id ndltd-OhioLink-oai-etd.ohiolink.edu-osu1306418814
record_format oai_dc
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Communication
Composition
Higher Education
Instructional Design
Language Arts
Literacy
Pedagogy
Rhetoric
disability studies
composition studies
rhetoric
autism
synaesthesia
shiny
usability
accessibility
universal design
technical communication
writing
digital media
computers
multimodality
audience
spellingShingle Communication
Composition
Higher Education
Instructional Design
Language Arts
Literacy
Pedagogy
Rhetoric
disability studies
composition studies
rhetoric
autism
synaesthesia
shiny
usability
accessibility
universal design
technical communication
writing
digital media
computers
multimodality
audience
Yergeau, Melanie
Disabling Composition: Toward a 21st-Century, Synaesthetic Theory of Writing
author Yergeau, Melanie
author_facet Yergeau, Melanie
author_sort Yergeau, Melanie
title Disabling Composition: Toward a 21st-Century, Synaesthetic Theory of Writing
title_short Disabling Composition: Toward a 21st-Century, Synaesthetic Theory of Writing
title_full Disabling Composition: Toward a 21st-Century, Synaesthetic Theory of Writing
title_fullStr Disabling Composition: Toward a 21st-Century, Synaesthetic Theory of Writing
title_full_unstemmed Disabling Composition: Toward a 21st-Century, Synaesthetic Theory of Writing
title_sort disabling composition: toward a 21st-century, synaesthetic theory of writing
publisher The Ohio State University / OhioLINK
publishDate 2011
url http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1306418814
work_keys_str_mv AT yergeaumelanie disablingcompositiontowarda21stcenturysynaesthetictheoryofwriting
_version_ 1719429984561397760
spelling ndltd-OhioLink-oai-etd.ohiolink.edu-osu13064188142021-08-03T06:02:41Z Disabling Composition: Toward a 21st-Century, Synaesthetic Theory of Writing Yergeau, Melanie Communication Composition Higher Education Instructional Design Language Arts Literacy Pedagogy Rhetoric disability studies composition studies rhetoric autism synaesthesia shiny usability accessibility universal design technical communication writing digital media computers multimodality audience <p>My dissertation examines the ways in which composition pedagogies have, both in theory and in practice, systematically worked to exclude individuals with disabilities. Persisting in composition studies is the ideological belief that traditional writing and intelligence are somehow inherently linked, that traditional literacy is central to defining one’s intellectual worth. This privileging of composing as print-based, I contend, masks the notion that writing is simply one among many systems of making and conveying meaning, that among our readers are those who cannot always access the messages delivered within print-based texts.</p><p>I argue that disability studies can enable us to reconceive the rhetorical triangle and what it means to compose. Disability studies allows us to perceive the ways in which traditional writing—and composition studies’ investment in traditional writing—normalizes and has been normalized by our understanding of “the” rhetorical triangle. But disability studies also allows us to regard the ways in which multimodal composing normalizes and has been normalized by our understanding of “the” rhetorical triangle. In order to create the inclusive, radically welcoming pedagogy that so many teacher-scholars strive for, I suggest that we disable composition studies—what we think we know about composers, composing, and composition(s).</p><p>Disabling Composition presents three case studies in which we can re/vision this disabling move. In the first case study, I interrogate new media conceptions of synaesthesia, which, in current scholarly literature, has become synonymous with multimodal composing and has been separated from its original, pathological position as a sensory impairment. This configuration of synaesthesia as a non-severe, non-pathological heuristic, I argue, embodies what I term the “rhetoric of shininess”—a concept that sounds wonderfully robust and inclusive in theory, but is often empty and exclusionary in practice. In the second case study, I use critical discourse analysis to explore how two recent usability-centric articles from Technical Communication Quarterly and Computers and Composition assume an able-bodied audience and segregate disabled users into “accessibility” clusters. In the final case study, I analyze literacy narratives of three autistic writer-activists. These individuals, I argue, serve as one example of disabling composition at work, and they have much to teach us about our conceptions of audience.</p><p>In my final chapter, I consider universal design and how its principles of flexibility and equitability work in service of disabling composition. Here I emphasize the importance of accessibility to composition studies, of the ways in which our choices—at conferences, in our syllabi, in our scholarly work—reflect who it is we value as audience members.</p><p>Finally, my dissertation is a born digital project. Though it is by no means fully accessible, it experiments with universal design and accessibility in its very form. I recognize that my audience likely contains individuals who work best with print-based texts, as well as individuals who work best with other modes of expression. Individuals who in other contexts might be considered able-bodied may, at many points, feel disabled as they encounter this dissertation.</p> 2011-11-03 English text The Ohio State University / OhioLINK http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1306418814 http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1306418814 unrestricted This thesis or dissertation is protected by copyright: all rights reserved. It may not be copied or redistributed beyond the terms of applicable copyright laws.