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Title Pluralizing plagiarism : identities, contexts, pedagogies / edited by Rebecca Moore Howard and Amy E. Robillard.

Publication Info. Portsmouth, NH : Boynton/Cook Publishers, [2008]
©2008

Item Status

Location Call No. Status OPAC Message Public Note Gift Note
 Moore Stacks  PN167 .P58 2008    Available  ---
Description viii, 181 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references.
Contents Introduction: Plagiarisms / Amy E. Robillard, Rebecca Moore Howard -- Man bites dog: The public, the press, and plagiarism / Michele Eodice -- Situating plagiarism as a form of authorship: The politics of writing in a first-year writing course / Amy E. Robillard -- Time is not on our side: Plagiarism and workload in the community college / Kami Day -- Where there's smoke, is there fire? Understanding coauthorship in the writing center / Tracy Hamler Carrick -- One size does not fit all: Plagiarism across the curriculum / Sandra Jamieson -- Plagiarizing (from) graduate students / Rebecca Moore Howard -- "Thou shalt not plagiarize"? Appeals to textual authority and community at religiously affiliated and secular colleges / T. Kenny Fountain, Lauren Fitzgerald -- Intertextuality in the transcultural contact zone / Celia Thompson, Alastair Pennycock -- We never wanted to be cops: Plagiarism, institutional paranoia, and shared responsibility / Chris M. Anson -- Beyond plagiarism / Kathleen Blake Yancey -- Afterword: Plagiarism, difference, and power / Bruce Horner.
Summary "The recent cases of Doris Kearns Goodwin and Kaavya Viswanathan demonstrate that plagiarism is a hot-button issue. It is also pervasive, occurring in universities, four-year colleges, community colleges, and secondary schools. In graduate programs, international classrooms, and multicultural classrooms. In writing centers and writing-across-the-curriculum programs. In scholarly publications and the popular media. How do we understand a literacy practice that is simultaneously so abhorred and so present in the lives of both beginning and advanced writers, students, and Pulitzer Prize winners? Pluralizing Plagiarism offers multiple answers to this question -- answers that insist on taking into account the rhetorical situations in which plagiarism occurs. While most scholarly publications on plagiarism mirror mass media's attempts to reduce the issue to simple black-and-white statements, the contributors to Pluralizing Plagiarism recognize that it takes place not in universalized realms of good and bad, but in specific contexts in which students' cultural backgrounds often play a role. Teachers concerned about plagiarism can best address the issue in the classroom -- especially the first-year composition classroom -- as part of writing pedagogy and not just as a matter for punishment and prohibition. Pluralizing Plagiarism opens a productive dialogue about what is at stake in plagiarism -- one that approaches the topic with students rather than for or about them. Leading the way toward curricular reform, its contributors take student work seriously and, therefore, encourage teachers to take student writing and learning seriously." -- Back cover.
Subject Plagiarism.
Plagiarism.
Added Author Howard, Rebecca Moore.
Robillard, Amy E.
Other Form: Online version: Pluralizing plagiarism. Portsmouth, NH : Boynton/Cook Publishers, c2008 (OCoLC)654247410
ISBN 9780867095951 paperback alkaline paper
0867095954 paperback alkaline paper