The document provides an overview of a workshop on preliminary genre analysis. It outlines adjustments to assignment due dates and signups for conferences. It also includes sample journal responses analyzing genre conceptions and developing genre definitions. Students are asked to choose an academic discipline to analyze genres within and properly cite sources using APA, MLA, or Chicago style. Peer review involves reading papers and providing feedback and citation guidance.
Activity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translation
Genre Analysis Workshop Schedule Adjustments
1. +
Preliminary Genre
Analysis: Workshop
Tuesday, September 11th
2. +
Schedule adjustments
Final draft of paper due Tuesday, 9/18
Sign up for conferences Wednesday, Thursday, and Monday.
Bring a full draft of your paper to your conference.
We will not meet as a class on Thursday. Work on your papers
and get ready for your conferences instead.
My office is located in Colbourn Hall, room 305D
3. +
Journal
What does Devitt describe as the “conventional conception of
genre?” What are the “New Conceptions” of genre? How are
they different?
4. +
“Treating genre as form requires dividing form from content,
with genre as the form into which content is put” (574).
“Genres develop, then, because they respond appropriately to
situations that writers encounter repeatedly. In principle, that is,
writers first respond in fitting ways and hence similarly to
recurring situations” (576).
5. +
In your groups
Come up with a list of significant quotes from Bawarshi, Devitt,
and Reiff and/or Devitt. Post to our Facebook group. You can
use your notebooks
Then finish the sentences:
Genres are….
Genres are not…..
6. +
Now develop your sentences into a
paragraph about genres:
Genres are responses to recurring situations. According to Amy Devitt, a genre theorist,
genres “develop because they respond appropriately to situations that writers encounter
repeatedly. In principle, that is, writers first respond in fitting ways and hence similarly to
recurring situations” (576). What Devitt means is that rather than being containers into
which content is inserted, genres are general patterns developed by communities that
continue to change as the community’s needs develop. Devitt further develops her
discussion of genres in the article, “Materiality and Genre in the Study of Discourse
Communities,” which she wrote along with Anis Bawarshi and Mary Jo Reiff. In this article,
the three researchers give examples of how genres are developed by communities in order
to meet specific needs. For example, Anish Bawarshi illustrates the genre of the Patient
Medical History Form by explaining that this form “is a good way to understand how
doctors function and how they treat us as patients” (550). The structure of this form, which
asks patients to list their insurance information and annual income, reveals the value that
doctors’ offices often place on earning an income from their services. Devitt, Bawarshi, and
Reiff counter the understanding of genres as static formats, arguing that genres are
developed by discourse communities to get things accomplished.
7. +
Then, introduce your disciplines
Since, according to various genre theorists, genres reveal
useful information regarding the values and goals of discourse
communities, I will be using the genres of a community that I
plan to enter as a way of analyzing how to communicate with
that group. I have chosen to study _______ discipline, because
_____. In order to analyze appropriate methods of
communication for that group, I will be analyzing three articles
from the field, looking specifically at the genre settings,
participants, features, subjects, patterns.
8. +
Citing your sources
You should use the citation formats appropriate to your
disciplines. Use your articles as examples. In general, the citation
formats should follow one of these styles:
APA: http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/560/01/
MLA: http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/01/
Chicago: http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/717/2/
Search for the appropriate type of text to cite, and then follow the
guidelines. Most of your sources will be “academic articles
accessed through an online database.”
14. +
Peer Review
Look through the different citation formats, and decide which
format your discipline follows. Then, find a table with people
who are all using that same format. Swap papers with one
person at your table.
15. +
Peer Review Structure
First, read through the entire paper, marking anything that you
think might need revision. If you are working on a computer, feel
free to use track changes. Save the document as “peer review
draft”
Circle any area in the document where you think a quote or
example would be helpful
Once you have read through your partner’s paper, write a letter to
them that discusses:
The strengths of the analysis
The biggest issue that you can identify
Three specific suggestions for improvement
Either save the letter on the computer or hand write. Swap with another
person.
Work on citations together, if you’d like.