Through classroom ethnography, student interviews, analyses of settler archives, and personal reflection, There Is No Making It Out addresses the legacies of settler colonialism and settler rhetorics and their continued impact on how (subaltern) peoples see the world, walk through it, and interact with others. Romeo García argues that concepts of decoloniality prompt crucial counter-rhetorics and writing that are necessary but perhaps ultimately unattainable. In the demand for something else, and at the intersection between a praxical theorizing and theory-building actioning, There Is No Making It Out works to de-link and reclaim an archival approach as a critical method and also reclaim a theory of archival impressions as a theoretical apparatus deeply attuned both to tilling the ground on which power takes root and to a full spectrum of Matter (living, nonliving, nonhuman). García offers no definitive resolutions but, situated between two rhetorical standpoints-stories-so-far and the possibilities of new stories-There Is No Making It Out channels a hope and struggle for wor(l)ding otherwise.
Sélectionnez une option de livraison
There Is No Making It Out: Stories-So-Far and the Possibilities of New Stories
1 Item ajouté au panier
1 Item ajouté au ramassage
Votre article a été ajouté au ramassage à [location]
Il vous manque [amount] pour obtenir la LIVRAISON GRATUITE!
Vous avez droit à la LIVRAISON GRATUITE!
Translation missing: fr.settings.free_shipping_default_message
There Is No Making It Out: Stories-So-Far and the Possibilities of New Stories
Romeo García is assistant professor of Writing and Rhetoric Studies at the University of Utah. He is coeditor of Rhetorics Elsewhere and Otherwise, Unsettling Archival Research, and Pluriversal Literacies, and his interdisciplinary research appears in College Composition and Communication, Rhetoric Society Quarterly, Across the Disciplines, and Rhetoric, Politics, and Culture.
"A stunning contribution. García shows us that a decolonial perspective-one that resists simple binaries-is, in fact, not an option but a necessity if we are to understand the interconnectedness of literacy, place, and history." -Mya Poe, Northeastern University
"Theorizing from archival analysis, classroom practice, and personal experience, this book's inquiries and insights will be significant to many scholars in our field, across research interests and methodologies." -Raúl Sánchez, University of Florida
Vous aimerez peut-être aussi
Previous
Next
Articles récemment consultés
Le choix d’une sélection entraîne l’actualisation de la page entière.
S’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre.
Les livres numériques d’Indigo sont disponibles sur Kobo.com
Connectez-vous ou créez votre compte Kobo gratuit pour commencer. Lisez des livres numériques sur n'importe quelle liseuse Kobo ou avec l'application Kobo gratuite.
Pourquoi Kobo?
Avec plus de 6 millions des meilleurs livres numériques au monde, Kobo vous offre tout un univers de lecture. Libérez-vous des étagères et profitez de points de récompense à chaque achat.