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  • The Political Turn: Writing “Democracy” for the 21st Century

This workshop extends a conversation about the 1930s Federal Writers’ Project begun in 2011 and continued at CCCC 2012 to focus specifically on defining what we mean by the term “democracy.”

Over the past fifty years, we have seen a “linguistic turn,” a “social turn,” and a “public turn.” In this moment of mounting, worldwide economic, environmental, and cultural uncertainty, we submit that it is time for a “political turn.” Despite some indications of a slow recovery from the crash in 2008, the U.S. continues to face mounting household and student debt, foreclosures, and long-term unemployment. The richest 1% own a third of the nation’s net worth; income of the 24 million least wealthy Americans decreased by 10% in 2010; and one in every 7 Americans lives below the poverty line (Guardian 11/16/11). It is this gross economic inequality that gave rise to the Occupy Wall Street movement in September 2011 and its powerful slogan, “We are the 99%.” In the environmental arena, we have born witness to the effects of climate change and the persistence of unscientific political discourse about it; the threat of nuclear disasters like the explosion at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Plant in March 2011; and the impact of market-driven energy policies and procedures like hydro-fracking. And on the cultural front, we live in a period most acutely marked perhaps by the fact that incarcerated people in the U.S. represent 25% of the world’s prisoners and of those 70% are nonwhite. According to Michelle Alexander, author of The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness, “more African Americans [are] under correctional control today—in prison or jail, on probation or parole—than were enslaved in 1850, a decade before the Civil War began.”

At CCCC 2012, we held a workshop on the relevance of the 1930s Federal Writers’ Project to contemporary college writing programs, service-learning programs, and scholars across the country engaged in university-community partnerships. We continued earlier explorations begun at the 2011 Writing Democracy conference at Texas A&M-Commerce to explore how together these programs might create a roadmap for rediscovering 21st century America with FWP 2.0, using some of the same tools of ethnography, state or local guides, oral history, and folklore used by the federal writers during the Great Depression. Among the contributions at the CCCC 2012 workshop were Jeff Grabill’s commentary on the relevance of John Dewey’s The Public and Its Problems to thinking through the rhetorical appeal that gives rise to a public and Steven Parks’ discussion of the publicly funded Federation of Worker Writers and Community Publishers, a nonprofit organization begun in 1976 in England whose aim is “to increase access to writing and publishing, especially for those who may sometimes find it difficult to be heard in our society.” Historian Jerrold Hirsch, author of Portrait of America: A Cultural History of the Federal Writers’ Project, provided a historical context for the discussion. Kathi Blake Yancey described the Center for Everyday Writing at The Florida State University and Laurie Grobman [End Page 134] discussed her student research projects in Latino, African American, and Jewish communities, all leading to the publication of books.

The proposed 2013 workshop emerges directly from conversations in St. Louis about the FWP as a historical and cultural model. For as productive as those conversations were, they also sparked new areas of concern. It became clear that deeper conversations of what we mean by the term “democracy” and how such a project could go beyond merely linking community-based writing and other university-community partnerships needed to occur. We needed to identify comparable subjects for a reprise in 2012 of the federal writers’ invitation to people whose voices had not been heard in the 1930s—Native Americans, the last generation of ex-slaves, immigrants, and workers—to tell their stories. For this workshop, then, we intend to build an agenda that might begin to serve as today’s equivalent of the FWP’s commitment to democracy, pluralism, and inclusiveness.

The primary goal of the proposed CCCC Workshop, then...

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