Join Books.org — it's free

Education, Educational Psychology
Cutting & The Pedagogy Self-Disclosure by Jeffrey Berman β€” book cover

Cutting & The Pedagogy Self-Disclosure

by Jeffrey Berman, Patricia Hatch Wallace
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Synopsis

Cutting, a form of self-mutilation, is a growing problem in the United States, especially among adolescent females. It is regarded as self-destructive behavior, yet paradoxically, people who cut themselves generally do not wish to die but to find relief from unbearable psychological pain.

Cutting and the Pedagogy of Self-Disclosure is the first book to explore how college students write about their experiences as cutters. The idea behind the book arose when Patricia Hatch Wallace, a high school English teacher, wrote a reader-response diary for a graduate course taught by Professor Jeffrey Berman in which she revealed for the first time that she had cut herself twenty years earlier. At Berman's suggestion, Wallace wrote her master's thesis on cutting. Not long after she finished her thesis, two students in Berman's expository writing course revealed their own experiences as cutters. Their disclosures encouraged several students in another writing class to share their own cutting stories with classmates. Realizing that so many students were writing about the same phenomenon, Berman and Wallace decided to write a book about a subject that is rarely discussed inside or outside the classroom.

About the Author:
Jeffrey Berman is professor of English at the University at Albany

About the Author:
Patricia Hatch Wallace is an English teacher at Hoosac Valley High School in Cheshire, Massachusetts

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Book Details

Published
December 1, 2007
Publisher
University of Massachusetts Press
Pages
320
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781558496149

More by Jeffrey Berman

Similar books