Cross-Border Networks in Writing Studies
By Derek Mueller and Andrea Williams
()
About this ebook
Derek Mueller
Jennifer Clary-Lemon is Associate Professor in Rhetoric, Writing, and Communications at the University of Winnipeg. Andrea Abernethy Lunsford is the Louise Hewlett Nixon Professor of English, Emerita, at Stanford University. Derek Mueller is Associate Professor of Written Communication and Director of the First-year Writing Program at Eastern Michigan University. Louise Wetherbee Phelps is Adjunct Professor of Rhetoric and Writing at Old Dominion University and Emeritus Professor of Writing and Rhetoric at Syracuse University. Andrea Williams is Associate Professor of Writing Instruction in the Faculty of Arts & Science at the University of Toronto.
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Cross-Border Networks in Writing Studies - Derek Mueller
Acknowledgments
This book is a collaborative work beyond having four co-authors. Surveys and interviews generated much of our data, so we would like to thank the many people who completed the surveys and participated in the interviews. The following scholars generously shared their time, stories, and insights in interviews: Natasha Artemeva, Doug Brent, Rick Coe, Jay Dolmage, Aviva Freedman, Roger Graves, Dale Jacobs, Lorelei Lingard, Anthony Paré, Margaret Procter, Dan Richards, Cathy Schryer, Ron Sheese, and Graham Smart. We thank Aviva Freedman, Jim Reither, Sharon Hamilton, and Cathy Schryer for graciously providing biographical materials and responding to questions. We also appreciate Ian Pringle’s and Janice Lauer’s help with research: Ian searched his garage for conference materials and shared memories of his collaborations with Aviva Freedman, while Janice provided information on Canadian participation in the Purdue Seminar. We are grateful to scholars at the University of Rhode Island willing to share their work and materials, as well as those at the University of Winnipeg who shared their memories of the birth of the program.
We are also grateful to Andrea Lunsford for her invaluable contribution to the early development of Canadian writing studies and for writing the response.
We owe thanks to Roger Graves for suggesting at the Writing Research Across Borders Conference 2014 conference that we publish our research as a book. We would also like to thank the Inkshed editorial board, along with David Blakesley, who has given this book a wider audience by co-publishing it with Parlor Press.
We would like to acknowledge the University of Winnipeg and Eastern Michigan University for contributing funds for the editing and indexing of this book. We thank Jared Jameson for his meticulous copyediting and Jo-Anne Pelissier for her indexing.
1 Becoming Networked, Cross-Border Scholars: Sources and Development of the Project
Derek Mueller, Andrea Williams, Louise Wetherbee Phelps, and Jennifer Clary-Lemon
It’s always a bit arbitrary to pinpoint the origin of a project or piece of writing, but our cross-border collaboration began with Jennifer Clary-Lemon’s initiative to bring Louise Wetherbee Phelps from the US to the University of Winnipeg as a Fulbright Specialist Scholar in the spring of 2011, to consult and collaborate with the Department of Rhetoric, Writing, and Communications on a vision for its future development. Winnipeg’s anomalous history in Canada as a longstanding independent writing department with an American-style first-year program and a major in rhetoric and communications made this cross-border consultation especially appropriate. Based on Louise’s work on the Visibility Project seeking recognition for rhetoric and composition as a research field in American higher education (Phelps and Ackerman, 2010), Jennifer’s proposal envisioned that the project could not only inform the department’s own strategic planning but also promote greater visibility and agency for writing studies as a discipline in the Canadian academy. Jennifer, herself a dual citizen with an American doctorate, emphasized the potential for cross-border conversations to use complementary strengths and develop the field both nationally and internationally.
The project’s outcome will be . . . one of the only existing attempts at co-constructing knowledge about a North American (rather than simply American) concept of writing studies, drawing on the strength and history of the development of the field in the United States, and the innovation and initiative of fledgling programs in Canada.
(Clary-Lemon, Fulbright proposal)
To further these goals, part of Louise’s commission was to research various contexts for understanding the department’s history, character, and potential future: a local perspective, situating it in the university, the city of Winnipeg, and the region; a comparative perspective, placing its curriculum in the landscape of Canadian instructional programs in writing and rhetoric and, contrastively, undergraduate and graduate programs in the US; and a field perspective, examining the department in the context of discourse and writing studies as a still-emerging scholarly field in the Canadian academy, interlinked with US rhetoric and composition and contributing to international writing studies. To fulfill this charge, Louise read widely in Canadian scholarship on writing and rhetoric, including publications by faculty at Winnipeg; studied websites and writings on Canadian programs; and interviewed several Canadian scholars at other institutions by phone and Skype. She was particularly informed by Jennifer’s own inventory of Canadian scholarship (Clary-Lemon, 2009), the first to survey Canadian research and publication in writing studies as distinct from instructional programs. This article examined how the Canadian field is historically rooted in the themes of location and national culture, expressing a tension between Canadian independence and dependence on the US field, with more recent research such as the new genre theory exemplifying a more hybridized North American scholarship rather than one defined in opposition to rhetoric and composition
in the US.
Canadian scholarship has shown itself as loyal to its historical themes of location and national culture . . . ; yet at the same time, there are, and must be, hybrid systems that blend the best research and practice of North America, as dual citizens and Canadians with American rhet/comp PhD specializations enter the picture.
(Clary-Lemon, 2009, p. 105)
After Louise completed her report (Phelps, 2011), it was taken up by the Department of Writing, Rhetoric, and Communications as a starting point for curricular revision at Winnipeg (discussed in chapter 4). The following spring Jennifer, Louise, and other Winnipeg faculty (Judith Kearns, Jaqueline McLeod Rogers, and Tracy Whalen) presented a roundtable at the Conference on College Composition and Communication (4Cs
) on the Fulbright collaboration (March, 2012). Their session, Cross-Border Collaboration in Charting a Department’s Future: Toward a North-American Conception of Rhetoric and Writing Studies,
placed the project’s cross-border conversations in the context of an evolving, convergent, (inter)disciplinarity in North American rhetoric and writing studies,
which in turn was being integrated into an increasingly interdisciplinary and internationalized field of writing studies (4Cs roundtable proposal, 2011).
Shortly before meeting at 4Cs that year, Louise and Jennifer exchanged emails about building on this work to develop a proposal for the 2014 Writing Research across Borders (WRAB) international conference in Paris. Louise also contacted American scholar Derek Mueller about joining the group, suggesting that they could use his methodological skills to study Canadian scholarly networks. She was inspired by a 4Cs presentation on the Writing Studies Tree, a visual, crowd-sourced map of the genealogy of American scholars that was being built by some City University of New York (CUNY) graduate students. Wondering how the Tree might be extended or emulated to map Canadian scholars, Louise thought immediately of Derek, a former student at Syracuse University who had been pursuing his interests in distant
methods, mapping, and visualization of data since graduate school. Derek and Louise contacted the CUNY team about working together on this project, but despite strong interest from graduate student Ben Miller and the faculty leader of the project, Sondra Perl, plans for combining forces and developing correlated proposals for WRAB in Paris didn’t work out. Instead Derek went forward with his own mapping project, using survey data (see chapter 2). However, as we worked toward our own plans and methods for exploring scholarly networks, we remained inspired by the CUNY team’s pioneering project to look at scholarly networks, in part, through the lenses foregrounded in the Tree: person-to-person relations (genealogical/mentoring; collegial/co-location); and person-to-institution relations (educational; workplace).
Meanwhile, at the invitation of Canadian scholar Doug Brent, Louise was preparing a keynote talk for the Canadian Association for the Study of Discourse and Writing (CASDW) conference in May, 2012 in Waterloo, Ontario. At his request, she drew together lessons from her Winnipeg studies to compare the struggles for disciplinary recognition in the United States for rhetoric and composition to those in Canada for discourse and writing. Responding to Canadian writing scholars’ ambivalence about their pushme-pullyou conflict with American sites and conceptions of rhetoric and writing
(Clary-Lemon, 2009, p. 97), Louise suggested deconstructing and reconstructing this historical binary between dependence and independence so that the Canadian discipline need not think of itself any more as defined either by imitation or opposition
to US writing studies (Phelps, 2014, p. 17). This movement toward a conception of Canadian-US interdependence, foreshadowed by Jennifer in her article and the Fulbright proposal, echoed in the Winnipeg roundtable at 4CS, and taken up by Louise in this address, shaped our ongoing planning for the research project we would propose for the WRAB conference in Paris.
We sort of zeroed in on the idea of focusing on the interdependence of American (US) and Canadian writing studies—mutual influence, partnerships, cross-fertilization through graduate education—within a framework of difference. It seemed that we are playing with a set of polarities: independence/interdependence, disciplinarity vs. academic identity, disciplinarity vs. diffuse interdisciplinarity, plus methodologies at different scales.
(Email from Louise to Derek and Jennifer on planning the proposal)
Louise’s reading for her CASDW talk included Randall Collins’s The Sociology of Philosophies (2000), which offers a global theory of how intellectual networks operate to develop, debate, and circulate ideas, emphasizing the synchrony of thought and social relationships. His essential insight, that intellectual activity is a flow of ideas among people energized and informed by their engagement with one another, reinforced the interest we shared in exploring scholarly networks, especially genealogical ones, as a way of understanding how disciplines form, develop, and sustain themselves.
These experiences, meetings, readings, and interchanges all fed into our proposal for the 2014 WRAB conference in Paris as we began putting it together in February, 2013, now including Andrea Williams, a Canadian scholar and writing program administrator who had met Louise at the CASDW conference. Andrea would add an interview-based qualitative study to what we were now thinking of as a multi-methodological study of interdependencies and cross-pollination between Canadian and U.S. writing studies
(proposal for WRAB 2014). Our methods would use different scales of description, ranging from distant to close,
to describe the role of transnational networks in shaping and sustaining writing studies in both countries. Collectively, we would gather data through surveys and interviews of Canadian scholars that all of us could draw on; individually, we would employ methods including data visualization, digital mapping, qualitative analysis of interviews, case study, and historical and textual inquiry.
After working on these research goals interactively over the next year, we came away from the Paris conference with a plan for co-authoring this book, which in many respects fulfills our original goals but has also evolved in ways we couldn’t have foreseen.
In this symposium a team of two Canadian and two U.S. researchers will combine methodologies at different scales of description to demonstrate the vital role of transnational networks in shaping and sustaining writing studies in both Canada and the United States. These studies, challenging the common trope of Canadian writing studies developing in opposition to its U.S. counterpart, explore an array of reciprocal relationships: genealogy, partnership, adaptation of model, mentorship, mutual presence.
(Proposal for WRAB 2014)
You may wonder why we have told this story of how we got together, planned this project, and came to put our work together in this collaborative book. It’s not special in any way—most co-authors or co-editors of books in our field have had similar experiences. They seldom detail the process for readers, wonder what makes it possible, or examine how it works. It’s taken for granted, along with all the features of disciplinarity (for example, conferences) that we recognize as professional
but seldom study to find out how they actually afford intellectual activity. In fact, making all that visible is one point of our study. In tracing this history, we see the kinds of affordances for, and examples of, the very intersection of intellectual and social relations that we set out to identify and study in this project:
co-location of scholars in the same place (graduate school, aconsultancy)
mentorship, beginning with genealogical relations (senior to junior) and then evolving to mutual mentorship in the context of collegial relations andcollaboration
collaborating on research, on publication, on curricular review andrevision
connecting one another to other scholars in extended scholarly networks (for example, the process by which we identified Canadian scholars to survey and interview)
reading one another’s published writing
connecting through commonorganizations
attending (cross-border) conferences: meeting to discuss projects, hearing one another’s presentations, presentingtogether
referring each other to scholarly ideas andtexts
using technologies like Skype, email, and Google Docs to work together and keep incontact.
In other words, this history introduces us as networked, cross-border scholars, a microcosm of what we are studying. We are Canadians and Americans, insiders and outsiders to one another’s scholarly communities and cultures, different generations, from different institutions. We brought to this project different but overlapping inspirations, histories, knowledge bases, methods, and home contexts. The book in its final form reflects the evolution of both goals and methods through the reciprocal influence of our different roles and contributions to the project. Most importantly, we have increasingly knitted them together into blended, coordinated, and complementary—networked
—methods for understanding the development of disciplines, ideas, and scholars in terms of scholarly networks.
A Networked Methodological Approach
Our study of Canada-US writing studies interdependencies enacts what we identify as a networked methodological approach.
We consider this approach novel because it applies network logics to the design and execution of a collaborative, mixed methods research project. This networked methodological approach
is influenced by disparate theoretical insights from network studies. Generally, network studies provide theoretical perspectives useful for attending to fluid structures of activity and relationships that may be articulated through links and nodes or simple, granular models of complex phenomena. Counter to isolating phenomena at too narrow or bounded a scope or, on the other hand, relinquishing a tightly-delineated scope to comparably baggy and inclusive references such as community or field, our use of networks for this research circumscribes the work with principles of delineated but flexible interconnection (i.e., locating connections that operate between and among differing methodological distances) and discernible granularity at scale (i.e., forms of evidence appropriate to a suite of methodologies, operating in concert).
Our reference to networks in this approach acknowledges a well-established, extensive tradition involving considerable topical and methodological variation where interconnected, complex phenomena are concerned. Social Network Analysis (SNA) has been widely adopted in quantitative sociology for more than three decades, offering greater technical precision in both modeling and measuring relationships among links and nodes (Wasserman & Faust, 1994). By contrast and with a far greater emphasis on tracing non-obvious connections using field observation and descriptive accounts, Actor-Network Theory (ANT) has influenced numerous studies that draw upon network vocabulary as researchers seek to follow human and non-human actors, from science and technology studies (see Latour, 1996) and interdisciplinary field studies in forest ecology (see Latour, 1999) to political philosophy (see Latour, 2004) and urban infrastructure (Winner, 1986; Woolgar & Cooper, 1999). Still other research on networks has framed them as a way to explain material and organismic phase transitions, or shifts at a moment of criticality from seeming chaos to pattern or order (Strogatz, 2004; Barabási & Frangos, 2002; Buchanan, 2003). Yet more network studies research has been used to theorize tensions between a rising technocracy and educational reform (Taylor, 2003) and to examine contemporary sociocultural power relations (Castells, 2009; Benkler, 2007; Galloway & Thacker, 2007). Although this is by no means a comprehensive gloss, it sufficiently locates a rich backdrop of network-oriented adaptations for inquiry and scholarly research, pointing toward the ways in which network logic encourages a methodological range of modeling, measuring, observation, analysis, narrativizing, and theorizing.
Network studies generally have established that phenomena observable at one scale of activity are not necessarily observable or structurally equivalent at another scale. For instance, patterns of cross-border activity in which Canadian scholars complete BAs and MAs in Canada are demonstrable only on a local, anecdotal level, unless we ask the question . . . using a large-scale survey and distant readings methods to visualize the cross-border pattern of activity. Such a large scale and distant study, however, proves insufficient for helping us grasp the micro-level influence of a brief consultation visit from a U.S. scholar to a Canadian university.
(Book prospectus)
Recently and more proximate to the domain of writing studies, Swarts’s entry in Keywords in Writing Studies (2015) differentiates network as a noun from network as a verb, noting that networks emerge as settings in which new kinds of literate information gathering, processing, and composing practices emerge
(p. 121). It is in this sense of co-location and connection that our carrying out of related, coordinated methodologies manifests, as an interdependent, orchestrated—and thus networked
—series of operations. That is, each methodology, highlighted chapter by chapter, is tied to and intertwined with each other’s methodology. To ground our thinking about these ties and intertwining, Gochenour’s Nodalism
(2011) has been helpful for its articulation of networks as a structural metaphor that keys on nuanced structural attunement. This attunement is most apparent in cooperative modeling, in which part and whole function more smoothly together because of their being doubly constituted as nodes and as elements in an integrated system (para. 23–24).
The most apt synthesis of networks relevant to our methodological approach stems from Spinuzzi’s Network (2008), which through its focus on workplace studies offers a definitional orientation to networks and simultaneously recognizes their methodological promise at the intersection of activity theory and Actor-Network Theory, a synchretism
(p. 197) of grounded description and pragmatic, problem-solution exploration. Spinuzzi argues that networks share four characteristics: they are heterogeneous, multiply linked, transformative, and black-boxed. We find these principles harmonious with our interdependencies research in the following ways:
1.Networks are heterogeneous, Spinuzzi explains, because they are constituted through relationships or associations among elements
(p. 198). For Spinuzzi as for us, these relationships are dynamic, only ever achieving relative, temporary stability. In the context of our studying Canada-US interdependencies for writing studies, this might refer to the relocation of a survey respondent from one location to another; the network of associations fluctuates accordingly, and this type of change is constant.
2.Networks are multiply linked, and this is achieved through what Spinuzzi terms weaving and splicing (p. 198). Weaving refers to the development of relatively stable parts of a network over time, whereas splicing refers to branching that converges as new interaction. For this study of Canada-US interdependencies, this has been realized methodologically as weaving in our coordinated efforts to have, for example, the survey results inform the interview questions, and, in turn, to have outreach for interviews cycle back into new survey results. In terms of splicing, a networked methodological approach operates as multiply linked in the discovery of unplanned convergence, such as when an interview informs a closer-up perspective on a smaller selection of maps developed from the survey’s geolocative data.
3.Networks are transformative. Spinuzzi discusses this quality in terms of circulating representations, that a network must represent and reprepresent phenomena in various ways, often conflicting ways
(p. 199). Representations and re-representations are constituted among the people, texts, narratives, identifications, institutions, and locations detailed in the study. The mélange of representations coheres around questions of interdependence, yet the assortment of evidence answers to interdependency with considerable variation. The network transforms as these representations and re-representations circulate, and our work has, as it evolved, participated in that transformative endeavour.
4.Networks yield "black boxes, which means they subsume and eventually obscure constitutive qualities that would be too complex to revisit with description or examination. That is, black boxes reduce complexity by replacing complex qualities with satisfactory stand-ins. This is represented in our work by survey and interview questions that center on nation-based identification. As Spinuzzi attests, black boxes
emerge from historically developing activities (p. 199)—in this case, citizenship activities that asked respondents to identify themselves along a contained and historicized North-American boundary. Yet Spinnuzi also notes that these boxes
take a lot of work to achieve and maintain" (p. 199), and these complexities came to light as scholars discussed their nation-based identification in greater and more varied detail in the interviews.
In addition to these principles introduced by Spinuzzi, what we frame here as a networked methodological approach
adds a fifth principle: networks afford and also therefore obligate researchers to multi-scale and multi-scopic consideration of the assemblage. This resembles Spinuzzi’s point about transformation insofar as it considers materially circulating representations; however, this additional principle introduces deliberate, purposeful considerations of scale (distance versus close) and aperture (wide versus narrow). Much like Johanek’s (2000) argument that we must systematize inquiry in order to contextualize research in the service of both flexibility and multidisciplinarity (p. 207), we suggest that one focus of research—here, the historic development and movement of Canadian and US writing studies scholars across the North