Conceptualizing Dialogic Literary Argumentation: Inviting Students to Take a Turn in Important Conversations

IF 1.9 1区 文学 Q2 COMMUNICATION
Jennifer VanDerHeide, George E. Newell, A. Olsen
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Although authors often create literary texts in order to comment on issues of personhood and human relationships, reading and writing about literary texts in schools is often focused on close analysis of literary elements or exploration of one’s own experience with the text. Thus, students’ written arguments about literature typically do little work in the world toward understanding the human condition. In response, we argue for a theoretical and instructional framework of reading and writing about literature called Dialogic Literary Argumentation. Dialogic literary argumentation asks students and teachers to engage in reading, dialogue, and argumentative writing about how they and others make meaning out of literary texts, what the meaning says about what it means to be human together, and how we might act in and on the worlds in which we live. In this article, we explicate the various elements of this theoretical framework that situates the student’s literary argument within their own cognitive processes, social interactions in classroom events, and broader sociocultural contexts. Students’ composed arguments draw on multiple texts (the literary text, others in and beyond the classroom, their own experiences, the literary discipline, and the world), which are mediated by various classroom dialogues, scaffolds, and supports.
对话文学论证的概念化:邀请学生在重要对话中轮流发言
尽管作者经常创作文学文本来评论人格和人际关系问题,但在学校里阅读和写作文学文本往往侧重于对文学元素的仔细分析或探索自己对文本的体验。因此,学生们关于文学的书面论点在理解人类状况方面通常收效甚微。作为回应,我们主张建立一个关于文学阅读和写作的理论和教学框架,称为对话文学论证。对话式文学论证要求学生和教师参与阅读、对话和议论文写作,讲述他们和其他人如何从文学文本中获得意义,意义说明了作为一个人在一起意味着什么,以及我们如何在我们生活的世界中行动。在这篇文章中,我们解释了这个理论框架的各种元素,这些元素将学生的文学论点置于他们自己的认知过程、课堂事件中的社会互动和更广泛的社会文化背景中。学生的综合论点借鉴了多个文本(文学文本、课堂内外的其他人、他们自己的经历、文学学科和世界),这些文本通过各种课堂对话、支架和支持进行调解。
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来源期刊
Written Communication
Written Communication COMMUNICATION-
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
15.80%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: Written Communication is an international multidisciplinary journal that publishes theory and research in writing from fields including anthropology, English, education, history, journalism, linguistics, psychology, and rhetoric. Among topics of interest are the nature of writing ability; the assessment of writing; the impact of technology on writing (and the impact of writing on technology); the social and political consequences of writing and writing instruction; nonacademic writing; literacy (including workplace and emergent literacy and the effects of classroom processes on literacy development); the social construction of knowledge; the nature of writing in disciplinary and professional domains.
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