Transforming Student Literacies: Three Feminists
(Re)Teach Reading, Writing, and Speaking
by Amy Spangler Gerald, Kathleen
Mcevoy, and Pamela Whitfield
In her 1974 essay "Toward a Woman-Centered
University" Adrienne Rich notes that, contrary
to popular belief, American universities are
not bastions of free thought but patriarchal
institutions that reinforce negative aspects
of society, such as aggressive competition,
domination, hierarchies of power, and gender
inequity. Female and male students alike are
not encouraged to think for themselves but
are indoctrinated into these traditional values
of academia. Thirty years later Rich's concerns
are still relevant and even more urgent because
of the tremendous rhetorical force of
the patriarchal status quo and the influence
of the corporate mentality that stresses training
over critical thinking. Today, we answer
Rich's call for a woman-centered university by
using tenets of feminist pedagogy to open our
students' minds, teaching them to be resisting
readers, critical writers, and empowered
speakers. These skills enable our students to
do more than memorize unquestioned information;
students become the kind of critical
thinkers and rhetors who excel across disciplines
inside and outside the academy.
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