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Writing as Responsive, Situated Practice: The Case for Rhetoric in Canadian Writing Studies
Author(s) -
Michael Lukas,
Tim Personn
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
discourse and writing/rédactologie
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2563-7320
DOI - 10.31468/cjsdwr.779
Subject(s) - rhetoric , situated , kairos , presumption , rhetorical question , argument (complex analysis) , sociology , focus (optics) , pedagogy , professional writing , epistemology , political science , linguistics , computer science , law , philosophy , medicine , physics , optics , artificial intelligence
This article responds to a widely held presumption that ineffective student writing in Canadian classrooms can be resolved through technical solutions on the model of the popular Grammarly app.  In contrast, this article suggests that a solution to the problem of writing instruction should focus on how to teach argument through rhetoric as a responsive, situated practice that occurs within different dynamic discourse communities. The article makes this case by recommending a renewed emphasis on the rhetorical concept of kairos, which provides students with an ethical comportment for decision-making in a pluralistic and uncertain world. This article concludes with a call for revitalized interdisciplinary attention to rhetoric in Canadian writing studies and programs.

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