Fighting Prosaic Messages

Par : Marilyn Amoroso, Henry Amoroso
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN978-1-962414-04-3
  • EAN9781962414043
  • Date de parution14/02/2024
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurQuill Publisher

Résumé

Literacy is as much ethereal as it is material. That is because reading and writing are acts of knowing that encompasses creativity, choice, and self-expression. To understand literacy is to understand cultural-historical reality. Societies, including our own, do not give the gift of literacy to all. As a former literacy educator in the Caribbean, Africa, and North America, I can attest to the reality of this statement. For the past 30 years I have written and spoken about the sorrow that is illiteracy.
I have also challenged my students to think of literacy and pedagogy in activist terms. Fighting Prosaic Messages gives voice to the millions of poor and working-class Americans, past and present, who struggle to be literate. I used family literacies to challenge readers to question why so many Americans do not express themselves in reading and in writing. The pattern of literacy across four generations of my relatives has been obstruction.
My immigrant grandmother never received fair and just acknowledgment of her literacies from the mill owners she worked for in Lawrence, Massachusetts. My father could read and write yet still failed in school. I turned my back on books until I graduated. Tragically my son's voice was nearly extinguished in school. The real power of literacy, a way to understand experience, was not given freely to us. This book is about how we can make the gift of literacy more available to all. -Henry C.
Amoroso, Jr. About the AuthorHenry Amoroso, deceased author of "Fighting Prosaic Messages, " and professor of Literacy Education for over 35 years have challenged his many students to think of literacy and pedagogy in activist terms to give them the voice to those past and present, who struggle to be literate. In his book, he tells the story of his grandmother's experience immigrating from Italy to Massachusetts, her own struggles with literacy, the literacy challenges faced by her son, and those faced by our biracial children.
There, readers will find the answer to two important questions: what is the nature of failure in America's educational system, and what can we do about it?
Literacy is as much ethereal as it is material. That is because reading and writing are acts of knowing that encompasses creativity, choice, and self-expression. To understand literacy is to understand cultural-historical reality. Societies, including our own, do not give the gift of literacy to all. As a former literacy educator in the Caribbean, Africa, and North America, I can attest to the reality of this statement. For the past 30 years I have written and spoken about the sorrow that is illiteracy.
I have also challenged my students to think of literacy and pedagogy in activist terms. Fighting Prosaic Messages gives voice to the millions of poor and working-class Americans, past and present, who struggle to be literate. I used family literacies to challenge readers to question why so many Americans do not express themselves in reading and in writing. The pattern of literacy across four generations of my relatives has been obstruction.
My immigrant grandmother never received fair and just acknowledgment of her literacies from the mill owners she worked for in Lawrence, Massachusetts. My father could read and write yet still failed in school. I turned my back on books until I graduated. Tragically my son's voice was nearly extinguished in school. The real power of literacy, a way to understand experience, was not given freely to us. This book is about how we can make the gift of literacy more available to all. -Henry C.
Amoroso, Jr. About the AuthorHenry Amoroso, deceased author of "Fighting Prosaic Messages, " and professor of Literacy Education for over 35 years have challenged his many students to think of literacy and pedagogy in activist terms to give them the voice to those past and present, who struggle to be literate. In his book, he tells the story of his grandmother's experience immigrating from Italy to Massachusetts, her own struggles with literacy, the literacy challenges faced by her son, and those faced by our biracial children.
There, readers will find the answer to two important questions: what is the nature of failure in America's educational system, and what can we do about it?