New Perspectives on Academic Writing
The Thing That Wouldn’t Die
Professor Bernd Herzogenrath editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:27th Jun '24
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Critiques, explores and discusses alternatives to the ‘gold standard’ of academic writing
Particularly for the disciplines of the humanities and social sciences, for which writing is their lifeblood, the crisis in academic writing has become existential. It is not hard to diagnose the disease, and its causes. This book showcases what we desperately need: radical alternatives, experiments we can try out, ways of writing that don’t just tweak the system but plot a different course altogether. This isn’t just about finding new genres, for these only change the surface appearance without altering the underlying dynamic. Rather, the editor and contributors focus on finding new ways to join thinking both with writing and the things of which, and with which, we write. Each chapter brims with the kind of liveliness, outspokenness and urgency that their theme demands. Far from tiptoeing around the edifice of academia they are intent on stirring things up, reigniting their scholarship with a fuse of activism, in the hope of setting off an explosion that could send ripples throughout the academy.
Can academic writing ‘unwrite itself’? Redirect itself toward infusing ‘the Academy’ with forms of writing that aim to disrupt its usual forms of critique and communicative accessibility? This collection introduces a welter of unfamiliar forces into the wording of thought, strategies that inspire to seed a 'bomb' of differences. * jan jagodzinski, Professor of Visual Art and Media Education, University of Alberta, Canada *
This book aims to put the heat back in academic writing and unfreeze it from the rigour mortis it has suffered from for years. It is heart-warming to add this to my collection of books that will help free us from the tyrannies of dry, stale and crusty academic writing. * Mark Ingham, Reader in Critical and Nomadic Pedagogies, National Teaching Fellow and UAL Senior Teaching Scholar, University of the Arts London, UK *
ISBN: 9781350231603
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
216 pages