ABSTRACT

In What Writing Does and How It Does It, editors Charles Bazerman and Paul Prior offer a sophisticated introduction to methods for understanding, studying, and analyzing texts and writing practices. This volume addresses a variety of approaches to analyzing texts, and considers the processes of writing, exploring textual practices and their contexts, and examining what texts do and how texts mean rather than what they mean. Included are traditional modes of analysis (rhetorical, literary, linguistic), as well as newer modes, such as text and talk, genre and activity analysis, and intertextual analysis.

The chapters have been developed to provide answers to a specified set of questions, with each one offering:
*a preview of the chapter's content and purpose;
*an introduction to basic concepts, referring to key theoretical and research studies in the area;
*details on the types of data and questions for which the analysis is best used;
*examples from a wide-ranging group of texts, including educational materials, student writing, published literature, and online and electronic media;
*one or more applied analyses, with a clear statement of procedures for analysis and illustrations of a particular sample of data; and
*a brief summary, suggestions for additional readings, and a set of activities.

The side-by-side comparison of methods allows the reader to see the multi-dimensionality of writing, facilitating selection of the best method for a particular research question.

The volume contributors are experts from linguistics, communication studies, rhetoric, literary analysis, document design, sociolinguistics, education, ethnography, and cultural psychology, and each utilizes a specific mode of text analysis. With its broad range of methodological examples, What Writing Does and How It Does It is a unique and invaluable resource for advanced undergraduate and graduate students and for researchers in education, composition, ESL and applied linguistics, communication, L1 and L2 learning, print media, and electronic media. It will also be useful in all social sciences and humanities that place importance on texts and textual practices, such as English, writing, and rhetoric.

chapter |10 pages

PART I: ANALYZING TEXTS 1

part |2 pages

PART I: ANALYZING TEXTS

chapter 1|20 pages

Content Analysis: What Texts Talk About

ByThomas Huckin

chapter 2|24 pages

Poetics and Narrativity: How Texts Tell Stories

ByPhilip Eubanks

chapter 3|26 pages

Linguistic Discourse Analysis: How the Language in Texts Works

ByEllen Barton

chapter 4|14 pages

Intertextuality: How Texts Rely on Other Texts

ByCharles Bazerman

part |2 pages

PART II: ANALYZING TEXTUAL PRACTICES

chapter 7|34 pages

Tracing Process: How Texts Come Into Being

ByPaul Prior

chapter 8|38 pages

Speaking and Writing: How Talk and Text Interact in Situated Practices

ByKevin Leander, Paul Prior

chapter 9|40 pages

Children’s Writing: How Textual Forms, Contextual Forces, and Textual Politics Co-Emerge

ByGeorge Kamberelis and Lenora de la Luna

chapter 10|30 pages

Rhetorical Analysis: Understanding How Texts Persuade Readers

ByJack Selzer