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In Political Literacy in Composition and Rhetoric, Donald Lazere calls for revival of NCTE resolutions in the 1970s for teaching the “critical reading, listening, viewing, and thinking skills necessary to enable students to cope with the persuasive techniques in political statements, advertising, entertainment, and news,” and explores the reasons these goals have been eclipsed in composition studies over recent decades.  Obstacles to those goals have included the emphasis in the profession on basic and first year writing at the expense of more advanced study in argumentative rhetoric, and on the privileging of students’ personal writing over critical study of both academic and political discourse.  Lazere further argues that theorists who legitimately champion students’ pluralistic local communities sometimes fail to recognize that liberal education can enable students to grow beyond their home cultures to critical awareness of national and international politics. Finally, he argues that the fixation in recent composition studies on liberally-inclined students and communities “on the margins” has eclipsed attention to the conservative conformity long prevalent in mainstream American society and education. His proposals for curriculum and pedagogy seek to introduce students to a more highly-informed, cogent, and open-ended level of debate between the political left and right.

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Title Page, Copyright
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  1. Contents
  2. pp. v-vi
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  1. Acknowledgments
  2. pp. vii-viii
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  1. Part 1: The View from Middle America
  1. 1. Marginality as the New Orthodoxy
  2. pp. 3-24
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  1. 2. My Teaching Story
  2. pp. 25-45
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  1. 3. Critical Thinking for Political Literacy
  2. pp. 46-64
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  1. Part 2: The Excesses of Postmodern Pluralism
  1. 4. What Ever Happened to Critical Thinking?
  2. pp. 67-89
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  1. 5. Degrees of Separation from Academic Discourse
  2. pp. 90-109
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  1. 6. Down with “Clear, Logical Prose”? Ceding Reason to Conservatives
  2. pp. 110-128
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  1. 7. Bartholomae and Petrosky’s Depoliticized Ways of Reading
  2. pp. 129-151
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  1. 8. Acting Locally, Thinking Locally: The Shrinking of the Public Sphere
  2. pp. 152-165
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  1. 9. The Resistance to National Standards: Common Core State Standards as the Perfect Storm
  2. pp. 166-182
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  1. Part 3: Psychological and Sociological Perspectives: Agenda for a Revival
  1. 10. Why Does All This Still Matter?
  2. pp. 185-194
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  1. 11. Orality, Literacy, and Political Consciousness
  2. pp. 195-215
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  1. 12. Sociolinguistics, Political Socialization, and Mass Culture
  2. pp. 216-241
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  1. 13. Shifting Critical Perspectives on Language and Class
  2. pp. 242-266
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  1. Conclusion: Theorizing the Lower Middle Class, and Pedagogy of Those Who Support the Oppressor
  2. pp. 267-286
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  1. Epilogue: A Core Curriculum for Civic Literacy
  2. pp. 287-292
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  1. Notes
  2. pp. 293-298
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  1. Works Cited
  2. pp. 299-316
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  1. Index
  2. pp. 317-332
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  1. About the Author, Blurbs, Back Cover
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