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Writing Spaces and Places: A GeoEthn...
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Lesh, Charles Notto.
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Writing Spaces and Places: A GeoEthnography of Graffiti Writing in Boston.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Writing Spaces and Places: A GeoEthnography of Graffiti Writing in Boston./
作者:
Lesh, Charles Notto.
出版者:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2016,
面頁冊數:
266 p.
附註:
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 77-09(E), Section: A.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International77-09A(E).
標題:
Rhetoric. -
電子資源:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=10102558
ISBN:
9781339662619
Writing Spaces and Places: A GeoEthnography of Graffiti Writing in Boston.
Lesh, Charles Notto.
Writing Spaces and Places: A GeoEthnography of Graffiti Writing in Boston.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2016 - 266 p.
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 77-09(E), Section: A.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Northeastern University, 2016.
As its central and motivating claim, this dissertation argues that writing makes space. Through an ethnographic examination of graffiti writing in Boston and the various social spaces it produces---the blackbook, the city, and the train---my work here is intended to alert scholars of writing and rhetoric to the ways in which rhetorical activity not only exists in space, requires space, and negotiates space, but also makes spaces that promote, facilitate, and limit particular assemblages of social relations. While previous work in rhetoric and composition has persuasively argued that space informs, shapes, and produces (the conditions for) writing, I argue in this dissertation that writing informs, shapes, and produces space. I contend that graffiti writing provides an instructive example of the ways in which communities of writers use resources available to them to alter their spatial realities and challenge larger spatial processes. Through close ethnographic work with graffiti writers, I demonstrate how communities of writers---particularly those with limited spaces for rhetorical work---must think in terms of spatial production as well as spatial impact and negotiation. Graffiti writing provides a rich example of this rhetorical spatial production: a community of writers working to produce alternative spatial experiences within spaces and places designed to erase, marginalize, or eradicate their textual engagements.
ISBN: 9781339662619Subjects--Topical Terms:
516647
Rhetoric.
Writing Spaces and Places: A GeoEthnography of Graffiti Writing in Boston.
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As its central and motivating claim, this dissertation argues that writing makes space. Through an ethnographic examination of graffiti writing in Boston and the various social spaces it produces---the blackbook, the city, and the train---my work here is intended to alert scholars of writing and rhetoric to the ways in which rhetorical activity not only exists in space, requires space, and negotiates space, but also makes spaces that promote, facilitate, and limit particular assemblages of social relations. While previous work in rhetoric and composition has persuasively argued that space informs, shapes, and produces (the conditions for) writing, I argue in this dissertation that writing informs, shapes, and produces space. I contend that graffiti writing provides an instructive example of the ways in which communities of writers use resources available to them to alter their spatial realities and challenge larger spatial processes. Through close ethnographic work with graffiti writers, I demonstrate how communities of writers---particularly those with limited spaces for rhetorical work---must think in terms of spatial production as well as spatial impact and negotiation. Graffiti writing provides a rich example of this rhetorical spatial production: a community of writers working to produce alternative spatial experiences within spaces and places designed to erase, marginalize, or eradicate their textual engagements.
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While my work here deals directly with graffiti writing in Boston, I believe that my emphasis on the spatial production of writing has implications for a range of conversations in the field, apart from its more obvious connections to work on space and place. In each chapter, I work through how this orientation towards the study of writing challenges and supplements disciplinary thinking on a range of topics that, while ostensibly discrete, are brought into contact through an examination of their connections to spatially productive writing. In an attempt to think through the rhetorical work of graffiti writing in Boston, I pull from, and intervene in, a range of disciplinary conversations, including ethnography and methodology (Chapter 1), Rhetorical Genre Studies (Chapter 2), publics and public writing (Chapter 3), and circulation and mobility (Chapter 4). The glue that holds these varied interventions together is a new approach to the study of writing that requires an examination of texts and the social spaces they produce, and how this refigured relationship to writing reorients the ways we examine publics, the texts they circulate, and the channels of textual circulation they employ. Graffiti writing challenges boundaries; indeed, its rhetorical efficacy is tied up in its ability to appear where it should not. In this way, this dissertation mimics this rhetorical expansiveness, with graffiti writing popping up in unexpected and, perhaps, inhospitable places.
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