Nick Tingle

7 articles
  1. Counterstatement: Autobiography in Composition Scholarship
    doi:10.2307/30044674
  2. OPINION:The Vexation of Class
    Abstract

    The author explores his vexation with David Bartholomae’s “Inventing the University” in terms of its assumptions about class. He suggests that it both negates his own experience as a member of the working class and of the pedagogy he employs as a teacher of writing with middle-class students, given its insistence on mimicry of a dominant discourse that involves a betrayal of self for both working-class and middle-class learners of academic discourse.

    doi:10.58680/ce20044069
  3. Opinion: The Vexation of Class
    Abstract

    m ecently reprinted in Cross-Talk in Comp Theory, David Bartholomae's the University is now a recognized classic in the field of composition theory. I admired the article, when I first read it over twenty years ago, as a telling criticism of writing as process. I also found it vexing, and still do. I use my vexation with Inventing as a catalyst for rumination on my social trajectory. My vexation is intimately related my passage from the working the middle class. I read Inventing as the negation both of my own educational experience as a member of the working class and of the pedagogy I employ as a teacher of writing with middle-class students. It is a tribute the power of Inventing, now seen as an early example of social constructionism, that I am not the only person more recently vexed by it. Thomas Newkirk and Nancy Welch are also. I use their particular responses Inventing as a way define my own. Newkirk points more my problem with the implications of Inventing for my view of education: making the move into university discourse is not simply a matter of inventing but also of uprooting. Welch points more my problem with Inventing as implying a narrative of academic socialization distinctly different from the socializing process I underwent. At the core of Inventing is Bartholomae's analysis of the function of the commonplace in student writing. He illustrates his claims through reference short student writings produced in response a prompt on creativity. One student writes, Creativity me, means being free express yourself in a way that is unique you (148). Bartholomae comments that with his use of to me the student appropriates a commonplace as his own. Further, this act of appropriation constitutes his as a writer (149). Bartholomae argues that one's authority as an academic

    doi:10.2307/4140719
  4. Nick Tingle Responds
    doi:10.2307/377008
  5. Comment & Response
    doi:10.58680/ce198113784
  6. Notes from the Ground down (Or Ground up): Insecurity, Anxiety, and the Teaching of Composition
    doi:10.2307/377119
  7. Notes from the Ground Down (or Ground Up): Insecurity Anxiety, and the Teaching of Composition
    doi:10.58680/ce198113796