Strategic Disingenuousness: The WPA, the “Scribbling Women,” and the Problem of Expertise
Abstract
We in composition studies have countered the suspicion that what we do is “simplistic in method and impoverished in content” by insisting on our own disciplinary expertise, an insistence that has gained us administrative support and, arguably, better working conditions. Yet this article explores a problem that arose for the author as a result of her own insistence on disciplinary expertise: she had great difficulty recruiting faculty from other disciplines to teach first-year writing classes. This article suggests a solution to this problem, a strategic disingenuousness derived from the strategy developed by popular sentimental women authors of nineteenth-century America to counter the disciplinary expertise of professional male orators and rhetoricians, who looked down on the untrained speaker. The stance of strategic disingenuousness that this article advocates is more radical than the denial of expertise touted by recent scholarship in WAC and WID: it requires WPAs to withhold their expertise in the absence of any assurancethat the faculty they are training already have within themselves the knowledge they need to teach writing. An admittedly inefficient and often exasperating stance, it nonetheless represents a way for WPAs to entice faculty to teach writing and build a strong community with them.
- Journal
- College Composition and Communication
- Published
- 2015-06-01
- DOI
- 10.58680/ccc201527365
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- Open Access
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Citation Context
Cited by in this index (2)
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Accardi et al. (2024)Teaching English in the Two-Year College
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Serviss et al. (2019)College Composition and Communication
References (0)
No references on file for this article.
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