Breaking the silence on a number of sacrosanct aspects of higher education--and now and then raising the clamor about some highly politicized issues--Conspiring with Forms is a critique of both the academy and the discourse concerning its purposes and direction.
About the Author: Terry Caesar taught English and American literature at Clarion University and Mukogawa University in Japan.
220 Pages
Biography + Autobiography, Educators
Description
About the Book
Breaking the silence on a number of sacrosanct aspects of higher education--and raising the clamor about some highly politicized issues--Conspiring with Forms is a critique of both the academy and the discourse concerning its purposes and direction. Caesar combines theoretical sophistication with subjective depth and a measure of urbane wit.
Book Synopsis
Breaking the silence on a number of sacrosanct aspects of higher education--and now and then raising the clamor about some highly politicized issues--Conspiring with Forms is a critique of both the academy and the discourse concerning its purposes and direction.
Academic life is embedded among forms, says Terry P. Caesar. It is a milieu of customs and conventions, practices and pretenses, all bursting with implications and hidden costs for the mainly mute and complicitous scholars who perpetuate them. Many of these forms are texts--proposals, letters of application and recommendation, dissertations, freshman composition themes, and prefaces and acknowledgments in books. It is impossible, Caesar says, to be an academic and not produce them or, more important, be produced by them.
To discuss these texts, Caesar combines theoretical sophistication with subjective depth and a measure of urbane wit. Essentially, he turns some of the techniques of contemporary theory and criticism back onto the system from which they evolved. At the same time, he draws on his personal experiences, supplemented with excerpts from actual texts of his own and others.
Review Quotes
Caesar issues a most unusual and very welcome report from the soldiers in the ill-rewarded posts at the less prestigious colleges and 'universities, ' providing valuable data for a history of everyday academic life in late twentieth-century America.
--English Literature in Translation
About the Author
Terry Caesar taught English and American literature at Clarion University and Mukogawa University in Japan. His books include "Speaking of Animals: Essays on Dogs and Others" and a memoir, "Before I Had a Mother." He lives in San Antonio, Texas.
Dimensions (Overall): 8.5 Inches (H) x 5.5 Inches (W) x .5 Inches (D)
Weight: .63 Pounds
Suggested Age: 22 Years and Up
Number of Pages: 220
Genre: Biography + Autobiography
Sub-Genre: Educators
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Format: Paperback
Author: Terry Caesar
Language: English
Street Date: December 1, 2010
TCIN: 1010864226
UPC: 9780820337883
Item Number (DPCI): 247-06-5943
Origin: Made in the USA or Imported
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