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The young composers : composition's beginnings in nineteenth-century schools / Lucille M. Schultz.

Van Pelt Library PE1405.U6 S38 1999
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Schultz, Lucille M., 1943-
Series:
Studies in writing & rhetoric
Studies in writing and rhetoric
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
English language--Rhetoric--Study and teaching--United States--History--19th century.
English language.
English language--Composition and exercises--Textbooks--History--19th century.
English language--Composition and exercises.
Textbooks.
History.
English language--Rhetoric--Study and teaching.
United States.
Physical Description:
xiv, 218 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm.
Place of Publication:
Carbondale, IL : Southern Illinois University Press, [1999]
Summary:
Lucille M. Schultz's The Young Composers: Composition's Beginnings in Nineteenth-Century Schools is the first full-length history of school-based writing instruction. Schultz demonstrates that writing instruction in nineteenth-century American schools is much more important in the overall history of writing instruction than we have previously assumed.
Drawing on primary materials that have not been considered in previous histories of writing instruction -- little-known textbooks and student writing that includes prize-winning essays, journal entries, letters, and articles written for school newspapers -- Schultz shows that in nineteenth-century American schools, the voices of the British rhetoricians that dominated college writing instruction were attenuated by the voice of the Swiss education reformer Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi. Partly through the influence of Pestalozzi's thought, writing instruction for children in schools became child-centered, not just a replica or imitation of writing instruction in the colleges.
It was also in these nineteenth-century American schools that personal or experience-based writing began and where the democratization of writing was institutionalized. These schools prefigured some of our contemporary composition practices: free writing, peer editing, and the use of illustrations as writing prompts. It was in these schools, in fact, where composition instruction as we know it today began, Schultz argues.
This book features a chapter on the agency of textbook iconography, which includes illustrations from nineteenth-century composition books as well as a cultural analysis of those illustrations. Schultz also includes a lengthy bibliography ofnineteenth-century composition textbooks and student and school newspapers.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 193-210) and index.
ISBN:
0809322366
OCLC:
39223586

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