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Motives for Metaphor by James E. Seitz β€” book cover
Teaching - English Language, Teaching - Literature, Administration - Curricula, Philology, Literacy, Teaching - Writing, Teaching - Curricula, Teaching - Reading & Language Miscellanea, Rhetoric - English Language

Motives for Metaphor

by James E. Seitz
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Overview

Despite urgent calls for reform, composition, literature, and creative writing, remain territorial, competitive fields. This book imagines ways in which the three English camps can reconnect. Seitz contends that the study of metaphor can advance curriculum reform precisely because of its unusual institutional position. By pronouncing equivalence in the very face of difference, metaphor performs an irrational discursive act that takes us to the nexus of textual, social, and ideological questions that have stirred such contentious debate in recent years over the function of English studies itself. As perhaps the most radical (yet also quotidian) means by which language negotiates difference, metaphor can help us to think about the politics of identification and the curricular movements such a politics has inspired.

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Editorials

Booknews

Imagines ways in which the three English teaching camps<--> composition, literature, and creative writing<-->can reconnect through a reconception of that most common figure of speech, the metaphor. Combines ideas from literary criticism, composition theory, student papers, and postmodern metafictions to suggest ways to transform the structure and purpose of the English department curriculum. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknew.com)

Book Details

Published
June 30, 1999
Publisher
Pittsburgh, Pa. : University of Pittsburgh Press, c1999.
Pages
224
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780822956921

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