Amy J. Devitt
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Amy J. Devitt (born 1955) (Ph.D., University of Michigan, 1982) is an American scholar and educator most known for her work in
genre studies Genre studies is an academic subject which studies genre theory as a branch of general critical theory in several different fields, including art, literature, linguistics, rhetoric and composition studies. Literary genre studies is a structu ...
, writing pedagogy, and professional writing. She is
Professor Emerita ''Emeritus'' (; female: ''emerita'') is an adjective used to designate a retired chair, professor, pastor, bishop, pope, director, president, prime minister, rabbi, emperor, or other person who has been "permitted to retain as an honorary title ...
of English (retired) at the University of Kansas where she taught since 1985, most notably as Chancellor's Club Teaching Professor (2007-2020), Frances Stiles Teaching Professor (2012-2015), and Conger-Gables Teaching Professor (2001-2004). Her teaching awards also include the first Kemper Teaching Fellow and the Byron A. Alexander Outstanding Graduate Mentor Award. She is the author or coauthor of three books and over 25 academic articles and chapters as well as co-editor (with Carolyn Miller) of the book ''Landmark Essays on Rhetorical Genre Studies''.


Biography


Education

Devitt earned a B.A. in English from Trinity University (Texas) in 1977, an M.A. in English Literature and Composition from University of Kansas in 1979, and a Ph.D. in English Language and Literature from the University of Michigan in 1982.


Teaching and professional experience

After graduating from the University of Michigan with a Ph.D in English, Devitt worked as an Assistant Professor of English at the
University of Tulsa The University of Tulsa (TU) is a private research university in Tulsa, Oklahoma. It has a historic affiliation with the Presbyterian Church and the campus architectural style is predominantly Collegiate Gothic. The school traces its origin to ...
from 1982-1985. Devitt then joined the English department at the University of Kansas, where she had earned her M.A. in 1985, and taught there until her retirement in 2020.


Research impact

As one of the founders of Rhetorical Genre Studies, Devitt is known as contributing the evolution of genres and the relation to language change,A. Devitt (1989). ''Standardizing Written English: Diffusion in the Case of Scotland 1520-1659''. Cambridge:Cambridge University Press. introducing the concept of genre sets, clarifying the reciprocal relationship between formal genre markers and recognition of genre activity, and elaborating the pedagogic implications of genre awareness and antecedent genres. These contributions have been documented by scholars Anis Bawarshi and Mary Jo Reiff and recognized in the substantial citation of her work.


Professional contributions


Major publications


Books

''Standardizing Written English: Diffusion in the Case of Scotland 1520-1659'' (1989), presents a new perspective on the process of linguistic standardization. It demonstrates, through empirical research and theoretical arguments, how language standards spread over time gradually, with significant variation, and at different rates in different genres. Its particular case study is of English written in Scotland in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, as the standard was shifting for socio-political reasons from a Scots-English to Anglo-English set of norms. Variation across genres proved as statistically significant as variation across a century and a half, attributable to the contextual variables underlying different genres. Standardization proves a gradual and highly variable process influenced by social and political contexts. ''Writing Genres'' (2004) offers a comprehensive view of genre as a rhetorical concept and as an influence on what and how people write. Drawing from rhetorical, linguistic, and literary research and scholarship, chapters explore genre in its social settings and contexts, how genres change, genre norms and creativity, literary genres, and ways of teaching genres through genre awareness and antecedent genres. It argues for a fuller understanding of genre as context as well as form, offering insights into the tensions between stability and flexibility, standardization and innovation, conformity and critique. ''Scenes of Writing: Strategies for Composing with Genres'' with Mary Jo Reiff and Anis Bawarshi (2004, reissued 2018) was an early textbook to apply rhetorical genre theory to the teaching of writing. It leads students in analyzing the rhetorical situations of any genre in order to understand any genre they write, to write their own texts more effectively, and to make their own critical decisions about whether and how to conform or innovate within a genre. After teaching the process for any genre, the text guides students through academic, workplace, and public genres they may write.


Articles and chapters

“Generalizing about Genre: New Conceptions of an Old Concept” (1993) argues for a shift within writing studies from treating genre as a formal convention to seeing it as a constructor of rhetorical situation and context. The implications for teachers and students of writing include that assigning or choosing a genre carries with it expected purposes and audiences as well as rhetorically meaningful textual expectations. Peter Vandenberg has called this article "germinal" and introducing this new concept of genre to the mainstream composition world. “Intertextuality in Tax Accounting: Generic, Referential, and Functional” (1991) examines the complex interactions of texts and genres within a community as they function to fulfill the community’s needs and reinforce its values. Based on empirical and contextual analysis of texts and interviews, it reports the results of a study on the writing done by tax accountants, examining how the texts within a professional community define and shape the work of that community. Those genres work together as a genre set to define, construct, and perform the work that needs to be done. “Genre ''for'' Social Action: Transforming Worlds through Genre Awareness and Action” (2021) argues that critical genre awareness can and should lead to critical genre action. It suggests and briefly illustrates four ways to use genres not just ''and'' but ''for'' social action: genre mindfulness, resistance, revision, and creation.A. Devitt (2021). Genre for Social Action: Transforming Worlds Through Genre Awareness and Action. Genre in the climate debate (pp. 17-33). DeGruyter Open Poland https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9788395720499/html?lang=en


References                                                               


External links


Professional website, including C.V., and blog, Genre-Colored Glasses

Google Scholar profile

ORCID profile
{{DEFAULTSORT:Devitt, Amy J. 21st-century American academics Rhetoric theorists Living people University of Michigan alumni Trinity University (Texas) alumni University of Kansas alumni University of Kansas faculty 1955 births