ABSTRACT

This book argues that contemporary neuroscience compliments, extends, and challenges recent and influential posthuman and new materialist accounts of the relations between rhetoric, affect, and writing pedagogy. Drawing on cutting-edge neuro-philosophy, Comstock re-thinks both historical and current relations between writing and power around questions of affect, attention, and plasticity. In considering the uses and limits of exciting new findings from the neurobiology, this volume both theorizes and offers pedagogical strategies for teaching writing in a digital age characterized by the erosion of wonder and pervasive disaffection. Ultimately, in response to recent critiques transcendental reason and subjectivity, and related calls for the increased inclusion of multi-modal and digital writing and rhetoric, Comstock argues for an embodied pedagogy that values the substantial relations between writing and pedagogical care.

chapter

Introduction

chapter 1|40 pages

Neuroscience and Neuroideology

Plasticity, Flexibility, and the Emotional Architecture of Experience

chapter 2|26 pages

Composition’s Correlationalisms

Objects of Wonder

chapter 3|37 pages

To Care or Not to Care

The Supposed Indestructability of Wonder

chapter 4|23 pages

Writing Pedagogy and the Crises of Attention

From Distraction to Disaffection