This book explores narrative imagination and emotion as resources for learning critical meta-reflection. The author examines the learning trajectories of several students as they engage in learning to think critically through a new approach to creative writing, and details how learning through writing is linked to new discoursal identities which are trialled in the writing process. In doing so, she analyses the processes of expansion and change that result from the negotiations involved in learning through writing. This volume offers a completely new approach to creative writing, including useful practical advice as well as a solid theoretical base. It is sure to appeal to students of creative writing and discourse analysis as well as applied linguistics and language as identity.
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The author examines the learning trajectories of several students as they engage in learning to think critically through a new approach to creative writing, and details how learning through writing is linked to new discoursal identities which are trialled in the writing process.
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Chapter 1. Introduction.- Chapter 2. Creative Writing and Critical Thinking - From a romantic to a socio-critical view on creative writing.- Chapter 3. Basic outlines of the research.- Chapter 4. Discoursal identity and subject.- Chapter 5. Text as a site of negotiation: a model for text-analysis.- Chapter 6. Writers' positionings.- Chapter 7. Critical meta-reflection.- Chapter 8. A follow-up study - creative writing for critical meta-reflection in a different context.- Chapter 9. Concluding discussion about discoursal identity and learning critical thinking through creative writing.- Chapter 10. Creative writing for critical meta-reflection - some educational implications.
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This book explores narrative imagination and emotion as resources for learning critical meta-reflection. The author examines the learning trajectories of several students as they engage in learning to think critically through a new approach to creative writing, and details how learning through writing is linked to new discoursal identities which are trialled in the writing process. In doing so, she analyses the processes of expansion and change that result from the negotiations involved in learning through writing. This volume offers a completely new approach to creative writing, including useful practical advice as well as a solid theoretical base. It is sure to appeal to students of creative writing and discourse analysis as well as applied linguistics and language as identity.
​Hélène Edberg is Senior Lecturer and Educational Developer at Södertörn University, Sweden. Her research interests are based around applied linguistics and rhetoric. She has been teaching creative writing for over a decade, and is particularly interested in identification processes linked to learning through writing. 
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“This book is a stimulating and innovative contribution to the field of creative writing. By showing how narrative imagination can be used for critical thinking it breaks new ground. It is a must-read not only for university lecturers in composition but for any scholar in writing research interested in exploring the negotiation of discoursal identities.” (Per Ledin, Södertörn University, Sweden)

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Introduces a new analytical model, based on activity theory, making it possible to analyse learning through writing in student texts Examines student trajectories as they learn to think critically through creative writing Offers practical advice as well as theoretical grounding to support this new approach
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Product details

ISBN
9783319880419
Published
2019-05-11
Publisher
Springer International Publishing AG; Springer International Publishing AG
Height
210 mm
Width
148 mm
Age
Research, UU, UP, 05
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Biographical note

​Hélène Edberg is Senior Lecturer and Educational Developer at Södertörn University, Sweden. Her research interests are based around applied linguistics and rhetoric. She has been teaching creative writing for over a decade, and is particularly interested in identification processes linked to learning through writing.