Traversing the Democratic Borders of the EssayState University of New York Press, 1 de fev. de 2012 - 172 páginas Scholarship on the personal essay has focused on Western European and U. S. varieties of the form. In Traversing the Democratic Borders of the Essay, Cristina Kirklighter extends these boundaries by reading the Latin American and Latino/a essayists Paulo Freire, Victor Villanueva, and Ruth Behar, alongside such canonical figures as Montaigne, Bacon, Emerson, and Thoreau. In this fascinating journey into the commonalities and differences among these essayists, Kirklighter focuses on various elements of the personal essay—self-reflexivity, accessibility, spontaneity, and a rhetoric of sincerity—in order to argue for a more democratic form of writing in academia, one that would democratize the academy and promote nation-building. By using these elements in their teachings and writings, Kirklighter argues, educators can play a significant role in helping others who experience academic alienation achieve a better sense of belonging as they slowly dismantle the walls of the ivory tower. |
Conteúdo
1 Introduction | 1 |
Montaigne and Bacons Use of the Essay Form | 15 |
3 Essaying an American Democratic Identity in Emerson and Thoreau | 39 |
4 The Essay as PoliticalCultural Critique in Latin America | 71 |
5 Achieving a Place in Academia through the Personal Academic Essays of Victor Villanueva and Ruth Behar | 103 |
6 Conclusion | 133 |
WORKS CITED | 137 |
149 | |
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acade academia academic writing American Scholar audience authenticity Bacon become believed bell hooks Bootstraps Cicero’s Ciceronian communities contemporary create critical critique cultural democracy democratic demonstrate dialogue discourse dispositio element of self-reflection Emerson and Thoreau emphasis English studies essay form essay predecessors essay scholars essay scholarship essay’s elements ethnographic Europe form of writing Freire’s Freirian genre human identity individual influenced inspired intellectual knowledge language Latin American essay Latin American essayists Latino/a academics Letters to Cristina liberatory literary lived experiences Michel de Montaigne Montaigne Montaigne’s nation nature one’s Oppressed Paulo Freire Pedagogy personal essay personal essayists personal form personal writing Peter McLaren philosophical Plutarch political practice Pyrrhonian skepticism Pyrrhonism quest readers Renaissance reviewer rhetoric role Ruth Behar scholarly Seneca skepticism social society sonal Spanish spontaneity style taigne theories tion traditional truth understand Victor Villanueva Victoria Ocampo Walden Western European William Gass writing form