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Contribution to Book
Chapter 5. A Definition of Everyday Writing: Methods for a Writer-Informed Approach to Lifespan Writing
English Faculty Publications
  • Jeffrey Naftzinger, Sacred Heart University
Document Type
Book Chapter
Publication Date
1-1-2021
Abstract

This chapter suggests that everyday writing (EW), both the practice and the term, are valuable for studying writing through the lifespan for two major reasons. First, EW is the type of writing that is most often engaged in through the lifespan, but—in and out of the field—it is often overshadowed by academic and professional writing; turning our attention to EW can give us the opportunity to understand how most people use writing in the course of their daily lives. Second, the term EW helps non-academic and non-professional writers shift their perspectives of what writing is, what it does, and who counts as a writer; this shift makes the writers more aware of their own writing practices, makes them more apt to see themselves as writers, and makes them better understand how the writing they practice is, has been, and can be used throughout their lifespan.

Comments

Chapter in Approaches to Lifespan Writing Research: Generating Murmurations Towards an Actionable Coherence.

ISBN: 9781646421459 (pbk), 9781642151060 (ePub)

DOI
10.37514/PER-B.2020.1053.2.05
Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International
Citation Information

Naftzinger, J. (2021). A definition of everyday writing: Methods for a writer-informed approach to lifespan writing. In R. J. Dippre & T. Phillips (Eds.), Approaches to lifespan writing research: Generating an actionable coherence. WAC Clearinghouse. Doi: 10.37514/PER-B.2020.1053.2.05