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Charles Bazerman

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Charles Bazerman
Born (1945-06-30) June 30, 1945 (age 79)
New York, United States
Alma materB.A. Cornell University, Ph.D. Brandeis University
SpouseShirley Geok-lin Lim
Awards2018 James R. Squire Award from the National Council of Teachers of English; 2020 Conference on College Composition and Communication Exemplar Award.
Scientific career
FieldsGenre studies, rhetoric of science, development of writing abilities
InstitutionsUniversity of California, Santa Barbara
Doctoral advisorJ.V. Cunningham

Charles Bazerman (born 1945) is an American educator and scholar. He was born and raised in New York. He has contributed significantly to the establishment of writing as a research field, as evidenced by the collection of essays written by international scholars in Writing as A Human Activity: Implications and Applications of the Work of Charles Bazerman.[1] Best known for his work on genre studies and the rhetoric of science, he is a Professor of Education at the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he also served as Chair of the Program in Education for eight years.[2] He served as Chair of the Conference on College Composition and Communication, delivering the 2009 CCCC Chair's Address, "The Wonders of Writing," in San Francisco, California.[3][4] He is the author of over 18 books, including Shaping Written Knowledge, Constructing Experiences, The Languages of Edison’s Light, A Theory of Literate Action, and a Rhetoric of Literate Action. He also edited over 20 volumes, including Textual Dynamics of the Profession, Writing Selves/Writing Societies, What Writing Does and How it Does It, as well as the Handbook of Research on Writing and the two series Rhetoric, Knowledge and Society and Reference Guides to Rhetoric and Composition. He also wrote textbooks supporting the integration of reading and writing that have appeared in over 30 editions and versions including The informed writer: Using sources in the disciplines, The Informed Reader, and the English Skills Handbook.

Academic career

Bazerman did his undergraduate work at Cornell University (B.A. 1967), and earned a Ph.D. in English and American Literature at Brandeis University in 1971. In 2016 the Argentinian National Universities of Cordoba, Entre Ríos, Río Cuarto, and Villa María granted him a Doctor Honoris Causa. He has taught at Baruch College, City University of New York from 1972 to 1990, becoming a full professor in 1985. He was professor of Literature, Communication and Culture at the Georgia Institute of Technology from 1990 to 1994. In 1994 he joined the English faculty at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB), and in 1997 he became a Professor of Education in the Gevirtz Graduate School of Education at the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he also served as chair of the program in education from 2000 to 2006. He has also taught at Cornell University, the National University of Singapore, Universidade Federale de Pernambuco, University of the Lorraine (France), Masaryk University (Czech Republic), China University of Geosciences (Beijing), University of Porto (Portugal),and PS93K elementary school in Brooklyn. His work has been translated into Portuguese, Italian, French, Spanish, and Chinese.

His work has won numerous awards, including two lifetime achievement awards, the 2018 James R. Squire Award from the National Council of Teachers of English and the 2020 Conference on College Composition and Communication Exemplar Award.

Writing across the curriculum and disciplinary writing

Bazerman, as an early advocate of  Writing across the curriculum (WAC), sought to establish a research basis to understand a movement within contemporary composition studies that concerns itself with writing in classes outside of composition, literature, and other English courses. His 1981 analysis of research papers in the sciences, social sciences, and humanities identified differences in the way they represented the material studied, established a relationship with the disciplinary audiences, presented the author, and used the disciplinary literature.[5] In consequent publications, he studied such topics as the changing genres of disciplinary research articles,[6] the development of reference and citation practices[7][8] and the use of evidence in student learning[9] and professional domains.[10] With his students, he wrote a reference guide to Writing Across the Curriculum, which integrated studies of writing in different disciplines together with educational practices and programs.[11]

Genre and activity theory

Drawing on his various historical and empirical studies and the work of colleagues, Bazerman developed theories about genre and how they participated in and helped form activity systems, initially in his book Shaping Written Knowledge. He later elaborated theoretical ideas in several chapters on genre systems,[12][13] typification and originality,[14][15] concepts in activity,[16] and the social origins of genres in letter writing.[17] He fostered work of other scholars on activity through co-editing a number of volumes with David Russell.[18][19][20] His two volumes of Literate Action provided a comprehensive view of his rhetorical theory and interdisciplinary sources.[21][22]

To further investigate how consequential social actions engage multiple activity and genre systems in interaction, he examined how Thomas Edison and his colleagues needed to communicatively engage with multiple journalistic, financial, technical, legal, cultural, and corporate spheres in the course of inventing and producing central light and power.[23] In a series of articles he also applied this reasoning to understand the rise of environmental knowledge, public and governmental engagement with the environment, and the politics of climate change legislation.[24][25][26][27][28]

Relation of Sociocultural factors to cognition and lifespan development of writing

While his work has centrally focused on the historical and social situatedness of writing, he has sought to understand how those sociocultural factors set the conditions for psychology processes, development of writing abilities and intellectual development.[29][30][31] Through the study of historical examples, he has examined how the growing understanding of the communicative world of such innovative thinkers as Joseph Priestley and Adam Smith went hand in hand with their changing ways of writing.[32][33] He consequently studied how writing and reading practices influenced growth of thinking in students.[34][35]

The question of the development of individual writers within their social circumstances and their changing understanding of their communicative need and social circumstances resulted in a series of inquiries into the lifespan development of writing and the methodological difficulties of such a project;[36][37] and his participation in collaborative groups to engage that inquiry.[38][39][40]

Leadership roles

Bazerman is a founding organizer of the Research Network Forum,[41] a forum for early career scholars and graduate students that has been held annually since 1987 at the Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC), the Consortium of Doctoral Programs in Rhetoric and Composition, and the Rhetoricians for Peace. In 2011, Bazerman became the Inaugural Chair of the International Society of the Advancement of Writing Research, which holds conferences on writing research around the world.[42]

Bibliography

Primary works

  • Shaping Written Knowledge: The Genre and Activity of the Experimental Article in Science (1988)
  • Bazerman, Charles. "Reporting the Experiment: The Changing Account of Scientific Doings in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, 1665-1800." In Landmark Essays on Rhetoric of Science: Case Studies. Ed. Randy Allen Harris. Mahwah: Hermagoras Press, 1997.
  • Constructing experience, SIU Press, 1994, ISBN 978-0-8093-1906-0
  • The Languages of Edison's Light, MIT Press, 2002, ISBN 978-0-262-52326-4
  • The informed writer: Using sources in the disciplines, Houghton Mifflin, 1995, ISBN 978-0-395-68723-9

Edited collections

References

  1. ^ Rogers, Paul M., David R. Russell, Paula Carlino, & Jonathan M. Marine (Eds.). (2023). Writing as a Human Activity: Implications and Applications of the Work of Charles Bazerman. The WAC Clearinghouse; University Press of Colorado. doi:10.37514/PER-B.2023.1800
  2. ^ "Welcome | Charles Bazerman". bazerman.education.ucsb.edu. Retrieved 2020-12-12.
  3. ^ Jerz, Dennis G. (2009-03-12). "Charles Bazerman, The Wonder of Writing (Chair's Address) CCCC 2009". Jerz's Literacy Weblog (est. 1999). Retrieved 2020-12-12.
  4. ^ "CCCC 2009 participants". Archived from the original on 2010-06-18. Retrieved 2010-03-14.
  5. ^ C. Bazerman (1981). What written knowledge does: Three examples of academic discourse. Philosophy of the Social Sciences, 11(3), 361-88.  Reprinted in Landmark Essays in Writing Across the Curriculum, ed. Bazerman and Russell. Hermagoras Press, 1994; in Norton Book of Composition Studies, ed. Susan Miller. Norton 2009; In Ethnographic Discourse. Ed. Paul Atkinson and Sara Delamont. SAGE Publications, London, 2008.
  6. ^ Bazerman, Charles. (2000). Shaping Written Knowledge: The Genre and Activity of the Experimental Article in Science. The WAC Clearinghouse. https://wac.colostate.edu/books/landmarks/bazerman-shaping/ (Originally published in 1988 by University of Wisconsin Press)
  7. ^ C. Bazerman (1991). How natural philosophers can cooperate: The rhetorical technology of coordinated research in Joseph Priestley's History and Present State of Electricity. In C. Bazerman & J. Paradis (Eds.), Textual dynamics of the professions (pp. 13-44). Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.  
  8. ^ C. Bazerman (1993). Intertextual self-fashioning: Gould and Lewontin's representations of the literature. In R. Selzer (Ed.), Understanding scientific prose (pp. 20-41). Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.
  9. ^ C. Bazerman (2019). Inscribing the world into knowledge: Data and evidence in disciplinary academic writing. In C. Bazerman, B. Gonzalez, et al. (Eds.), Conocer la escritura: investigación más allá de las fronteras; Knowing writing: Writing research across borders, (pp. 279-294). Bogota: Universidad Javeriana.
  10. ^ C. Bazerman (2009). How does science come to speak in the courts? Citations, intertexts, expert witnesses, consequential facts and reasoning. Law and Contemporary Problems, 72(1), 91-120.  
  11. ^ Bazerman, Charles, Joseph, Little, Lisa, Bethel, Teri, Chavkin, Danielle, Fouquette, & Janet, Garufis. (2005). Reference Guide to Writing Across the Curriculum. Parlor Press; The WAC Clearinghouse. https://wac.colostate.edu/books/referenceguides/bazerman-wac/Parlor Press LLC, 2005.
  12. ^ C. Bazerman (1994). Systems of genre and the enactment of social intentions. In A. Freedman & P. Medway (Eds.), Genre and the new rhetoric (pp. 79-101). Taylor & Francis
  13. ^ C. Bazerman (1994). Sketches towards a rhetorical theory of literacy. Constructing Experience (pp. 7-XX). Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press.
  14. ^ C. Bazerman (1999). Singular utterances: Realizing local activities through typified forms in typified circumstances. In A. Trosberg (Ed.), Analysing the discourses of professional genres (pp. 25-40). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
  15. ^ C. Bazerman (2010). Paying the rent: Languaging particularity and novelty. Revista Brasileira de Lingüistica Applicada, 10(2), 459-469.
  16. ^ C. Bazerman (2012). Writing with concepts: Communal, internalized, and externalized. Mind, Culture, and Activity, 19(3), 259-272.  
  17. ^ C. Bazerman (2000). Letters and the social grounding of differentiated genres. In D. Barton & N. Hall (Eds.), Letter writing as a social practice (pp. 15-30). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
  18. ^ C. Bazerman & D. Russell (Eds.) (2003). Writing selves, writing societies. WAC Clearinghouse & MCA.
  19. ^ D. Russell & C. Bazerman (1997). The Activity of Writing; The Writing of Activity. Special issue of Mind, Culture, and Activity, 4(4).
  20. ^ C. Bazerman & D. Russell (1994). Landmark essays in writing across the curriculum.  Davis, CA: Hermagoras Press. Reissued, Routledge, 2020.
  21. ^ C. Bazerman (2013). A Theory of literate action. Literate Action, volume 2. Parlor Press and WAC Clearinghouse. Translated into Portuguese: Teoria da ação letrada.  Sao Paulo: Parabola, 2015.
  22. ^ C. Bazerman (2013). A rhetoric of literate action. Literate action, volume 1. Parlor Press and WAC Clearinghouse. Translated into Portuguese: Retórica da ação letrada.  Sao Paulo: Parabola, 2015.
  23. ^ C. Bazerman (1999). The languages of Edison’s light. Cambridge MA: MIT Press.
  24. ^ C. Bazerman (2001). Nuclear information: One rhetorical moment in the construction of the information age. Written Communication, 18(3), 259-295.
  25. ^ C. Bazerman, J. Little & T. Chavkin (2003). The production of information for genred activity spaces. Written Communication, 20(4), 455-477.
  26. ^ C. Bazerman & R. De los Santos (2005). Measuring incommensurability: Are toxicology and ecotoxicology blind to what the other sees? In R. Harris (Ed.), Rhetoric and Incommensurability (pp. 424-463). Parlor Press.
  27. ^ C. Bazerman (2021). Scientific knowledge, public knowledge, and public policy: How genres form and disrupt knowledge for acting about anthropogenic climate change. In S. Auken & C. Sunesen (Eds.), Genre in the climate debate (pp. 34-50). Warsaw, Poland: De Gruyter Open Poland. doi:10.1515/9788395720499-004
  28. ^ C. Bazerman & J. Kuntzman (2021). How the US Congress knows and evades knowing about anthropogenic climate change: The record created in committee hearings, 2004–2016. In S. Auken & C. Sunesen (Eds.), Genre in the climate debate (pp. 51-84). Warsaw, Poland: De Gruyter Open Poland. doi:10.1515/9788395720499-005
  29. ^ C. Bazerman (2009). Genre and cognitive development. In C. Bazerman, A. Bonini, D. Figueiredo (Eds.). Genre in a changing world. Parlor Press and WAC Clearinghouse.
  30. ^ C. Bazerman (2012). Writing, cognition, and affect from the perspective of sociohistorical studies. In V. Berninger (Ed.), Past, present, and future contributions cognitive writing research to cognitive psychology (pp. 89-104). New York: Psychology Press
  31. ^ C. Bazerman (2017). The psychology of writing situated within social action: An empirical and theoretical program. In P. Portanova, M. Rifenburg, & D. Roen (Eds.), Contemporary perspectives on cognition. WAC Clearinghouse.
  32. ^ C. Bazerman (1991). How natural philosophers can cooperate: The rhetorical technology of coordinated research in Joseph Priestley's History and Present State of Electricity. In C. Bazerman & J. Paradis (Eds.), Textual dynamics of the professions (pp. 13-44). Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.
  33. ^ C. Bazerman (1993). Money talks: The rhetorical project of Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations. In W. Henderson, T. Dudley-Evans & R. Backhouse (Eds.), Economics and language (pp. 173-199). New York: Routledge.
  34. ^ C. Bazerman, K. Simon, P. Ewing, & P. Pieng (2013). Domain-specific cognitive development through writing tasks in a teacher education program. Pragmatics & Cognition, 21(3), 530-551.
  35. ^ C. Bazerman, K. Simon, & P. Pieng (2014).   Writing about reading to advance thinking: A study in situated cognitive development. In P. Boscolo & P. Klein (Eds.), Writing as a learning activity (pp. 249-276). Leiden: Brill
  36. ^ C. Bazerman (2013). Comprendiendo de un viaje que dura toda la vida: la evolución de la escritura. Understanding the lifelong journey of writing development. Revista Infancia y Aprendizaje/Journal for the Study of Education and Development, 36(4), 421-441.  
  37. ^ C. Bazerman (2020a). The puzzle of conducting research on lifespan development of writing. In K. Blewett, C. Donahue, & C. Monroe (Eds.), The expanding universe of writing studies: Higher education writing research (pp. 403-416). Peter Lang.
  38. ^ C. Bazerman, A. Applebee, D. Brandt, V. Berninger, S. Graham, P. Matsuda, S. Murphy, D. Rowe, M. Schleppegrell (2017). Taking the long view on writing development. Research in the Teaching of English, 51(3), 51-60.
  39. ^ C. Bazerman, A. Applebee, V. Berninger, D. Brandt, S. Graham, J. V. Jeffery, P. Kei Matsuda, S. Murphy, D. W. Rowe, M. Schleppegrell, & K. C. Wilcox (2018). Lifespan development of writing abilities. Urbana IL: NCTE Press.
  40. ^ C. Bazerman (2020b). Preface. In R. J. Dippre & T. Phillips (Eds.), Approaches to Lifespan Writing Research: Generating an Actionable Coherence (pp. xxi-xxiii). WAC Clearinghouse.
  41. ^ Gorelick, Risa. (2017). “The Missing Piece: Where is the Labor-Related Research at the Research Network Forum?” In Randall McClure, Dayna V. Goldstein and Michael A. Pemberton (eds.) The State(ment) and Future of Work in Composition. Parlor Press. pp. 115-125.
  42. ^ "ISAWR Home". Archived from the original on 2012-04-20. Retrieved January 15, 2022.