guaman Poma’s First New Chronicle and Good Government. I read this writer’s argument for indigenous ability and reshaping of space through picture, map, and text as a multimodal effort that invites attention to classroom rhetorical power dynamics and standards.
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The Postindian Rhetoric of Gerald Vizenor
Author(s): John D. MilesThis article examines the intersections between Gerald Vizenor’s theories of survivance, postindian, manifest manners, and transmotion, and some longstanding rhetorical concepts that shape the teaching of writing. It also examines how Vizenor’s terminology may inform our understandings of these terms and help reshape the canon that informs our teaching of writing and rhetoric.
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Literacy Stewardship: Dakelh Women Composing Culture
Author(s): Alanna FrostThis essay suggests a companion term to literacy sponsors that better mirrors the practice and protection of traditional literacies evident in the cases of two Dakelh elders. Literacy steward introduces a theoretical means to describe community members whose rhetorical decisions depend on traditions that are alternative to dominant literacies.
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Cherokee Practice, Missionary Intentions: Literacy Learning among Early Nineteenth-Century Cherokee Women
Author(s): M. Amanda MoulderThis article discusses how archival documents reveal early nineteenth-century Cherokee purposes for English-language literacy. In spite of Euro-American efforts to depoliticize Cherokee women’s roles, Cherokee female students adapted the literacy tools of an outsider patriarchal society to retain public, political power. Their writing served Cherokee national interests and demonstrated female students’ concerns with the fate of the Cherokee people.
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Ma ka Hana ka ‘Ike (In the Work Is the Knowledge): Kaona as Rhetorical Action
Author(s): Brandy Nālani McDougall and Georganne NordstromDrawing on Malea Powell’s “rhetorics of survivance” and Scott Richard Lyons’s “rhetorical sovereignty” as a framework, we examine how kaona, a Hawaiian rhetorical device, is employed within Queen Lili‘uokalani’s autobiography and Haunani-Kay Trask’s poetry as a call for Hawaiian resistance against American colonialism through allusions to Pele-Hi'iaka stories.
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Writing Removal and Resistance: Native American Rhetoric in the Composition Classroom
Author(s): Daniel ColeThis essay describes my design and implementation of a composition course focused on the Native American rhetorical device of survivance at work in debates on Indian removal and U.S.-Indian relations in general. Using a contact zone approach, I found that the course improved writing and thinking skills by pushing students out of their ideological and intellectual comfort zones. As a deeper benefit, the study of Native American rhetorical strategies renders the Western rhetorical tradition not only as a framework for inquiry but as an object of analysis and critique itself.
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Review Essay: Ethnic Rhetorics Reviewed
Author(s): Jaime Armin MejíaReviewed are: Mestiz@ Scripts, Digital Migrations, and the Territories of Writing Damián Baca Rhetorics of the Americas: 3114 BCE to 2012 CE Damián Baca and Victor Villanueva, editors Representations: Doing Asian American Rhetoric LuMing Mao and Morris Young, editors Writing in Multicultural Settings Carol Severino, Juan C. Guerra, and Johnnella E. Butler, editors American Indian Rhetorics of Survivance: Word Medicine, Word Magic Ernest Stromberg, editor
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Volumes & issues
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Volume 76 (2024)
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Volume 75 (2023 - 2024)
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Volume 74 (2022 - 2023)
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Volume 73 (2021 - 2022)
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Volume 72 (2020 - 2021)
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Volume 71 (2019 - 2020)
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Volume 70 (2018 - 2019)
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Volume 69 (2017 - 2018)
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Volume 68 (2016 - 2017)
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Volume 67 (2015 - 2016)
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Volume 66 (2014 - 2015)
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Volume 65 (2013 - 2014)
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Volume 64 (2012 - 2013)
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Volume 63 (2011 - 2012)
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Volume 62 (2010 - 2011)
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Volume 61 (2009 - 2010)
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Volume 60 (2008 - 2009)
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Volume 59 (2007 - 2008)
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Volume 58 (2006 - 2007)
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Volume 57 (2005 - 2006)
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Volume 56 (2004 - 2005)
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Volume 55 (2003 - 2004)
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Volume 54 (2002 - 2003)
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Volume 53 (2001 - 2002)
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Volume 52 (2000 - 2001)
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Volume 51 (1999 - 2000)
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Volume 50 (1998 - 1999)
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Volume 49 (1998)
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Volume 48 (1997)
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Volume 47 (1996)
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Volume 46 (1995)
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Volume 45 (1994)
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Volume 44 (1993)
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Volume 43 (1992)
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Volume 42 (1991)
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Volume 41 (1990)
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Volume 40 (1989)
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Volume 39 (1988)
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Volume 38 (1987)
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Volume 37 (1986)
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Volume 36 (1985)
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Volume 35 (1984)
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Volume 34 (1983)
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Volume 33 (1982)
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Volume 32 (1981)
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Volume 31 (1980)
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Volume 30 (1979)
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Volume 29 (1978)
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Volume 28 (1977)
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Volume 27 (1976)
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Volume 26 (1975)
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Volume 25 (1974)
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Volume 24 (1973)
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Volume 23 (1972)
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Volume 22 (1971)
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Volume 21 (1970)
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Volume 20 (1969)
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Volume 19 (1968)
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Volume 18 (1967)
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Volume 17 (1966)
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Volume 16 (1965)
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Volume 15 (1964)
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Volume 14 (1963)
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Volume 13 (1962)
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Volume 12 (1961)
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Volume 11 (1960)
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Volume 10 (1959)
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Volume 9 (1958)
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Volume 8 (1957)
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Volume 7 (1956)
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Volume 6 (1955)
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Volume 5 (1954)
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Volume 4 (1953)
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Volume 3 (1952)
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Volume 2 (1951)
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Volume 1 (1950)
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