Tracing Trajectories of Practice: Repurposing in One Student’s Developing Disciplinary Writing Processes

Author:

Roozen Kevin1

Affiliation:

1. Auburn University, Auburn, AL,

Abstract

An extensive body of scholarship has documented the way disciplinary texts and activities are produced and mediated through their relationship to a wide array of extradisciplinary discourses. This article seeks to complement and extend that line of work by drawing upon Witte’s (1992) notion of intertext to address the way disciplinary activities repurpose, or reuse and transform, extradisciplinary practices. Based on text collection and practice-oriented retrospective accounts of one writer’s processes for a number of textual activities, the article argues that the writer’s developing disciplinary writing process as a graduate student in English literature is mediated by practices she repurposed from previous engagements with keeping a prayer journal as a member of a church youth group and generating visual designs for an undergraduate graphic arts class. Ultimately, the article argues for increased theoretical, methodological, and pedagogical attention to the discursive practices persons recruit and reinvigorate across multiple engagements with reading, writing, making, and doing.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Literature and Literary Theory,Communication

Reference65 articles.

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2. Bartholomae, D. ( 1985). Inventing the university. In M. Rose (Ed.), When a writer can’t write: Studies in writer’s block and other composing process problems (pp. 134-165). New York: Guilford.

3. Bazerman, C. ( 2004). Intertextualities: Voloshinov, Bakhtin, literary theory, and literacy studies. In A. F. Ball & S. W. Freedman (Eds.), Bakhtinian perspectives on language, literacy, and learning (pp. 53-65). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.

4. Beach, K. ( 2003). Consequential transitions: A developmental view of knowledge propagation through social organizations. In T. Tuomi-Grohn & Y. Engestrom (Eds.), Between school and work: New perspectives on transfer and boundary crossing (pp. 39-61). New York: Pergamon.

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