Julie Lindquist
FacultyWriting, Rhetoric, and CulturesRhetoric and WritingFirst Year WritingProfessional and Public Writing
Professor
Director of First-Year Writing
Biography
My enduring interests have been related to language, class, culture, and educational access. My first major project was an ethnographic study of political rhetoric in a working-class bar; I have since published books and articles on the relationship of langauge and culture to literacy and writing pedagogy. For the past few years, I have been working with Bump Halbritter and others on a long-term project that combines life history and literacy research with appraoches to video documentary (LiteracyCorps Michigan). This research is inspired by, and finds application in, my current work as Director of the First-Year writing program at MSU.
Research Areas
Cultural Rhetorics, Literacy, Qualitative Methods, Writing Pedagogy
Projects
Time, Lives, and Videotape: Operationalizing Discovery in Scenes of Literacy Sponsorship
“Time, Lives, and Videotape: Operationalizing Discovery in Scenes of Literacy Sponsorship.” With Bump Halbritter. College English (November 2012). Selected for the Richard Ohmann Outstanding Article College English Award for 2013.
Time to Grow them: Practicing Slow Research in a Fast Field
“Time to Grow them: Practicing Slow Research in a Fast Field.” JAC: A Journal of Composition Theory. 32: 3 & 4 (2012).
Class Affects, Classroom Affectations: Working Through the Paradoxes of Strategic Empathy
“Class Affects, Classroom Affectations: Working Through the Paradoxes of Strategic Empathy.” College English 67 (2): November 2004.
The Elements of Literacy
The Elements of Literacy. With David Seitz. Longman/Pearson. 2008.
A Place to Stand: Politics and Persuasion in a Working-Class Bar
A Place to Stand: Politics and Persuasion in a Working-Class Bar. New York: Oxford, 2002.( Reviewed in Language and Society, Anthropology and Humanism, Linguistic Anthropology, and College English.)