“…In my concluding remarks at SSLW2013 (Matsuda, 2013), I responded to Pecorari's (2013) donut hole metaphor by saying that the hole is what makes a donut a donut; without a hole, it would just be a fried dough, overcooked on the outside or undercooked on the inside. It's the hole that gives a donut a distinct identity.…”
In this short coda to the special issue, Paul Kei Matsuda connects some of his previous work on the disciplinarity of second language writing to issues raised in this issue about the place of L2 writing in Canada and beyond.
“…In my concluding remarks at SSLW2013 (Matsuda, 2013), I responded to Pecorari's (2013) donut hole metaphor by saying that the hole is what makes a donut a donut; without a hole, it would just be a fried dough, overcooked on the outside or undercooked on the inside. It's the hole that gives a donut a distinct identity.…”
In this short coda to the special issue, Paul Kei Matsuda connects some of his previous work on the disciplinarity of second language writing to issues raised in this issue about the place of L2 writing in Canada and beyond.
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