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E-raamat: Writing for Scholarly Publication: Behind the Scenes in Language Education

  • Formaat: 312 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Oct-2003
  • Kirjastus: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9781135633936
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: 312 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Oct-2003
  • Kirjastus: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9781135633936

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This collection of first-person essays by established authors provides a wealth of support and insights for new and experienced academic writers in language education and multicultural studies. Although writing for publication is becoming increasingly important as these fields become both more professional and more competitive, few scholars talk candidly about their experiences negotiating a piece of writing into print. These essays will help researchers, practitioners, and graduate students expand their understanding of what it means--professionally and personally--to write for publication.

Carefully crafted, focused, and provocative, the chapters in this volume document authors' experiences with a range of practical, political, and personal issues in writing for publication. Many portray the hardship and struggle that are not obvious in a finished piece of writing. Readers are encouraged to resonate with the events and issues portrayed, and to connect the narratives to their own lives. Practical information, such as contact information for journal and book publishers, manuscript guidelines, and useful books are included in appendices.

Although organized thematically, the essays in Writing for Scholarly Publication: Behind the Scenes in Language Education overlap in many ways as each author considers multiple issues: *In the Introduction, the editors discuss key aspects of writing for scholarly publication, such as writing as situated practice, issues faced by newcomers, the construction of personal identity through writing, writing and transparency, facets of the interactive nature of scholarly writing, and intertwined political issues. *Part I focuses on issues and concerns faced by "Newcomers." *In Part II, "Negotiating and Interacting," the essays closely examine the interactions among authors, editors, manuscript reviewers, and collaborators; these interactions tend to be the least often discussed and these essays therefore offer readers fascinating insights into the sensitive social, political, and personal relationships among the many players in the scholarly writing game. *"Identity Construction" is addressed in Part III, where authors share their experiences with and reflections on the ways that professional writing helps them construct their identities as writers and scholars. *The essays in Part IV, "From the Periphery," help redefine what the notion of "periphery" might mean, from a concept with a negative connotation of "outsider" to a positive connotation of active and unconventional participant.
Preface xi
Acknowledgments xvii
1. Introduction: Issues in Writing for Publication
1(16)
Christine Pearson Casanave and Stephanie Vandrick
PART I: NEWCOMERS
2. Demystifying Publishing: A Collaborative Exchange Between Graduate student and Supervisor
17(22)
Ena Lee and Bonny Norton
3. Coming to Voice: Publishing as a Graduate Student
39(14)
Paul Kei Matsuda
4. On Beginning to Write at 40
53(8)
Stephanie Vandrick
5. Striving for Original Voice in Publication?: A Critical Reflection
61(12)
Ryuko Kubota
PART II: NEGOTIATING AND INTERACTING
6. Negotiating the Gatekeepers: The Journey of an Academic Article
73(18)
George Braine
7. Reflections on Being a Gatekeeper
91(12)
Sandra Lee McKay
8. Tangled Webs: Complexities of Professional Writing
103(10)
Ilona Leki
9. Reflections on Coauthorship and the Professional Dialogue: Risks and Rewards
113(18)
John Hedgcock
PART III: IDENTITY CONSTRUCTION
10. Narrative Braiding: Constructing a Multistrand Portrayal of self as Writer
131(16)
Christine Pearson Casanave
11. Narrating One's Self: Public-Personal Dichotomies and a (Public) Writing Life
147(12)
Linda Lonon Blanton
12. Writing for Publication/Writing for Public Execution: On the (Personally) Vexing Notion of (Personal) Voice
159(18)
Dwight Atkinson
13. The Privilege of Writing as an Immigrant Woman
177(20)
Aneta Pavlenko
PART IV: FROM THE PERIPHERY
14. A Somewhat Legitimate and Very Peripheral Participation
197(14)
A. Suresh Canagarajah
15. A Scholar on the Periphery: Standing Firm, Walking Slowly
211(12)
Miyuki Sasaki
16. Writing Across the Theory-Practice Divide: A Longitudinal Confession
223(14)
Brian Morgan
17. Crossing Over: Writing a Life in Two Genres
237(8)
Martha Clark Cummings
Author Biostatements
245(16)
APPENDIXES
A. Summary of Basic Steps in Journal Article and Book Publishing
261(2)
B. Sample Book Proposal Guidelines
263(4)
C. Sample Journal Article Guidelines
267(10)
D. Journal and Book Publisher Contact Information
277(4)
E. Selected Resources on Writing and Publishing
281(2)
Author Index
283(4)
Subject Index
287