What Writing Does and How It Does It offers a sophisiticated introduction to multiple methods--each described and illustrated by an expert researcher--of understanding, studying, and analyzing texts and writing practices across a wide-range of set.
Added by: englishcology | Karma: 4552.53 | Fiction literature | 23 June 2008
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The explanation of this lies in the wretchedly dependent state of native authorship at that time. The law of copyright had not then attained to even the refined injustice which it has now reached. "I continue," he wrote, in 1844, "to scribble tales with good success so far as regards empty praise, some notes of which, pleasant enough to my ears, have come from across the Atlantic. But the pamphlet and piratical system has so broken up all regular literature, that I am forced to work hard for small gains."
Reference Guide to Writing Across the Curriculum traces the Writing Across the Curriculum movement from its origins in British secondary education through its flourishing in American higher education and extension to American primary and secondary education. The authors follow their historical review of the literature by a review of research into primary, secondary, and higher education WAC teaching and learning. Subsequent chapters examine the relations of WAC to Writing to Learn theory, research, and pedagogy, as well as its interactions with the Rhetoric of Science and Writing in the Disciplines movements. Current issues of theory and practice are followed by a presentation of best practices in program design, assessment, and classroom practices. An extensive bibliography and suggestions for further reading round out this comprehensive guide to Writing Across the Curriculum.
Winston Churchill: Man of the Century. Modern Scholar Series
Churchill was an improbable hero for what was to be
called “the century of the common man,” not only
because he was personally so very uncommon, but
because he was from an elite British family and was never
closely in touch with “ordinary people” in Britain, let
alone the rest of the world. Yet, to pigeonhole Churchill
that way is misleading.
Winston Churchill was seen even in his own lifetime as a
historic figure, one of the great men of world history, commemorated
all across the world (but especially among the
English-speaking peoples) in statues, memorials, streets and
schools named after him, and in a plethora of stamps,
medals, plates, and other such memorabilia.
"English Across Cultures: Cultures Across English : A Reader in Cross Cultural Communication"
The articles contained in this volume give a good overview about the main questions in the field of cross-cultural communication as well as language and culture. Particularly interesting is Platt's article about different communicative strategies in English-speaking Asian speech communities and Verschueren's paper about English as an object and medium of misunderstanding.