Multigenre:
An Introduction
"A multigenre paper arises
from research, experience, and imagination. It is not an uninterrupted,
expository monolog nor a seamless narrative nor a collection of poems. A
multigenre paper is composed of many genres and subgenres, each piece
self-contained, making a point of its own, yet connected by theme or topic and
sometimes by language, images, and content. In addition to many genres, a
multigenre paper may also contain many voices, not just the author's. The trick
is to make such a paper hang together."
(Romano, Blending Genre, Altering
Style i-xi)
Multigenre writing
projects respond to contemporary conceptions of genre, audience, voice,
arrangement and style by enabling students to tap into their knowledge about
new media literacies, rich rhetorical situations, and the multiple perspectives
that are inherent in any writing activity.
In short,
multigenre projects entail a series of generic documents that are linked by a
central premise, theme, or goal. They may forward an argument, trace a history,
or offer multiple interpretations of a text or event. They are rigorous forms
of writing, involving many elements of a traditional papers: coherence and
organization, purpose and aim of discourse, audience awareness, and
conventional appropriateness. As Nancy Mack explains, multigenre writing:
- Presents multiple, even conflicting perspectives of one event or topic.
- Provides a rich context for an event or topic.
- Demonstrates sophisticated understanding of audience needs and interests.
- Permits meaning to dictate form, rather than vice versa.
- Demonstrates a sophisticated knowledge of various genres and uses of language.
- Integrates factual information into a meaningful text, verses copying or simply recall.
- Permits the author to highlight personal interests and special expertise.
- Stimulates critical analysis and higher-level thinking skills.
- Makes coherence and unity a genuine rhetorical problem to be solved.
- Requires research skills and knowledge of source documentation.
- Can make full use of new media literacies.
- Is almost impossible to plagiarize.
- Results in an interesting, engaging product.
- Demands careful reading and response.
Multigenre writing
is thus informed by a multitude of rhetorical considerations including a
complex understanding of genre theory.
For additional
information, see the following links:
- Planning and Assessment Handout (by Nancy Mack): http://www.wright.edu/%7Enancy.mack/handouts/mgplanning.pdf
- Sample MGs: http://clem.mscd.edu/~kuhnc/portfolio.htm
- Bibliography: http://fp.okstate.edu/efolio/johnson/johnson_pathfinder_multigenre.htm
- Assessment: http://www.americandreamer.net/bushwb/honorweb/multigen/mgrubric.html
Adapted from “Multigenre: An
Introduction” by Lisa Langstraat.
http://writing.colostate.edu/gallery/multigenre/introduction.htm . Accessed 13
January 2013.
http://writing.colostate.edu/gallery/multigenre/introduction.htm . Accessed 13
January 2013.
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