2022
DOI: 10.1177/07410883221133290
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Humanistic Knowledge-Making and the Rhetoric of Literary Criticism: Special Topoi Meet Rhetorical Action

Abstract: This article examines the power of special topoi to characterize the discourse of literary criticism, and through emphasis on rhetorical action, it sheds light on the limitations of topos analysis for characterizing research articles in disciplinary discourse more generally. Using an analytical approach drawn both from studies of topoi in disciplinary discourse and rhetorical genre theory, I examine a representative corpus of 21st-century literary research articles. I find that while most of the special topoi … Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Or perhaps, to the contrary, University of Alberta’s customizable degree signals faculty members’ deliberately decanonizing conviction that the field of English studies is, in contemporary professional practice, precisely an undefined territory. While we acknowledge the attractions (and the philosophical point) of an undefined degree, we would point to evidence that English studies is defined, in professional practice, by patterns of argument (Fahnestock and Secor, 1991; Wilder, 2012), methods and motivations (Banting, 2023; Linkon, 2011; Thieme, 2017), and threshold concepts (Corrigan, 2019) that structure not only what professors do in their research but how they expect students to perform (Wilder, 2012). There is structure to English studies, even in the absence of a canon.…”
Section: Decanonizing By Re-imagining the Traditional Degreementioning
confidence: 94%
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“…Or perhaps, to the contrary, University of Alberta’s customizable degree signals faculty members’ deliberately decanonizing conviction that the field of English studies is, in contemporary professional practice, precisely an undefined territory. While we acknowledge the attractions (and the philosophical point) of an undefined degree, we would point to evidence that English studies is defined, in professional practice, by patterns of argument (Fahnestock and Secor, 1991; Wilder, 2012), methods and motivations (Banting, 2023; Linkon, 2011; Thieme, 2017), and threshold concepts (Corrigan, 2019) that structure not only what professors do in their research but how they expect students to perform (Wilder, 2012). There is structure to English studies, even in the absence of a canon.…”
Section: Decanonizing By Re-imagining the Traditional Degreementioning
confidence: 94%
“…Removing all requirements implies that any one course may stand in for the whole learning experience expected of an English Major—or at least that, having taken any handful of eighteen or twenty English courses, one is sure to have experienced the gamut. This metonymic relationship of the course to the degree may in fact reflect current pedagogical practice, to the extent that we frequently expect similar performances of first-year students as of fourth-year students (the same sorts of essays, just shorter); or that feminist critiques, for example, have purchase in relation to any set of assigned readings; or that the governing assumptions and threshold concepts of literary studies (Banting, 2023; Corrigan, 2019; Heinert and Chick, 2017; Linkon, 2011; Wilder, 2012) are latent but typically unexpressed in every course (see also Banting, 2014). What a canonized structure did for the English degree was assert that there was a substantial body of material to be covered and that department experts agreed on it to some imagined extent.…”
Section: Toward a Deeply Decanonized Degreementioning
confidence: 99%