Blog Post #8 - Brittany Means


Brian Goedde’s case study of his writing center student Lorraine held a lot of significance for me as a Mexican American. When I was in middle school and high school, I also tried to separate myself from the image of a culture stigmatized in the United States. The difference for me was that I tried to deny that part of my identity entirely, causing me years of grief. So this was a difficult reading for me. But I felt pulled to a discussion of academic language as a tool for assimilation into a white world. I agreed with Goedde’s description of academic writing as “wordy and tedious.” Academic writing gets on my nerves, upsets my brain, and often takes too long and too much to say not very much at all. But my complaints with academic language go beyond that. The devices inherent in academic writing—removal of “I” statements, formal/“standard” language, no room for sensory description—effectively attempt to remove all subjectivity. To be unbiased, universal (essentially, to be affluent, white, and educated). I just don’t think this is possible, and an attempt to do so is an erasure of the fact that everyone is writing from a relevant positionality. I think removing an “I” from something, or any kind of recognition of one’s placement in the world. I am not interested in writing that wants to be removed from humanity.  

Comments

  1. It's interesting, because even as recently as the beginning of this semester, I discouraged the use of "I" in academic writing, but I think as I've reentered academia and reexamined some troubling implications of how longstanding academic operations, I'm coming around to agreeing with you, Brittany. I'm currently at a place where I wouldn't insist on a person using "I" in academic writing, but I also now believe that to insist a person NOT use "I" feels narrow-minded. The elimination of "I," as you point out, eliminates subjectivity of experience, which I think is the very thing academia should be fostering.

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