Abstract

In this essay, the authors describe a collaborative, community-engaged graduate seminar in which students and incarcerated writers worked together to write promotional brochures for WordsUncaged, a prison writing program. Drawing on reflective writing from graduate students and incarcerated writers, the authors apply a hospitality framework to articulate participants’ learning and growth. The public nature of the writing task grounded the experience in tangible results, and the circulation of the brochures beyond the classroom led to specific rhetorical growth as participants worked towards a common purpose. The collaborative nature of this learning process also led to different interpretations of voice and language representing individual and collective experiences. This collaboration resulted in a reciprocal humanization for students and incarcerated writers, as students’ rhetorical decisions emphasized their incarcerated partner’s humanity and, simultaneously, the incarcerated writers felt recognized as human beings. While acknowledging the constraints and limitations of this sort of community engagement, the authors argue that the collaborative and public facets of this experience were central to creating meaningful growth for all participants; indeed, the different ways in which graduate students and incarcerated writers experienced this growth reflect the complex realities of the partnership itself.

Journal
Reflections: A Journal of Community-Engaged Writing and Rhetoric
Published
2019-04-01
DOI
10.59236/rjv19i1pp134-164
CompPile
Search in CompPile ↗
Open Access
OA PDF Gold
Topics
Export

Citation Context

Cited by in this index (0)

No articles in this index cite this work.

References (12) · 1 in this index

  1. What is Higher Education in Prison? Introduction to Radical Departures: Ruminations on th…
    Critical Education
  2. Writing Partnerships: Service-Learning in Composition
  3. Challenging the Prison-industrial Complex: Activism, Arts, and Educational Alternatives
  4. Hospitality and Authoring: An Essay for the English Profession
  5. Prison Pedagogies: Learning and Teaching with Imprisoned Writers
Show all 12 →
  1. Writing Together: Collaboration in Theory and Practice
  2. Tactics of Hope: The Public Turn in English Composition
  3. College Composition and Communication
  4. Writing Groups inside and outside the Classroom
  5. Writing Communities
  6. A Question of Mimetics: Graduate-Student Writing Courses and the New "Basic
  7. Rhetoric of Respect: Recognizing Change at a Community Writing Center