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The Rise of Writing
Redefining Mass Literacy

Drawing on real-life interviews, Brandt explores what happens when writing overtakes reading as the basis of people's daily literate experience.

Deborah Brandt (Author)

9781107462113, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 22 November 2014

206 pages, 2 tables
22.9 x 15 x 1.2 cm, 0.3 kg

'Through fascinating case studies that range from veteran ghostwriters to aspiring young authors, Deborah Brandt documents a significant trend: many of us now spend much of our daily lives composing texts. In such a world, she cogently argues, literacy research and teaching should focus on more than just skills of reading. With her usual acumen, rigor and eloquence, she calls for expanded attention to our new society of writing. She herself helps us understand it and think about how it might flourish.' John Schilb, Indiana University

Millions of Americans routinely spend half their working day or more with their hands on keyboards and their minds on audiences - writing so much, in fact, that they have less time and appetite for reading. In this highly anticipated sequel to her award-winning Literacy in American Lives, Deborah Brandt moves beyond laments about the decline of reading to focus on the rise of writing. What happens when writing overtakes reading as the basis of people's daily literate experience? How does a societal shift toward writing affect the ways that people develop their literacy and understand its value? Drawing on recent interviews with people who write every day, Brandt explores this major turn in the development of mass literacy and examines the serious challenges it poses for America's educational mission and civic health.

Introduction: the rise of mass writing
1. The status of writing
2. Writing for the State
3. Occupation: author/writing over reading in the literacy development of contemporary young adults
4. When everybody writes
Conclusion: deep writing
Appendices
Notes
Bibliography.

Subject Areas: Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography [JHMC], Literature & literary studies [D], Language acquisition [CFDC], Linguistics [CF]

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