Lexington Books
Pages: 292
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7391-7256-8 • Hardback • December 2012 • $143.00 • (£110.00)
978-0-7391-7257-5 • eBook • December 2012 • $135.50 • (£105.00)
Laurie Cella is associate professor and director of the First-Year Writing Program at Shippensburg University.
Jessica Restaino is associate professor of English and director of First-Year Writing at Montclair State University.
Introduction
by Laurie Cella
Part 1. Short-Lived Projects, Long-Lived Value
Chapter 1. After Tactics, What Comes Next?
by Paula Mathieu
Chapter 2. Tales from the Crawl Space: Asserting Youth Agency Within an Unsustainable Education System
by Paul Feigenbaum, Sharayna Douglas, and Maria Lovett
Chapter 3. Strategic Speculations on the Question of Value: The Role of Community Publishing in English Studies
by Stephen Parks
Chapter 4. Everyone Loved It and Still It Closed: When a Writing Program Isn't a Core Mandate
by Emily Isaacs and Ellen Kolba
Part 2. Community Literacy, Personal Contexts
Chapter 5. Sustainability Deferred: The Conflicting Logics of Career Advancement and Community Engagement
by Thomas Deans
Chapter 6. Hope and Despair, Risk and Struggle: (j)WPA Work, Service-Learning, and the Case for Baby Steps
by Michael Donnelly
Chapter 7. Mobile Sustainability: An Adjunct's Development of a Permanent Practice
by Karen Johnson
Part 3. Pedagogy
Chapter 8. Assessing Sustainability: The Class that Went Terribly Wrong
by Ellen Cushman and Lorelei Blackburn
Chapter 9. The Idea of a Literacy Dula
by Hannah Ashley
Part 4. Toward a Transnational Sustainability
Chapter 10. No More Than Fire Belongs to Prometheus: Techne, Institutions, and Interventions in Local Public Life
by Elenore Long
Chapter 11. Mastery, Failure, and Community Outreach as Stochastic Art: Lessons Learned with the Sudanese Diaspora in Phoenix
by Jennifer Clifton
Conclusion
by Jessica Restaino
Afterward
by Eli Goldblatt
Our current economic and social climate heightens the need for the critical scholarship featured in Unsustainable. The essays extend popular theoretical understandings of community-university dynamics through sometimes unnerving, too often familiar, narratives that recount funding debacles, student/community writer crises, ethical quandaries, and the politics of intervention. In the end, teachers, writers, and researchers are invited to find spaces for engagement, knowing that, despite inevitable challenges, community literacy theory and pedagogy represents some of the most dynamic work being done in composition, rhetoric, and literacy studies today.
— Tobi Jacobi, Colorado State University