Description
This project draws on sociocognitive rhetoric to ask, How, in complex situations not of our making, do we determine what needs to be done and how to leverage available means for the health of our communities and institutions? The project pulls together rhetorical concepts of the stochastic arts (those that demand the most precise, careful planning in the least predictable places) and techne (problem-solving tools that transform limits and barriers into possibilities) to forward a stochastic techne that grounds contemplative social action at the intersection of invention and intervention and mastery and failure in real time, under constraints we can't control and outcomes we can't predict. Based on 18 months of fieldwork with the Sudanese refugee diaspora in Phoenix, I offer a method for engaging in postmodern phronesis with community partners in four ways: 1) Explanations and examples of public listening and situational mapping 2) Narratives that elucidate the stochastic techne, a heuristic for determining and testing wise rhetorical action 3) Principles for constructing mutually collaborative, mutually beneficial community-university/ community-school partnerships for jointly addressing real-world issues that matter in the places where we live 4) Descriptions and explanations that ground the hard rhetorical work of inventing new paths and destinations as some of the Sudanese women construct hybridized identities and models of social entrepreneurship that resist aid-to-Africa discourse based on American paternalism and humanitarianism and re-cast themselves as micro-financers of innovative work here and in Southern Sudan. Finally, the project pulls back from the Sudanese to consider implications for re-figuring secondary English education around phronesis. Here, I offer a framework for teachers to engage in the real work of problem-posing that aims - as Django Paris calls us - to get something done by confronting the issues that confront our communities. Grounded in classroom instruction, the chapter provides tools for scaffolding public listening, multi-voiced inquiries, and phronesis with and for local publics. I conclude by calling for English education to abandon all pretense of being a predictive science and to instead embrace productive knowledge-making and the rhetorical work of phronesis as the heart of secondary English studies.
Details
Title
- Prioritizing phronesis: theorizing change, taking action, inventing possibilities with the Sudanese diaspora in Phoenix
Contributors
- Clifton, Jennifer (Author)
- Long, Elenore (Thesis advisor)
- Gee, James Paul (Committee member)
- Paris, Django (Committee member)
- Warriner, Doris (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2012
Subjects
- Rhetoric
- Education, Secondary
- Teacher Education
- English Education
- participatory action research
- phronesis
- Rhetoric
- rhetorical activist methodology
- transnational feminism
- English language--Rhetoric--Study and teaching (Secondary)--Arizona--Phoenix.
- English language
- Community and school--Arizona--Phoenix.
- Community and school
- Sudanese--Arizona--Phoenix.
- Sudanese
- Immigrants--Arizona--Phoenix.
- Immigrants
Resource Type
Collections this item is in
Note
- thesisPartial requirement for: Ph. D., Arizona State University, 2012
- bibliographyIncludes bibliographical references (p. 159-166)
- Field of study: Curriculum and instruction
Citation and reuse
Statement of Responsibility
by Jennifer Clifton