W. ROSS WINTEROWD

50 articles
  1. 2010 CCCC Exemplar Award Acceptance Speech
    Abstract

    The Exemplar Award is presented to a person who has served or serves as an exemplar of our organization, representing the highest ideals of scholarship, teaching, and service to the entire profession. This is a written version of the acceptance speech W. Ross Winterowd gave at the CCCC meeting in Louisville on March 18, 2010. We’re sorry to report that Winterowd died on January 21, 2011.

    doi:10.58680/ccc201113458
  2. Writing Theorists Writing: Life Studies
    doi:10.1207/s15327981rr2202_5
  3. The English Department: A Personal and Institutional History
    Abstract

    To understand the history of English, Ross Winterowd insists, one must understand how literary studies, composition-rhetoric studies, influential textbooks interrelate. Stressing the interrelationship among these three forces, Winterowd presents a history of English studies in the university since the Enlightenment.Winterowd s history is unique in three ways. First, it tells the whole story of English studies: it does not separate the history of literary studies from that of composition-rhetoric studies, nor can it if it is going to be an authentic history. Second, it traces the massive influence on English studies exerted by textbooks such as Adventures in Literature, Understanding Poetry, English in Action, and the Harbrace College Handbook. Finally, Winterowd himself is very much a part of the story, a partisan with more than forty years of service to the discipline, not simply a disinterested scholar searching for the truth.After demonstrating that literary studies literary scholars are products of Romantic epistemology values, Winterowd further invites controversy by reinterpreting the Romantic legacy inherited by English departments. His reinterpretation of major literary figures theory, too, invites discussion, possibly argument. And by directly contradicting current histories of composition-rhetoric that allow for no points of contact with literature, Winterowd intensifies the argument by explaining the development of composition-rhetoric from the standpoint of literature literary theory.

    doi:10.2307/358981
  4. A Teacher's Introduction to Composition and the Rhetorical Tradition
    doi:10.2307/358618
  5. Composition in Context: Essays in Honor of Donald C. Stewart
    Abstract

    This collection of sixteen essays, authored by major scholars in the field of composition and rhetoric, offers an eclectic range of opinions, perspectives, and interpretations regarding the place of composition studies in its academic context. Covering the history of rhetoric and composition from the nineteenth century to the present, the collection focuses on the institutional and intellectual framework of the discipline while honoring Donald C. Stewart, a man who addressed the central paradox of the field: its homelessness as a discipline in an academic community that prides itself on specialization.Over the past two decades composition grounded in rhetorical tradition has emerged as a foundation for liberal and professional studies. These essays, furthering the often disputed point that composition is indeed a discipline, are divided into three parts that examine three crucial questions: What is the history of composition s context? How does composition function within its context? How should we interpret or reinterpret this context?In the first part, the essayists investigate the history of composition teaching, noting the formative influences of the eighteenth-century Scottish rhetoricians in the development of the American tradition as well as the effect of composition on education in general. The essayists question the public perception of rhetoric as the art of flimflam and examine the rise of expressive writing at the expense of argumentation and persuasion.In part 2, the contributors make clear that composition is a discipline in the process of defining itself. They explore the role composition plays in universities and the ways in which it seeks focus and purpose, as well as formal justification for its existence.In the last section, the authors scan the very edge of the field of composition and rhetoric, from examinations of the nature of the composing imagination and of the question of dialogue as communication to feminist theoretical approaches that attempt to bridge the differences between the New Romantics and New Rhetoricians composing models. The essays are enhanced by the coeditors witty and perceptive introduction and by Vincent Gillespie s tribute to Donald Stewart.

    doi:10.2307/358448
  6. I. A. Richards, literary theory, and romantic composition
    doi:10.1080/07350199209388987
  7. Richards on Rhetoric
    doi:10.2307/357368
  8. A philosophy of composition<sup>1</sup>
    doi:10.1080/07350199109388938
  9. Literacy and Teaching: In Search of a "Language of Possibility"
    doi:10.2307/378204
  10. The Culture and Politics of Literacy
    doi:10.2307/357887
  11. Reading (and rehabilitating) the literature of fact
    doi:10.1080/07350198909388877
  12. Composition Textbooks: Publisher-Author Relationships
    Abstract

    Preview this article: Composition Textbooks: Publisher-Author Relationships, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/ccc/40/2/collegecompositionandcommunication11129-1.gif

    doi:10.58680/ccc198911129
  13. A letter
    doi:10.1080/07350198809388851
  14. Review essays
    Abstract

    Winifred Bryan Homer, Rhetoric in the Classical Tradition. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1988. xvii + 462 pages. Ira Shor, ed., Freire for the Classroom: A Sourcebook for Liberatory Teaching. Portsmouth, NH: Boynton/Cook, Heinemann, 1987. Afterword by Paulo Freire. 237 pages. Erika Lindemann, Longman Bibliography of Composition and Rhetoric: 1984–1985. Longman, 1987. xviii + 318 pages. Longman Bibliography of Composition and Rhetoric: 1986. Longman, 1988. xv + 249 pages. Richard M. Coe, Toward a Grammar of Passages. CCCC Studies in Writing and Rhetoric. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1988. 123 pages.

    doi:10.1080/07350198809388850
  15. Wordstar: The Sweet-Voiced Singer, in His Guise as a Vitalist, Courts the Muse on a Friday Afternoon
    doi:10.2307/357816
  16. Comment and Response
    Abstract

    Preview this article: Comment and Response, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/ce/50/1/collegeenglish11431-1.gif

    doi:10.58680/ce198811431
  17. W. Ross Winterowd Responds
    doi:10.2307/377605
  18. Composition/Rhetoric: A Synthesis
    doi:10.2307/357729
  19. The Purification of Literature and Rhetoric
    Abstract

    Preview this article: The Purification of Literature and Rhetoric, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/ce/49/3/collegeenglish11484-1.gif

    doi:10.58680/ce198711484
  20. Viewpoints: Dramatism and the Composing Process
    Abstract

    Preview this article: Viewpoints: Dramatism and the Composing Process, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/20/3/researchintheteachingofenglish15609-1.gif

    doi:10.58680/rte198615609
  21. With George and Mary
    doi:10.1080/07350198509359106
  22. The Politics of Meaning
    Abstract

    The social sciences and humanities bring different attitudes and methods to the problem of meaning. From the “scientismic” point of view, meaning is quantifiable and is largely what Tulving called “verbal” knowledge. The scientismic view, however, is flawed in three ways: its failure to account adequately for “episodic” knowledge, to view language as an event, and to understand modes. The literarist view of meaning is equally flawed. However, the scientismists have most of the political power; hence, the literarists are losing the battle for their set of values and their versions of literacy. A realignment of literary studies under the aegis of rhetoric is necessary.

    doi:10.1177/0741088385002003003
  23. Kenneth Burke: An annotated glossary of his terministic screen and a “statistical” survey of his major concepts
    doi:10.1080/02773948509390731
  24. Response to Gary Sloan, "Transitions: Relationships among T-Units"
    doi:10.2307/357612
  25. The deep structure of desire
    doi:10.1080/07350198509359091
  26. W. Ross Winterowd Responds
    doi:10.2307/376800
  27. Comment and Response
    doi:10.58680/ce198413353
  28. A Comment on Bruce T. Petersen's "Writing about Responses"
    doi:10.2307/377041
  29. Comment and Response
    doi:10.58680/ce198413380
  30. Dramatism in Themes and Poems
    doi:10.58680/ce198313613
  31. Black holes, indeterminacy, and Paulo Freire
    doi:10.1080/07350198309359053
  32. Prolegomenon to Pedagogical Stylistics
    doi:10.58680/ccc198315298
  33. The Rhetorical Transaction of Reading
    doi:10.58680/ccc197616590
  34. The Contemporary Writer: A Practical Rhetoric
    doi:10.2307/356160
  35. Contemporary Rhetoric: A Conceptual Background with Readings
    doi:10.2307/356171
  36. Comment for David Bleich
    doi:10.2307/375939
  37. Comment &amp; Response
    doi:10.58680/ce197616703
  38. Modern Dogma and the Rhetoric of Assent
    doi:10.2307/356817
  39. Reply to Robert J. Di Pietro
    doi:10.2307/374880
  40. The English Department and the Ideal Culture
    doi:10.58680/ce197417401
  41. “Topics” and Levels in the Composing Process
    doi:10.58680/ce197317783
  42. "Topics" and Levels in the Composing Process
    doi:10.2307/375337
  43. The Realms of Meaning: Text-Centered Criticism
    doi:10.58680/ccc197218170
  44. Language Is Sermonic
    doi:10.2307/356234
  45. Dispositio: The Concept of Form in Discourse
    doi:10.58680/ccc197119173
  46. Dispositio: The Concept of Form in Discourse
    doi:10.2307/356527
  47. The Grammar of Coherence
    doi:10.58680/ce197019270
  48. Rhetoric: A Synthesis
    doi:10.2307/354121
  49. Classical Rhetoric for the Modern Student
    doi:10.2307/354677
  50. Rhetoric and Writing
    doi:10.2307/355211