Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction | Lynn C. Lewis
Section I: Kairos and Opportunity
Interlude One: Kairos and Opportunity
1. Political, Personal, and Pedagogical Imperatives: Tactical Disciplinarity among Early Members of Writing Studies | Lauren Marshall Bowen and Laurie A. Pinkert
2. Through the Eyepiece (and Body) of a Long Past | Suellynn Duffey
3. Strategizing Disciplinarity, Disciplinary Strategies | Tara Wood
4. Embracing Failure: A Newly Independent Department’s Attempts at Writing Its Own Script | Ron Brooks, Caroline Dadas, Laura Field, and Jessica Restaino
Section II: Negotiations and Resilience
Interlude Two: Negotiations and Resilience
5. Claiming and Being Claimed by Writing Studies: Negotiating Identities for Creative Writers Teaching Composition | Alison Ersheid, Lisa Konigsberg, Maureen McVeigh, Nancy Pearson, and Seth Kahn
6. From Pell Grants to Tenure Track: Precarity and Privilege as a Disciplinary Pathway | Cynthia Johnson
7. Finding Resilience in Writing Studies at the United States–Mexico Border | Karen R. Tellez-Trujillo
Section III: Allegiance and Identification
Interlude Three: Allegiance and Identification
8. Being the Only One: The Embodiment and Labor of Tokenism | Khadeidra Billingsley
9. Literacy and Disciplinarity: Vignettes of Struggle and Identification | Raymond D. Rosas
10. Cognitive Dissonance | Alison Wells Zepeda
11. Writing into Inclusion from the Margins | Antonio Byrd
Section IV: Conclusion
Embodying Stories: Writing Studies and Its Potential Paths | Christina V. Cedillo
Index
About the Authors