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Movement, sensibilities, and desire: Coming to know affective dimensions of adolescents experiences with literacy and new media in school, on their own, and in the hospital

Although making digital media involves movements of bodies, materials, and, often, mobile technologies, most literacy research on adolescents experiences with digital media relies on screened and sedentary perspectives rooted in representation and multimodalityperspectives that elide or distort the role of embodiment. This dissertation critiques the overemphasis on screens, texts, and representation in literacy studies across three empirical papers. Each paper addresses unique questions around literacy as an affective experience of human bodies through ethnographic and micro-ethnographic investigations in (1) a public school, (2) a southeastern community, and (3) a childrens hospital school. Paper 1 illustrates how adolescents physical mobilities and affective histories connect to their agency and development as producers of digital texts in urban schools. Paper 2 describes how the feeling of meaning-making with digital devices involves historically, culturally, and affectively developed sensibilities that emerge as bodies make sense of people, places and things as semiotic material. Paper 3 builds a theory of literacy moments, or the feeling of being in something while engaged in social, textual production. In its attempts at coming to know affective dimensions of social life, this dissertation also develops tension around what it means to know and warrant claims about moving, feeling bodies other than our own.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VANDERBILT/oai:VANDERBILTETD:etd-03222015-144849
Date06 April 2015
CreatorsEhret, Christian Michael
ContributorsDr. Kevin Leander, Dr. Deborah Wells Rowe, Dr. Barbara S. Stengel, Dr. John M. Sloop, Dr. Jay L. Lemke
PublisherVANDERBILT
Source SetsVanderbilt University Theses
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
Sourcehttp://etd.library.vanderbilt.edu/available/etd-03222015-144849/
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