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Top Intellectual Property Developments of 2015

Introduction to the 2015 CCCC-IP Annual

by Clancy Ratliff

I remember being in John Logie’s rhetoric and intellectual property seminar at the University of Minnesota in 2003.


From my personal archives: a photo of the course syllabus.

He would often ask us to find news stories about, to use his phrase, the IP landscape, and in class we would juxtapose our discussions of critical theory of authorship and complex analysis of copyright law with current news about intellectual property issues. This began a habit of mind for me, which after about a decade I have systematized: all through the year, I see interesting stories in my social media feeds and my other reading, and I paste those URLs into a TextEdit document (and I’m increasingly doing screen capturing to augment this), which I turn into a CFP around the end of each year – a wish list of topics I hope people will want to write about, and they do, and very well.

In the 2015 Caucus meeting, we decided to start including a dedicated pedagogy section in the Annual. All the articles have had connections to rhetoric and composition in some way, but the three articles in the Pedagogy section this year are more explicitly directed toward classroom application and reflections on teaching writing. Kristi Murray Costello’s excellent analysis of the FI (failure for cheating or plagiarism) course grade is the first scholarly examination in our field of this new institutional development. Steven Engel gives us several clever classroom activities about the misattributed quotation on the Maya Angelou postage stamp that help students better understand authorship. Kathrin Kottemann helps us reflect on what we’re asking students to do as authors; through her research about catfishing, an online dating phenomenon, she raises the question: are we asking our students to be catfish? To pretend to be someone else?  In future years, we hope to have not only pieces such as these, but other teaching genres as well: syllabuses for new courses on IP issues, lesson plans, assignment descriptions, and curated lists of resources for teaching about copyright and authorship.

After the section of articles that are closely related to pedagogy is the section I’m calling Copyright and Authorship in Culture. The six articles in this section all look at 2015 events in the IP landscape and situate them in rhetoric and composition broadly. Matthew Teutsch illustrates the stakes of appropriation in his analysis of a political cartoon on Twitter that perhaps some of us saw: the lowering of the Confederate flag followed by the raising of the LGBT pride flag, a visual comment on two of the most important (and in one case, tragic) historical moments of the year. Craig A. Meyer writes about an artist who enlarged and printed Instagram photos of members of SuicideGirls, an adult lifestyle brand, as they describe themselves online. I will admit that I found the moving of the Instagram images across contexts to large gallery-quality prints to be an inventive and chic stylizing. However, the artist did not inform anyone in SuicideGirls that he intended to do this, and he sold the images for $90,000 each. Meyer’s analysis of this case is insightful.

William Duffy provides an impressively thorough explanation of the complexities and stakes of the “defeat devices” in Volkswagens: software that reported false data about emissions. Freedom to tinker in this case has implications for the environment, road safety, and much more. Wendy Warren Austin has taken the news story about the emergence of the kilo-author – which is exactly what it sounds like: 1000 or more co-authors – and made a substantial contribution to composition scholarship in her analysis of authorship in the sciences.

Laurie Cubbison continues her tracking of Taylor Swift’s copyright advocacy, which began in the last CCCC-IP Annual with a report about Swift’s decision to pull her album from Spotify. This year, Cubbison analyzes Swift’s argument to Apple: she pulled her album from the Apple Music streaming service because artists would not be paid for songs streamed during the free trial period for users, and Apple reacted by agreeing to pay the royalties. Kim Gainer reports on the most recent legal developments involving the status of the song “Happy Birthday,” a song that should have been in the public domain already but has not been. Now, however, those wanting to use “Happy Birthday” in audio or video compositions may do so without worry – though specific performances of the song may still be protected by copyright, of course.

The CCCC-IP Annual has always featured thoughtful and critical reviews of longer texts about copyright and intellectual property, particularly white papers from other organizations such as Creative Commons and the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Traci Zimmerman continues this tradition with a review of a new handbook from the Authors Alliance, Understanding Open Access: When, Why, & How to Make Your Work Openly Accessible.

In sum, I’ve learned a lot from reading this year’s Annual articles, and I hope you do too. If you assign any of them in your classes (they would work so well not only in composition classes, but in technical writing and literature courses also), please contact me and let me know how it went.

 Table of Contents
 1 Introduction to the 2015 Annual
Clancy Ratliff
 Pedagogy
 4 Who’s Failing Who?
Six Questions to Consider Before Adopting the FI Grade

Kristi Murray Costello
 12 Stamp of Authenticity: Using The Maya Angelou Forever Stamp to Explore Quotation and Authorship
Steven Engel
 17 Catfishing, Authorship, and Plagiarism in First-Year Writing
Kathrin Kottemann
 Copyright and Authorship in Culture
 20 Cultural Commentary and Fair Use: Bob Englehart, the Southern Poverty Law Center, and Two Flags
Matthew Teutsch
 28 A Prince, Some Girls, and the Terms: A Canary in the Cave?
Craig A. Meyer
 33 Defeat Devices as Intellectual Property:
A Retrospective Assessment from the DMCA Rulemaking
William Duffy
 47 How Does the Rise of the ‘Kilo-Author’ Affect the Field of Composition and Rhetoric?
Wendy Warren Austin
 54 All She Had to Do Was Stay:
How Apple Music Got Taylor Swift and Avoided Bad Blood

Laurie Cubbison
 58 A Copyright Ruling Puts the “Happy” Back in Happy Birthday (and Brings an End to the Mortification of Restaurant Servers and Patrons)
Kim Dian Gainer
 Review
 67 Understanding Open Access: When, Why & How to Make Your Work Openly Accessible
Traci Zimmerman
 73 Contributors

Top Intellectual Property Developments of 2010

Introduction to the 2010 CCCC-IP Annual

Clancy Ratliff, University of Louisiana at Lafayette

Like every year in recent memory, 2010 presented new developments in intellectual property and copyright: new situations and updates to ongoing ones. This year’s Conference on College Composition Communication Intellectual Property Annual  — our sixth issue — features several articles that track ongoing matters, such as the Georgia State case, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, and even the tricentennial of the Statute of Anne, which was the first copyright law. It also shows us interesting new cases such as the infringement of a food blogger’s copyright and its public aftermath and the appropriation of Hurricane Katrina survivors’ oral histories as “found poetry.” These articles are only some of the great work in this collection. On behalf of the CCCC Intellectual Property Committee, I hope you’ll read this year’s annual and come away from it more informed about some of the previous year’s additions to the intellectual property landscape.

Top Intellectual Property Developments of 2011

Introduction to the 2011 CCCC-IP Annual

Clancy Ratliff

This is the seventh year of publication for the Conference on College Composition Communication Intellectual Property Annual, published on behalf of the CCCC Intellectual Property Committee — my fifth as editor. That this Annual has maintained this degree of longevity bespeaks the field’s commitment to copyright, intellectual property, and authorship as key concerns. Throughout 2011, the battle between the content industries and the copyright activists continued, but other powerful internet industries have started lobbying for a free and open communication network: Facebook, Google, and more. This year’s Annual engages this rhetorical situation as well as developments in the circulation of scholarly publications.

Breaking Free: The Fight for User Control and the Practices of Jailbreaking

Devon C. Fitzgerald, Millikin University

Though the practice of jailbreaking1, a process allowing users greater control and customization of tools like the iPhone, iPod Touch, and more recently Android phones and e-readers like the Nook, has been around since early 2007, it gained a great deal of momentum in 2009.  The first jailbreaking methods, released in May 2007, were intended to provide users with a way to customize ringtones and play third-party games. Within months of each iPhone and iPod release, a jailbreak application is typically released.

In 2009, the Electronic Freedom Foundation filed a proposal with the Librarian of Congress and the Copyright Office for exceptions to the Digital Millenium Copyright Act (DMCA) which protects digital intellectual property like Apple’s operating systems and software, making anyone who circumvents the software in violation of the DMCA and subject to penalties under the law. So while there is some confusion regarding whether or not jailbreaking is “illegal,” it is clear that as of the writing of this report hackers and jailbreakers violate the DMCA. The EFF requested three exemptions to the DMCA: 1) an exemption for “amateur creators who use excerpts from DVD’s to create new, non-commercial works” 2) exemption for jailbreaking phones 3) a renewal of a previously granted exemption for unlocking handsets to be used in recycle and refurbishing programs (http://www.eff.org).  Apple claims that jailbreaking violates copyright and does not warrant an exception. A ruling was expected in October 2009, then postponed to December and further postponed for early 2010. A decision is expected any day.

Why Jailbreak?

Currently, the only way to add iPhone applications is to buy Apple-approved apps from iTunes. Applications such as GoogleVoice, available on Blackberry and Android phones have been rejected by Apple, leaving the users who want to use such technologies to either go without or jailbreak their phones and knowingly violate copyright. The EFF has called Apple’s closed software policies anti-competitive.

Jailbreaking requires users to download a third-party program like Blackra1n and r3dsn0w in order to modify the iPhone’s bootloader, allowing users access to the directories and other areas of technologies that users have been previously been prevented from modifying. This means that users are able to move beyond the closed propriety software with which the device ships and install third-party applications and open software including games, ringtones, backgrounds and icons as well as other functions currently missing from the iPhone software such as the cut and paste functionality. In addition, the iPhone is currently only available to those who belong to or agree to join the AT&T network2. Jailbreaking makes it easier to “unlock” devices so they can be used on any cellular network.

Recently, users of the Barnes and Noble e-reader the Nook have been “rooting” their devices in order to install programs like web browsers and an RSS reader in addition to being able to customize and configure the menu screen. The process is complex and requires users to re-register their devices. And like all jailbreaking it voids the original warranty.

Even Google’s Android OS, which is open-source and highly customizable is not immune to jailbreaking, though it seems as equally risky as jailbreaking the iPhone without as significant a payoff. Jailbreaking an Android phone allows  tethering (meaning users can hook the phone to their computers and use the phone’s wireless capabilities to get online through their computers), running a full LINUX system, downloading Android software directly from developers instead of filtered through a service provider. Because Android users are already able to significantly customize their phones through wallpaper backgrounds, font choices free applications, screen unlock patterns, passwords and which icons appear on the opening screen. Thus, the desire for root directory access is less significant and less popular.

Is Jailbreaking illegal?

In brief, yes and no. While not explicitly illegal, jailbreaking one’s phone is a violation of the Digital Millenium Copyright Act (DMCA), which protects digital intellectual property like Apple’s operating systems and proprietary software. Thus, anyone who circumvents the software in violation of the DMCA and subject to penalties under the law. So while there is some confusion regarding whether or not jailbreaking is “illegal,” it is clear that as of the writing of this report hackers and jailbreakers violate the DMCA.

In 2009 Electronic Frontier Foundation filed a proposal with the Librarian of Congress and the Copyright Office for exceptions to the Digital Millenium Copyright Act. The EFF requested three exemptions to the DMCA: 1) an exemption for “amateur creators who use excerpts from DVD’s to create new, non-commercial works” 2) exemption for jailbreaking phones 3) a renewal of a previously granted exemption for unlocking handsets to be used in recycle and refurbishing programs (http://www.eff.org).  Apple claims that jailbreaking violates copyright and does not warrant an exception. A ruling was expected in October 2009, then postponed to December and further postponed for early 2010. A decision is anticipated any day.

Implications for Rhetoric and Composition

The Copyright Office’s ruling could certainly impact the field of rhetoric and composition, particularly if it rules in favor of protecting closed, proprietary software which could potentially limit innovations and advancements in software technologies as well as limit user control and input. In the future this might have implications for the capabilities and choices of educational software and technologies.

Perhaps most significantly, the practice of jailbreaking itself points to a growing trend among technology users for control and customization options .There are customizable features on almost any technological tool one uses today and there has been for some time. Users can have a custom-made computer by choosing the hardware, software and in some cases, colors of their laptops. There are customizable templates for websites, blogs, content management systems like Drupal and Moodle and social media sites like Twitter. Today’s users want what is popular but they want to exert their ownership of it in some way; they want to personalize technology so that it works specifically for them and for their lifestyles but also to represent their identities. It is not surprising, then, that many users want to exert control over the technologies they use most. . As colleges move more content and courses online and seek ways to stay competitive in the marketplace, these user trends will find their ways into our classrooms and curriculum.

Work Cited

Electronic Frontier Foundation. 2009 DMCA Rulemaking. Web. 15 Feb. 2010.

Gohring, Nancy. “Report: DOJ Reviewing US Telecom Deals with Handset Makers.” PC World 6 July 2009. Web. 20 Feb. 2010.

*****

1 The term “jailbreak” originates from the UNIX command “chroot” which alters a computer’s operating directory and prevents the user from leaving that directory, commonly referred to as “chroot jail.”

2 The US Department of Justice has reportedly begun investigating how mobile service carriers function under exclusivity deals with makers of handsets, a move that could alter and even prevent agreements like the Apple/AT&T deal.

Two Competing Copyright Curricula

Two Competing Copyright Curricula: The 2009 Release of Intellectual Property Curricula from the Recording Industry Association of America and the Electronic Frontier Foundation

Clancy Ratliff, University of Louisiana at Lafayette

Introduction

In 2009, both the Recording Industry Association of America (hereafter RIAA) and the Electronic Frontier Foundation (hereafter EFF) publicized curricula for teaching children about copyright and intellectual property. The RIAA’s curriculum, intended for grades 3 through 8, was developed in 2006 but updated and re-released in 2009. The EFF’s curriculum, released for the first time in 2009, is geared toward grades 9 through 12. In this report, I will describe both curricula and the perspective that each one employs in its presentation of copyright law and briefly analyze their rhetoric. I will be using terms from Jessica Reyman’s book, The Rhetoric of Intellectual Property: Copyright Law and the Regulation of Digital Culture. Reyman examines the rhetorical workings of the content industries’ argument (she terms this “the property stewardship narrative”) and the copyright activists’ argument (which she calls “the cultural conservancy narrative”). Reyman makes a convincing case for taking public messages about copyright and intellectual property seriously, and these curricula serve as compelling examples of such messages. Below is a side-by-side listing of each curriculum’s objectives.

Objectives of the RIAA’s Curriculum, “Music Rules!”  Objectives of the EFF’s Curriculum, “Teaching Copyright”
  •  To introduce students to the concepts of copyright and intellectual property.
  • To help students recognize that taking music without paying for it (“songlifting”) is illegal and unfair to others.
  • To help students, teachers, and parents set guidelines for using technology like computers and the Internet responsibly.
  • To strengthen academic skills in reading, writing, mathematics, citizenship, and computer technology.
  • To encourage musical and artistic creativity.
  •  Reflect on what they already know about copyright law.
  • See the connection between the history of innovation and the history of copyright law.
  • Learn about fair use, free speech, and the public domain and how those concepts relate to using materials created by others.
  • Experience various stakeholders’ interests and master the principles of fair use through a mock trial.

The objectives alone reveal the political, economic, and rhetorical agendas of each curriculum, but I will go into the differences between these in more detail.

The RIAA’s Curriculum: “Music Rules!”

The RIAA’s curriculum, as one would expect, centers on copyright as granted to works of music, and the title of the curriculum is “Music Rules!” Students engage in a variety of activities: writing their own songs, solving math problems based on numbers provided by the RIAA explaining how much money recording companies lose through illegal downloading, and learning about the music industry and its jobs. Curriculum materials such as worksheets and brochures for students, teachers, and parents explain the process of recording music and break it down into these roles, all of which, the RIAA argues, are compromised due to illegal downloading:

  1. Talent Spotters: club owner, music scout, record company executives, mom.
  2. Tune Crafters: music producer, songwriters, arrangers, singer.
  3. Recording Artists: music producer, sound engineers, backup vocalists, instrumentalists, singer.
  4. Buzz Builders: music producer, publicist, designer, photographer, magazine publishers, poster distributors, music critics, radio DJs, music video broadcasters, TV talk show hosts, singer.
  5. Disc Wranglers: CD manufacturer, machine operators, printers, packagers, shipping manager, truck driver.
  6. Hit Merchants: store managers, sales clerks, cashiers, online vendors, online order handlers, mail carriers.

Also affected by illegal downloading, or what the RIAA terms “songlifting” in the curriculum, are new, struggling, up-and-coming musicians. One handout makes the point that  “[f]or every hit CD, there are nine more that never make it. But the hits actually help those other artists. With a hit, the record company can afford to give another group of newcomers their chance at stardom. So when hits get songlifted, lots of other artists lose out, too.” This parsing of the economics of the music business and emphasis on copyright law as the linchpin makes the RIAA’s agenda quite clear, but if it were not clear enough, they provide a list of “Brainstorming Ideas”:

Songlifters take millions of dollars of music each year.
Songlifters hurt all kinds of music makers, not just the stars.
Songlifters keep new artists from getting their chance at stardom.
Songlifters are breaking the law.
Songlifters can get other people in trouble by sharing illegal music.
Songlifters can get computer viruses when they illegally download online.
Songlifters don’t respect other people’s intellectual property.

I’m struck by how far this list is from how rhetoric and composition teachers think of “brainstorming,” which suggests open-ended questions and heuristics designed to help students find their own views on issues and explore their complexities. In fact, I also think of the charges of “indoctrination” made against many teachers who use methods from critical pedagogy – accusations of presenting political issues (which shouldn’t be in the curriculum at all, according to this view) in a one-sided manner. Apparently, though, a business organization is free to advance their agenda openly.

Teachers are even given a loyalty oath in the form of a “pledge sheet” and encouraged to have students sign it. For elementary school children, the document reads:

This is to certify that [student’s name] has learned the rules against songlifting and pledges to:
• Respect all forms of intellectual property.
• Obey the copyright laws that protect intellectual property.
• Always use computer technology responsibly.
• Always use Internet technology safely.
• Never accept illegal copies of songs online or on disc.
(student signature)
(teacher signature) (parent signature)

For middle-school children, the curriculum offers a “check sheet” that instructs them to:
• Respect all forms of intellectual property that you find on the Internet – text, images, videos, software, and songs.
• Look for permission from the copyright holder before downloading any free music that you find on the Internet.
• Avoid using unauthorized file-sharing software so that you keep your computer safe from viruses and your personal information safe from snoops and spyware.
• Delete any music that you receive by email and remind the person who sent it that sending copies of copyrighted music is illegal.
• Never accept a homemade CD that contains copyrighted music and remind the person who made it that he or she is breaking the law.
• Never provide personal information online without a parent’s permission.

Reyman uses the label of “the property stewardship narrative” to refer to the content industries’ arguments about copyright law. In this narrative, property stewards are official distributors (record companies, for example) who disseminate recordings of creative and intellectual work. We pay the property stewards for these recordings, who in turn pay the authors and artists. All the emphasis in the RIAA’s curriculum on the behind-the-scenes work of producing music should make its status as a property stewardship narrative clear. Only rarely does the RIAA’s curriculum discuss copyright in a less absolute and more even-handed way.

The EFF’s Curriculum, “Teaching Copyright”

The EFF announced the release of their curriculum, “Teaching Copyright,” on May 27, 2009. The main activities involved in their curriculum are reading assignments, short videos, discussions, and writing prompts in which the student must adopt the position of a stakeholder affected by copyright law. The lessons culminate in the mock trial of Disney v. Faden, based on a video the students watch in which information about fair use is presented from the mouths of Disney characters using short clips from Disney movies. The EFF’s curriculum is much more concerned with copyright law’s history and intent, and the perspectives of musicians who support peer-to-peer file sharing and people who create remixes and mashups online, making fair use of copyrighted material, are better represented. The EFF also showcases the importance of the public domain. The first activity is called “Copy Quiz” and functions as both a diagnostic tool to discern students’ knowledge of copyright and a discussion-starter. The emphasis on the public domain can be observed in the quiz (emphasis in original):

Adam recorded a video for his YouTube channel about the upcoming Senate elections and includes an official photo taken by a government employee and four bills authored by the incumbent that Adam found on the Senate’s website. That’s copyright infringement.
False. Works produced by the U.S. government, or any U.S. government agency, are in the public domain. The texts of legal cases and statutes produced by the federal government are also in the public domain. 
Justin downloaded the black-and-white horror classic Night of the Living Dead from the Internet Archive and decided to mix an audio sample from the film into one of his original songs. That’s copyright infringement.
False. The copyright for Night of the Living Dead is part of the wonderful wealth of the public domain. Justin is free to be as creative as he wants with public domain material.

Perhaps my own bias as a reader is in play here, but while the EFF has an obvious counter-agenda (“the wonderful wealth of the public domain”), they at least represent copyright law as it affects groups of people other than those in the music industry. They attempt to show the balance between copyright holders and the public and to show that artists are in the best position to create new intellectual and creative work if they are able to use others’ content. Reyman refers to this line of argument, made by copyright activists, as “the cultural conservancy narrative.” Culture is conserved and enriched by maintaining and continually replenishing a commons, or a public domain of content. Copyright law gives artists and authors an economic incentive to create new work, but it does not exist only to prevent others’ use of that work; copyright law also decrees that after the specified time limit, the work must go into the public domain to be distributed freely and used in the creation of new work. The cultural conservancy narrative is less simple, and it does not have the heroes and villains (pirates) of the property stewardship narrative. The EFF’s teaching task is daunting, but the attempt to raise public awareness of copyright and break down the fear and mystery surrounding it is necessary.

Implications for Rhetoric and Composition

Reyman shows, in The Rhetoric of Intellectual Property, that the content industries put a great deal of effort and money into relaying their messages about copyright to the public. Many internet users are paranoid about downloading or using anything: worried that their Internet Service Providers will know if they download copyrighted material, and afraid that if they use peer-to-peer networks, they will end up with viruses and spyware on their computers. Rhetoric that plays on audiences’ fears, creates a false dichotomy of “pay for it, or don’t download or use it at all,” and repeats a narrative with oversimplified good guys and bad guys is registering more clearly with the public than the copyright activists’ rhetoric. This fact alone connects the development of these curricula to rhetoric and composition studies, as well as the fact that these curricula are intended for teachers, who I assume are the majority of readers of this report. I also want to point out that colleges and universities have become central scenes for copyright rhetoric; as Reyman discusses in one chapter of her book, under the 2008 Higher Education Opportunity Act, colleges and universities are required to teach students about “the unauthorized distribution of copyrighted material” and “suggests that institutions use technology-based deterrents” to ensure that students do not download copyrighted files without permission or payment (117). That law is tied to higher education funding, which is particularly tenuous as of this writing. But I believe that even in this rhetorical context, these curricula can prove useful; perhaps we can use them both to create a new copyright curriculum for the college level, one that not only educates students about copyright law but also helps them become keener critics of rhetoric.

Works Cited

Electronic Frontier Foundation. Teaching Copyright. 2009.

Recording Industry Association of America. Music Rules! 2009.

Reyman, Jessica. The Rhetoric of Intellectual Property: Copyright Law and the Regulation of Digital Culture. New York: Routledge, 2010.

Top Intellectual Property Developments of 2008

Introduction

Clancy Ratliff, University of Louisiana at Lafayette
Co-Chair, 2009 CCCC Intellectual Property Caucus

I am happy to announce the fourth CCCC Intellectual Property Annual and my second Annual as editor, and I hope that you, the readers, will find that the articles help to achieve our committee’s first charge, to keep the rhetoric and composition community informed about developments related to intellectual property that affect our work as teachers and scholars.

While the CCCC Intellectual Property Caucus has studied many issues related to copyright and intellectual property, access to a public domain of scholarship, teaching materials, art, literature, music, science, and more, especially for students and teachers at small, underfunded universities, is at the heart of the Caucus’ activity. The topic, for example, of most of the articles in the past four years of annuals is fair use and access, and this year’s edition is no different; you will find articles about fair use, open access, and orphan works.

Like last year, I have licensed the 2009 Annual under a Creative Commons Attribution, No Derivative Works, Noncommercial Use license to facilitate the publication of this collection on other sites. Also, as I wrote in the introduction for the last collection, I want to emphasize that derivative works are permitted for purposes of accessibility (creating an audio recording for the visually impaired, for example). Also, I am making the collection available for download in Open Document Format as well as a PDF file.

Writing teachers are fortunate that more content than ever is available for potential use in classrooms. Old films and television shows are released on DVD every day. Archives are available in public institutional repositories set up by universities and government organizations. New content released under Creative Commons licenses is uploaded constantly. The IP Caucus will continue to chart this effort and contribute to it.

Settlement of Suit against Google Book Search Leaves Fair Use Issue Unresolved

Kim Dian Gainer, Radford University

Warner Brothers and J. K. Rowling v. RDR Books: Fair Use and the Publication of Fan Guides

Laurie Cubbison, Radford University

Open Access in 2008: The Harvard Policy and the APA’s Attempt to Profit from the NIH Open Access Mandate

Clancy Ratliff, University of Louisiana at Lafayette

“It’s A Hard Knock Life”: The Plight of Orphan Works and the Possibility of Reform

Traci A. Zimmerman, James Madison University

The Importance of Understanding and Utilizing Fair Use in Educational Contexts: A Study on Media Literacy and Copyright Confusion

Martine Courant Rife, Lansing Community College and Michigan State University

Report Overview

In September 2007, the Center for Social Media at the School of Communication at American University released a report, The Cost of Copyright Confusion for Media Literacy, explaining the results of a study regarding the understanding and use of fair use and copyright by individuals in educational-media literacy contexts. The main inquiry explored the relationship between copyright beliefs and teaching practices. The research found that the key goals of teaching media literacy were “comprised by unnecessary copyright restrictions and lack of understanding about copyright law” (p. 1).

According to the report, copyright law, particularly fair use, provides broad protection for folks working in education. However, due to participants’ lack of knowledge and understanding about the law’s protections, their ability to share, teach, and have students produce media-rich texts was severely circumscribed. Not only that, but the researchers found that teachers’ lack of knowledge was passed on to students as well as colleagues, perpetuating “copyright folklore” that often sees the law as much more restrictive than it is.

The report recommends increased understanding of fair use for educators as well as their institutions, and suggests the development of a statement outlining policies for use of copyrighted materials in education-media literacy contexts.

Discussion of the Study

In order to gather data, the researchers contacted teachers, media literacy curriculum producers, and organizational leaders. While many of the participants worked in K-12, a number of them were from universities. Interviews were conducted by phone and lasted about 45 minutes. According to the researchers, the interview questions were open-ended and explored how teachers use copyrighted materials for education and asked teachers to describe how their students use copyrighted materials in student-created coursework.

A unique aspect of the study was that all interviewees were named along with their area of expertise and institutional affiliations – 62 participants are listed in the appendix, about 30% are associated with teaching in K-12. Many of the participants were from the geographical regions near Temple University (Pennsylvania), but some were from as far away as California. The researchers did not describe their participant recruitment methods in the report except that they did use membership lists of various organizations, including the Action Coalition for Media Education, Alliance for a Media Literate America, The National Council of Teachers of English, the Student Television network, the National Alliance for Media Arts and Culture, and the Youth Media Reporter (p. 23).

The major finding of the study was that the key goals of teaching media literacy were “comprised by unnecessary copyright restrictions and lack of understanding about copyright law” (p. 1). Because of participants’ lack of knowledge and understanding about the law’s protections, their ability to share, teach, and have students produce media-rich texts was severely circumscribed. Not only that, but the researchers found that teachers’ lack of knowledge was passed on to students as well as colleagues, perpetuating “copyright folklore” (p. 12) that often characterized the law as much more restrictive than it is.

Additionally, the study offered the following findings:

  • During the last decade, copyright awareness has greatly increased among the educational community.
      
  • Teachers believe that the ability to access and use copyrighted materials is central to educating citizens, and is a necessary component to maintaining a democracy. “More than any other feature of copyright law, fair use recognized the core speech values enshrined in the first amendment” (p. 6).
      
  • Too many teachers are unaware of the expansive nature of fair use, and instead rely on various “Guidelines” circulating on the web and adopted by some institutions. The guidelines have varying histories, but are mainly products of the publishing industry.
      
  • Teachers are confused about the differences between plagiarism and copyright, and talk about the two interchangeably although they are separate doctrines (attribution is irrelevant to the issue of “fair use”).
      
  • Teachers received their information from the media, their institutions, and lore. The information they receive either negates fair use or casts it in a conservative light.
      
  • Many institutions have extremely restrictive policies about using copyrighted materials – including how students’ texts can be displayed. For example, some schools would only let student multimedia pieces be displayed in individual classrooms rather than on school-wide media display systems. Such policies fail to recognize fair use as a legitimate part of US law.
      
  • Gaining permission from copyright holders for educational use was not “an option among interviewees” (p. 10). Either the permission was not granted, or the fee requested was unreasonable in the context.
      
  • Teachers’ lack of understanding (characterized as “cognitive dissonance” by the researchers), caused them to develop three coping mechanisms: 1) studied ignorance; 2) quiet transgression; 3) hyper-compliance (p. 14).

“Studied ignorance” was defined by the researchers as the “what I don’t know can’t hurt me” attitude. Teachers believed that if they stayed ignorant of the laws, they didn’t need to worry or comply. “Quiet transgression” described teachers’ willingness to do what they considered illegal with the hopes that they were unlikely to get caught. “Hyper-compliance” was defined as teachers who created blanket prohibitions in the area of student work especially – such as not permitting students to use any copyrighted materials in their own coursework.

The “costs” of this confusion, according to the report, are less effective teaching materials, constriction of creativity for teachers and students, and the perpetuation of misinformation. Recommendations included developing a code of practice or a statement of fair use practices to assist the educational community. As an example, the authors refer to the recently developed Documentary Filmmakers’ Statement of Best Practices in Fair Use which have been negotiated with the Cost of Copyright Confusion co-authors along with documentary filmmaker organizations. Apparently, the Statement had an immediate effect. “Filmmakers themselves, commercial networks, and the Public Broadcasting System all refer to it on a regular basis . . . it has permitted filmmakers to portray reality as they see it without compromise” (p. 23).

Implications for Educators and Writing Teachers

The study, conducted through Temple University’s Center for Social Media and funded by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, connects to teachers of writing both directly and indirectly. It’s directly connected to us as writing teachers in two ways. One, the reports’ co-authors are Renee Hobbs, founder of the Media Education Law at Temple University School of Communication, Peter Jaszi, Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property in the American University Washington College of Law, and Pat Aufderheide, Center for Social Media at American University School of Communication. Notably, Peter Jaszi has in the past, co-authored pieces with Martha Woodmansee (1994, 1995) regarding the teaching of copyright in the context of composition instruction. Two, the report states that study participants were recruited from various membership lists, including the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE).

The study is indirectly connected to us simply because it is situated in existing scholarship within our field on a number of issues. For a small example consider the issue of copyright and chilled speech (Porter, 2005; Westbrook, 2006), ethics, copyright, and fair use (DeVoss & Porter, 2006), first amendment and copyright (Herrington, 1998), the teaching of fair use (Logie, 1998; CCCC IP Caucus statement; Walker, 1998), importance of understanding the TEACH Act (Reyman, 2006), and rhetorical tactics used to scare potential content users (Logie, 2006). I think we will all agree that the Cost of Copyright Confusion study speaks to issues that many of us care about. But what should we do, based on this study? One thing that we are already doing is working in this area in a way that is relevant to the teaching of composition and rhetoric. I have listed some existing scholarship in composition studies as a small example. This work should of course continue.

As such scholars (Herrington, Logie, Porter, DeVoss, etc.) have already suggested, we as composition teachers should take ownership of these issues. While I commend the Center of Social Media for its important work in the area of teaching, copyright, and fair use, I also implore researchers in rhetoric and writing (R&W) to conduct their own research with their own methodologies, and in a fashion that makes sense to us in R&W. For example, while researchers with the Cost of Copyright Confusion study interviewed 62 individuals about their understanding and practice regarding fair use, it seems to me that an important population was not included, and that is the students who also need fair use rights, and who are also impacted by the so-called “misinformation” that their teachers are passing on. Student perspectives would add rich details to the study’s findings. For a beginning, see Sue Webb’s (2008) reflection on composing and displaying her “Grand Theft Audio” multi-media piece.

The idea of developing a statement of fair use has previously been addressed in our field. We do have the existing CCCC IP Caucus (2000) fair use statement, but that was published almost a decade ago. It might be worthwhile to consider updating, renegotiating, and re-publishing this statement, perhaps using the CCCC IP caucus as a vehicle to do so. Including other stakeholders might give such a statement more punch. I am thinking of organizations like NCTE and affiliates, the American Association of University Professors, and perhaps key textbook publishers like Bedford/St. Martin’s, Erlbaum, and so on. We might enlist the help of Educause (through our institutional representatives). With collaborations like this, teachers and researchers within R&W should explore and pursue funding opportunities such as that offered by the MacArthur Foundation. These kinds of funds will support our work and further our expertise and legitimacy as experts of new-media writing.

Apart from direct political action, I think as new-media specialists we also want to take it upon ourselves to self-educate on copyright and fair use, and develop accurate and appropriate curriculum. We should make a space for this in our writing programs and professional development seminars. To do otherwise runs the risk that statements on fair use will be developed by lawyers outside our field rather than us: “us” as the experts on writing and the teaching of writing, for whom fair use is central.

Works Cited

CCCC IP Caucus. (2000, Feb.) Use your fair use: Strategies toward action. College Composition and Communication, 51( 3), 485-488.

Documentary Filmmakers’ Statement of Best Practices in Fair Use. (2005). Center for Social Media. Retrieved on March 8, 2008, from http://www.centerforsocialmedia.org/resources/publications/statement_of_best_practices_in_fair_use/.

Herrington, T. K. (1998).The interdependency of fair use and the first amendment. Computers and Composition, 15(2), 125-143.

Hobbs, R., Jaszi, P. & Aufderheide, P. (Oct. 2007). The Cost of Copyright Confusion for Media Literacy. Retrieved on November 9, 2007 from http://www.centerforsocialmedia.org/resources/publications/the_cost_of_copyright_confusion_for_media_literacy/.

Logie, J. (1998). Champing at the bits: Computers, copyright, and the composition classroom. Computers and Composition, 15, 201-214.

Logie, J. (2006). Peers, pirates, & persuasion: Rhetoric in the peer-to-peer debates. Indiana: Parlor Press.

Porter, J.E. (2005). The chilling of digital information: Technical communicators as public advocates. In Michael Day and Carol Lipson (Eds.). Technical communication and the world wide web in the new millennium (pp. 243-259). Mahway, NJ: Erlbaum.

Reyman, J. (2006). Copyright, distance education, and the TEACH Act: Implications for teaching writing. College Composition and Communication, 58(1), 30-45.

Walker, J.R. (1998). Copyrights and conversations: Intellectual property in the classroom. Computers and Composition 15, 243-251.

Webb, S. (2008). The composer. In DeVoss and Webb: C & W Online 2008 Grand Theft Audio. Retrieved on March 8, 2008, from http://www.digitalwriting.org/cw/.

Westbrook, S. (2006). Visual rhetoric in a culture of fear: Impediments to multimedia production. College English, 68(5), 457-480.

Woodmansee, M. & Jaszi, P. (Eds.). (1994). The construction of authorship: textual appropriation in law and literature. Durham and London: Duke UP.

Woodmansee, M. & Jaszi, P. (1995). The law of texts: Copyright in the academy. College English, 57, 769-787.

College Composition and Communication, Vol. 56, No. 3, February 2005

Click here to view the individual articles in this issue at http://www.ncte.org/cccc/ccc/issues/v56-3

Sommers ,Nancy. “The Case for Research: One Writing Program Administrator’s Story.” CCC 56.3 (2005): 507-514.

Abstract

This essay is based on a session called “Stories from the Field” at the 2004 meetings of the Conference on College Composition and Communication.

Keywords:

Writing Students Program Faculty Research WPA Composition GraduatePrograms

No works cited.

Schilb, John. “Review Essay: Prospects for ‘Rhetcomp’.” Rev. of The Realms of Rhetoric: The Prospects for Rhetoric Education. Joseph Petraglia and Deepika Bahri, eds.; Postmodern Sophistry: Stanley Fish and the Critical Enterprise. Gary A. Olson and Lynn Worsham, eds.; Beyond Postprocess and Postmodernism: Essays on the Spaciousness of Rhetoric. Theresa Enos and Keith D. Miller, eds. CCC 56.3 (2005): 515-522.

Works Cited

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Miller, J. Hillis. Afterword. Olson 141-47.
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Hesse, Douglas. “Not Even Joint Custody: Notes from an Ex-WPA.” CCC 56.3 (2005): 501-507.

Abstract

This essay is based on a session called “Stories from the Field” at the 2004 meetings of the Conference on College Composition and Communication.

Keywords:

Writing Students Program Faculty Research WPA Composition GraduatePrograms

Works Cited

Hesse, Douglas. “The WPA as Father, Husband, Ex.” Kitchen Cooks, Plate Twirlers, and Troubadours: Writing Program Administrators Tell Their Stories. Ed. Diana George. Portsmouth, NH: Boynton, 1999. 44-55.
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Brereton, John. “Scholar, Teacher, WPA, Mentor.” CCC56.3 (2005): 493-501.

Abstract

This essay is based on a session called “Stories from the Field” at the 2004 meetings of the Conference on College Composition and Communication.

Keywords:

Writing Students Program Faculty Research WPA Composition GraduatePrograms

Welch, Nancy. “Living Room: Teaching Public Writing in a Post-Publicity Era.” CCC 56. 3 (2005): 470-92.

Abstract

At the same time that compositionists have shown a renewed interest in public writing, neoliberal social and economic policies have dramatically shrunk the spaces in which most students’ voices can be heard. In this essay I argue that from twentiethcentury working-class struggles in the U.S. we and our students can acquire the tools necessary to work against this latest wave of economic privatization and concomitant suppression of public voice and rights. If we can resist the common academic assertion that we live today in a radically distinct postmodern, postindustrial society, we can return to capitalism’s long history for examples of the creative and persistent ways in which ordinary people have organized to claim living room.

Keywords:

Students Class WorkingClass History PublicSphere Writing Space Workers Rhetoric Labor Rights

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Mao, LuMing. “Rhetorical Borderlands: Chinese American Rhetoric in the Making.” CCC 56-3 (2005): 426-69.

Abstract

In this article I argue that the making of Chinese American rhetoric takes place in border zones and that it encodes both Chinese and European American rhetorical traditions. By focusing on the discursive category of “face” and “indirection”/ “directness,” I demonstrate that Chinese American rhetoric becomes viable and transformative not by securing a logical, unified, or unique order, but by participating in a process of becoming where meanings are in flux and where significations are contingent upon each and every particular experience.

Keywords:

Rhetoric Face China AmericanRhetoric FortuneCookies Indirection Students Discourse Communication Borderlands Tradition Language Culture

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Harkin, Patricia. “The Reception of Reader-Response Theory.” CCC 56.3 (2005): 410-25.

Abstract

This essay offers a historical explanation for the place of reader-response theory in English studies. Reader-response was a part of two movements: the (elitist) theory boom of the 1970s and the (populist) political movements of the 1960s and 1970s. If the theory boom was to remain elitist, it had to deauthorize reader-response. If reader-response was to remain populist, it had to consent to and participate in that deauthorization. In the 1980s reader-response was popular among compositionists, even as it began to lose currency among theorists. Later, however, compositionists professionalized themselves by deemphasizing, or even ignoring, reading. Now, as the profession again considers including explicit instruction in reading in the introductory writing course, the thinkers who could help us most have faded from the discussion.

Keywords:

Theory LiteraryTheory ReaderResponseTheory Reading Texts Composition Criticism EnglishStudies Reception

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College Composition and Communication, Vol. 56, No. 1, September 2004

Click here to view the individual articles in this issue at http://www.ncte.org/cccc/ccc/issues/v56-1

Sommers, Nancy, and Laura Saltz. “The Novice as Expert: Writing the Freshman Year.” CCC 56.1 (2004): 124-149.

Abstract

Why do some students prosper as college writers, moving forward with their writing, while others lose interest? In this essay we explore some of the paradoxes of writing development by focusing on the central role the freshman year plays in this development. We argue that students who make the greatest gains as writers throughout college (1) initially accept their status as novices and (2) see in writing a larger purpose than fulfilling an assignment. Based on the evidence of our longitudinal study, we conclude that the story of the freshman year is not one of dramatic changes on paper; it is the story of changes within the writers themselves.

Keywords:

ccc56.1 Writing Students FreshmanYear Papers Assignments Development AcademicWriting Novices

Works Cited

Bartholomae, David. “Inventing the University.” When a Writer Can’t Write: Studies in Writer’s Block and Other Composing Problems. Ed. Mike Rose. New York: Guilford, 1985.
Carroll, Lee Ann. Rehearsing New Roles: How College Students Develop as Writers. Carbondale: SIUP, 2002.
Herrington, Anne J., and Marcia Curtis. Persons in Process: Four Stories of Writing and Personal Development in College. Urbana: NCTE, 2000.
Light, Richard J. Making the Most of College: Students Speak Their Minds. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 2001.
Sternglass, Marilyn S. Time to Know Them: A Longitudinal Study of Writing and Learning at the College Level. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum, 1997.

Borkowski, David. “‘Not Too Late to Take the Sanitation Test’: Notes of a Non-Gifted Academic from the Working Class .” CCC 56.1 (2004): 94-123.

Abstract

Working-class academic narratives reveal a number of common themes, like dual estrangement and internalized class conflict. A less popularized motif is the bookish child who is catapulted out of her working-class origins. But some working-class academics, like myself, were not academically ambitious as children. I am a nontraditional working-class academic, and my distance from narratives of “gifted” ascent may actually bring me closer to my students.

Keywords:

ccc56.1 WorkingClass Class Students Books Teachers School Academics Bookish Home Scholarship

Works Cited

Belanoff, Pat. “Language: Closings and Openings.” Tokarczyk and Fay, pp. 251-75.
Black, Laurel Johnson. “Stupid Rich Bastards.” Dews and Law, pp. 13-25.
Brodkey, Linda. “Writing on the Bias.” College English 56.5 (1994): 527-47.
Bryant, Dorothy. Miss Giardino. (1978) New York: The Feminist P at CUNY, 1997.
Cappello, Mary. “Useful Knowledge.” Dews and Law, pp. 127-36.
Charlip, Julie. “A Real Class Act: Searching for Identity in the ‘Classless’ Society.” Dews and Law, pp. 26-40.
Christopher, Renny. “A Carpenter’s Daughter.” Dews and Law, pp. 137-50.
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Eagleton, Terry. The Gatekeeper. New York: St. Martin’s P, 2001.
Ernest, John. “One Hundred Friends and Other Class Issues: Teaching Both In and Out of the Game.” Shepard et al., pp. 23- 36.
Faulkner, Carol. “Truth and the Working Class in the Working Classroom.” Shepard et al., pp. 37-44.
Fitts, Karen, and Alan W. France. “Production Values and Composition Instruction: Keeping the Hearth, Keeping the Faith.” Shepard et al. pp. 45-60.
Frey, Olivia. “Stupid Clown of the Spirit’s Motive: Class Bias in Literary and Composition Studies.” Shepard et al., 61- 78. Garger, Steven. “Bronx Syndrome.” Dews and Law, pp. 41-53.
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Lang, Dwight. “The Social Construction of a Working-Class Academic.” Dews and Law, pp. 159-76.
Langston, Donna. “Who Am I Now? The Politics of Class Identity.” Tokarczyk and Fay, pp. 60-72.
Leslie, Naton. “You Were Raised Better Than That.” Dews and Law, pp. 66-74.
Martin, George T., Jr. “In the Shadow of My Old Kentucky Home.” Dews and Law, pp. 75-86.
O’Dair, Sharon. “Class Matters.” Dews and Law, pp. 200-08.
Overall, Christine. “Nowhere at Home: Toward a Phenomenology of Working-Class Consciousness.” Dews and Law, pp. 209-20.
Peckham, Irvin. “Complicity in Class Codes: The Exclusionary Function of Education.” Dews and Law, pp. 263-76.
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Sowinska, Suzanne. “Yer Own Motha Wouldna Reckanized Ya: Surviving an Apprenticeship in the ‘Knowledge Factory.'” Tokarczyk and Fay, pp. 148-61.
Sullivan, Patricia A. “Passing: A Family Dissemblance.” Shepard et al., pp. 231- 51.
Tate, Gary. “Halfway Back Home.” Shepard et al., pp. 252-61.
Tokarczyk, Michelle, and Elizabeth Fay, eds. Working-Class Women in the Academy: Laborers in the Knowledge Factory. Amherst, MA: U of Massachusetts P, 1993.
Villanueva, Victor, Jr. Bootstraps: From an American Academic of Color. Urbana, IL: NCTE, 1993.
Warren, Gloria D. “Another Day’s Journey: An African-American in Higher Education.” Dews and Law, pp. 106-23.
Zandy, Janet. Introduction. Calling Home: Working-Class Women’s Writing, An Anthology. Ed. Zandy. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers UP, 1990.
—. “The Job, the Job: The Risks of Work and the Uses of Texts.” Shepard et al., pp. 291-308.
Zweig, Michael. The Working-Class Majority: America’s Best Kept Secret. Ithaca, NY: Cornell UP, 2000.

Soliday, Mary. “Reading Student Writing with Anthropologists: Stance and Judgment in College Writing.” CCC 56.1 (2004): 72-93.

Abstract

This article describes how readers from a graduate program in anthropology evaluated student writing in a general education course. Readers voiced the concerns of their discipline when they focused on the stance writers assumed and how they made value judgments.

Keywords:

ccc56.1 Reading Culture Students Papers Anthropology Evidence Stance Bias

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Smith, Summer. “The Genre of the End Comment: Conventions in Teacher Responses to Student Writing.” College Composition and Communication 48.2 (1997): 249-68.
Soliday, Mary, and Barbara Gleason. “From Remediation to Enrichment: Evaluating a Mainstreaming Project.” Journal of Basic Writing 16.1 (1997): 64-78.
Sommers, Nancy. “Responding to Student Writing.” College Composition and Communication 33.2 (1982): 148-56.
Stygall, Gail. “Resisting Privilege: Basic Writing and Foucault’s Author Function.” College Composition and Communication 45.3 (1994): 320-41.
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Goleman, Judith. “An ‘Immensely Simplified Task’: Form in Modern Composition-Rhetoric.” CCC 56.1 (2004): 51-71.

Abstract

Using historical and contemporary documents, including student texts, this article examines why and how both novice and experienced writing teachers, including the author, continue to struggle with tacit allegiances to traditional forms while trying to facilitate dialectical writing in their classrooms.

Keywords:

ccc56.1 Language Writing Composition SAhmed Unity Rhetoric Coherence Discourse Students Identity Dialectic Reading Literacy

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Lu, Min-Zhan. “An Essay on the Work of Composition: Composing English against the Order of Fast Capitalism.” CCC 56.1 (2004): 16-50.

Abstract

This is an attempt to define what being a responsible and responsive user of English might mean in a world ordered by global capital, a world where all forms of intra- and international exchanges in all areas of life are increasingly under pressure to involve English. Turning to recent work in linguistics and education, I pose a set of alternative assumptions that might help us develop more responsible and responsive approaches to the relation between English and its users (both those labeled Native-Speaking, White or Middle Class, and those Othered by these labels), the language needs and purposes of individual users of English, and the relation between the work we do and the work done by users of English across the world. I argue that these assumptions can help us compose English against the grain of all systems and relations of injustice.

Keywords:

ccc56.1 English Work Discourse Life DiscursiveResources World Language China WorldEnglish FastCapitalism Composition Linguistics Education

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College Composition and Communication, Vol. 54, No. 4, June 2003

Click here to view the individual articles in this issue at http://www.ncte.org/cccc/ccc/issues/v54-4

Reynolds, Nedra. Rev. of Gender and Rhetorical Space in American Life, 1866-1910 by Nan Johnson. CCC . 54.4 (2003): 657-659.

Worsham, Lynn. Rev. of Feminism Beyond Modernism by Elizabeth Flynn. CCC. 54.4 (2003): 660-661.

Johnson, Robert R. Rev. of Reshaping Technical Communication: New Directions and Challenges for the Twenty-First Century . Barbara Mirel and Rachel Spilka, eds. CCC. 54.4 (2003): 662-664.

Wilkey, Christopher. Rev. of Community Action and Organizational Change: Image, Narrative, Identity by Brenton Faber. CCC. 54.4 (2003): 664-666.

Warnock, Scott. Rev. of The Writing Program Administrator’s Resource: A Guide to Reflective Institutional Practice . Stuart C. Brown and Theresa Enos, eds. CCC. 54.4 (2003): 666-669.

Fountaine, Tim. Rev. of Everyone Can Write: Essays toward a Hopeful Theory of Writing and Teaching Writing by Peter Elbow. CCC. 54.4 (2003): 669-672.

Hocks, Mary E. “Understanding Visual Rhetoric in Digital Writing Environments.” CCC. 54.4 (2003): 629-656.

Abstract:

This essay illustrates key features of visual rhetoric as they operate in two professional academic hypertexts and student work designed for the World Wide Web. By looking at features like audience stance, transparency, and hybridity, writing teachers can teach visual rhetoric as a transformative process of design. Critiquing and producing writing in digital environments offers a welcome return to rhetorical principles and an important pedagogy of writing as design.

Keywords:

ccc54.4 Students Design Readers Audience Online Web Writing Rhetoric Screen AWysocki Media Interface Hypertext VisualRhetoric DigitalLiteracy

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—. “Seriously Visible.” Eloquent Images: Word and Image in the Age of New Media . Ed. Mary E. Hocks and Michelle Kendrick. Cambridge: MIT UP, 2003.

Myers, Sharon A. “ReMembering the Sentence.” CCC. 54.4 (2003): 610-628.

Abstract:

This article echoes Robert J. Connors’s call for a reexamination of sentence pedagogies in composition teaching and offers an explanation of the unsolved mystery of why sentence combining improves student writing, using insights provided by work in contemporary research in linguistics and in language processing. Based the same insights, I argue that we invite words and phrases, the true members of sentences, to important positions in writing classes and describe practical methods for doing so.

Keywords:

ccc54.4 Words Sentence Students Grammar GrammarInstruction Language Writing Phrases Vocabulary Linguistics Patterns Verbs Pedagogy SentenceLevelPedagogy RConnors

Works Cited

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Williams, Bronwyn T. “Speak for Yourself? Power and Hybridity in the Cross-Cultural Classroom.” CCC. 54.4 (2003): 586-609.

Abstract:

In this article I use the lens of postcolonial theory to reflect on my uses of a varied series of writing pedagogies in cross-cultural classrooms at an international college. Such reflection helps reveal how relations of power between teacher and students and underlying ideological assumptions about knowledge and discourse often resulted in hybrid responses of mimicry, frustration, incomprehension, and resistance. A pedagogy constructed against the backdrop of postcolonial theory might provide both students and their teacher in such a cross-cultural setting with a more complex and useful way of understanding issues of power, discourse, identity, and the role of writing.

Keywords:

ccc54.4 Students Culture Power Discourse Classroom Authority Teacher DominantCulture Postcolonial CrossCultural Knowledge Resistance Hybridity Ideology

Works Cited

Appadurai, Arjun. “Disjuncture and Difference in the Global Cultural Economy.” Colonial Discourse and Post- Colonial Theory . Ed. Patrick Williams and Laura Chrisman. New York: Columbia UP, 1994. 324-39.
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—. “Of Mimicry and Man: The Ambivalence of Colonial Discourse.” The Location of Culture. London: Routledge, 1994. 85-92.
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Fox, Helen. Listening to the World: Cultural Issues in Academic Writing . Urbana, IL: NCTE, 1994.
Gavaskar, Vandana S. “‘I Don’t Identify with the Text’: Exploring the Boundaries of Personal/Cultural in a Postcolonial Pedagogy.” JAC: A Journal of Composition Theory 18.1 (1998): 137-52.
Hall, Stuart. “New Ethnicities.” Black British Cultural Studies. Ed. Houston A. Baker, Manthia Diawara, and Ruth H. Lindeborg. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1996. 163-72.
Newkirk, Thomas. The Performance of Self in Student Writing . Portsmouth, NH: Boynton/Cook, 1997.
Olson, Gary A. “Encountering the Other: Postcolonial Theory and Composition Scholarship.” JAC: A Journal of Composition Theory 18.1 (1998): 45-56.
Pratt, Mary Louise. “Arts of the Contact Zone.” Profession 91. New York: MLA 1991. 33-40.
Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty. “Can the Subaltern Speak?” Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture. Ed. Cary Nelson and Lawrence Grossberg. Urbana: U of Illinois P, 1988.
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Villanueva, Victor, Jr. Bootstraps: From an American Academic of Color . Urbana, IL: NCTE, 1993.

Herndl, Carl G. and Danny A. Bauer. “Speaking Matters: Liberation Theology, Rhetorical Performance, and Social Action.” CCC. 54.4 (2003): 558-585.

Abstract:

This article examines the rhetorical practice of liberation theology and how it has altered social relations of power in Latin America. Using the confrontational rhetoric of liberation theology as an example, we develop a rhetorical model that grounds postmodern theories of rhetorical performance in material relations to explain how marginalized or subaltern groups can effect social change.

Keywords:

ccc54.4 LiberationTheology Power Subaltern Discourse Performance Identity SocialAction GSpivak Communities LatinAmerica Material

Works Cited

Belli, Humberto. Breaking Faith: The Sandinista Revolution and Its Impact on Freedom and Christian Faith in Nicaragua . Garden City, MI: Puebla Institute, 1985.
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Boff, Leonardo, and Clodovis Boff. Introducing Liberation Theology. Trans. Paul Burns. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 1989.
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Roberts-Miller, Trish. “Discursive Conflict in Communities and Classrooms.” CCC. 54.4 (2003): 536-557.

Abstract:

Communitarianism and compositionists’ use of the concept of “communities of discourse,” while intended to promote inclusive discourse, can easily fall prey to the myth of progressivism, ignoring the relative costs of discursive conflict or the pressures of consensus and conformity.

Keywords:

ccc54.4 Community Discourse Argument Students PublicSphere Communitarian Democracy Difference Agreement Agonistic Conflict Irenic Progressivism

Works Cited

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Taylor, Charles. Philosophy and the Human Sciences . Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1985. Trimbur, John. “Consensus and Difference in Collaborative Learning.” College English 51 (1989): 602-16.

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