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Circulating Literacy
Alicia Brazeau
其他書名
Writing Instruction in American Periodicals, 1880-1910
出版
SIU Press
, 2016-11-09
主題
Language Arts & Disciplines / General
Language Arts & Disciplines / Writing / Authorship
Language Arts & Disciplines / Linguistics / Historical & Comparative
Language Arts & Disciplines / Literacy
Language Arts & Disciplines / Study & Teaching
Language Arts & Disciplines / Publishers & Publishing Industry
Literary Criticism / Books & Reading
Self-Help / General
Social Science / Women's Studies
ISBN
0809335441
9780809335442
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=vodkDQAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Near the dawn of the twentieth century, more than a million Americans had subscriptions to popular magazines, and many who did not subscribe read the periodicals. Far more men and women were learning advanced literacy through reading these magazines than by attending college. Yet this form of popular literacy has been relatively ignored by scholars, who have focused mainly on academic institutions and formal educational experiences. In
Circulating Literacy: Writing Instruction in American Periodicals, 1880–1910,
author Alicia Brazeau concentrates on the format, circulation, and function of popular and influential periodicals published between 1880 and 1910, including the farming magazines
Michigan Farmer
,
Ohio Farmer
, and
Maine Farmer
, which catered to rural residents, and two women’s magazines,
Harper’s Bazar
and the
Ladies’ Home Journal
, that catered to very different populations of women.
Brazeau establishes how these magazines shared a common strategy in the construction of literacy identities by connecting a specific identity with a particular set of reading and writing practices. She explores how farm journals were preoccupied with the value of literacy as a tool for shaping community; considers how the
Journal
and the
Bazar
deployed distinctly different illustrations of literacy values for women; shows how the
Journal
and editor Edward Bok cast women as consumers and sellers of literacy; and looks at the ways in which
Bazar
editors urged readers to adopt habits of reading and writing that emphasized communal relationships among women. In
Circulating Literacy,
Brazeau speaks to, and connects, the important topics of rural studies, gender, professionalization, and literacy sponsorship and identity, arguing for the value of the study of periodicals as literacy education tools.