rhetorically sound definition of genre [which] must be centred not on the substance or form of discourse, but on the action it is used to accomplish. ("Genre as Social Action", 1984, p 84).With my general focus on rhetorical agency, I have attempted to characterize precisely the social action which my particular band of reporters make such spectacular efforts to accomplish through personal recordings of their field trips. I read one or two reporters and one or two texts at a time, and I qualify their participation in the genre as I go along, but it's true that I haven't defined in any strict sense what is, for instance, a sufficient criterion for participation. And I wonder if I'm being strategically vague about it to spare myself some work, or whether I really don't find the more strict approach fruitful? Genre theory won't become fruitful by itself, I know, but if I ought to put work into it, I am simply wondering where to begin and for what reasons.
Notes on spectacular personal journalism - and on writing in general, but the notes are made while studying self-aware reporters like Günter Wallraff, Hunter S. Thompson, Norah Vincent, Barbara Ehrenreich and the rhetoric of their first persons singular.
Monday, July 24, 2006
What sort of genre theory?
One thing my committee has asked for is a more explicit theoretical discussion of genre to form the basis of my characterization of spectacular personal reportage. I recall a fellow PhD student presenting her genre-studies-in-progress and saying: 'If any of you have been thinking about studying genre as such, I advice you not to do it... I'm serious...' And I have in fact kept discussions of genre theory to an absolute minimum, but made sure that I point to Carolyn Miller to express my trust in her
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