articleJournal of Literacy ResearchSep 1, 2002Closed access

Limits of the Local: Expanding Perspectives on Literacy as a Social Practice

University of Wisconsin–Madison

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Abstract

This essay reflects on how the social practice model of literacy, an approach that defines reading and writing as situated, social practices, under-theorizes certain aspects of literacy, making it hard to account fully for its workings in local contexts. We trace this theoretical blind spot to the ways that the social practice model was formulated as a challenge to the “Great Divide” or “autonomous” models of literacy. We suggest that in rejecting a conception of literacy as a deterministic force, the revisionists critique veers too far in a reactive direction. By exaggerating the power of local contexts to define the meaning and forms that literacy takes and by under-theorizing the potentials of the…

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726
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5.20
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100%
References
51
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Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Literacy
  • Critical literacy
  • Reading (process)
  • Situated
  • Social practice
  • Meaning (existential)
  • Sociology
  • Action (physics)
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Quality Education
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