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- Volume 74, Issue 1, 2022
- Volume 74, Issue 1, 2022

Volume 74, Issue 1, 2022
- Articles
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Misogyny and the Norm of Recognition in Graduate English Programs
Author(s): Amy E. RobillardDrawing on interviews with ten female-identifying graduate students, this article theorizes a norm of recognition and argues that recognition, conceptualized as a masculine-coded good, circulates away from female graduate students toward faculty and from faculty back to male graduate students. Female graduate students instead experience misogyny, understood as a punishment for straying from patriarchal gender roles in which they are required to be givers.
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From Post-War Boom to Global University: Enacting Equity in the Open Doors Policies of Mass Higher Education
Author(s): Amy J. WanThis essay examines two narratives for US higher education—the tradition of access and the current moment of globalized expansion—to understand how policies about access and language do not inherently uphold practices of equity. I also discuss how writing specialists can intervene in the explicit and implicit practice of these policies.
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Post-Arrival Mentorships That Are Not Mentorships: Cross-Gender and Cross-Generational Trajectories in Rhet/Comp’s Nexus of Practice
Author(s): John Paul TassoniBilateral mentorships in rhetoric and composition can persist beyond formalized, institutional arrangements in ways that continue to (re)shape lives in the profession. Mediated discourse theory provides a lens through which to describe practices of enduring mentorships in terms of ways they might advance cross-gender and cross-generational understanding.
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Theorizing Writing Differently: How Community-Engaged Projects in First-Year Composition Shape Students’ Writing Theories and Strategies
Author(s): Heather LindenmanBased on a qualitative case study of students’ “theory of writing” essays, this study examines ways that first-year students’ community engagement experiences solidify and disrupt their writing knowledge, beliefs, and practices. Analysis of student writing demonstrates how different community-engaged writing projects inform first-year students’ writing theories and strategies.
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Participatory Counternarratives: Geocomposition, Public Memory, and the Sounding of Hybrid Place/Space
Author(s): Jacob D. RichterThis article argues that conceptions of public memory, as constructed, produced, and enacted in spaces such as a university campus, can be strategically reconceived for social justice ends by mapping student-created rhetorical audio tour compositions to physical locations around that place.
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Relationality in the Transfer of Writing Knowledge
Author(s): Angela Rounsaville, Rebecca Lorimer Leonard and Rebecca S. NowacekDeveloped from a collaborative transdisciplinary analysis of transfer scholarship, we redefine transfer as a relational phenomenon to capture the “dynamic, emergent, embodied, messy” elements of writing transfer (Prior and Olinger 137). Relationality also highlights conceptual relationships in transfer research that produce seeming contradictions but are more often complementary than confounding.
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Composing Addiction: A Study of the Emotional Dimensions of Writing Processes
Author(s): Patty WildeSituated in disability studies, this article shares the results from a qualitative research project that examined how three community college students who wrote about addiction navigated the process-based activities assigned in their first-year writing courses. These findings illuminate how such exercises evoke a spectrum of emotion that shapes both process and product.
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