Roy F. Fox

Facing the Sky


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      Praise for Facing the Sky

      More than a poultice for the psyche, Facing the Sky shows how composing in words and images mitigates trauma, heals on multiple levels, and makes us better functioning humans, as well as more deeply humane. This book demonstrates that when we nurture the voice we nurture the world and shows us how. It is a book for all of us who must sometime, somewhere, at some critical moment hold another’s soul in our hands. Read. Reap.

      —Susan Hudson, Boise, Idaho

      For teachers and future teachers of writing, Facing the Sky is an invaluable resource. By refocusing our attention on the role personal narrative plays in our lives, Fox encourages us to consider seriously what roles the “painfully honest” can, and should, play in our classrooms. Fox’s research reminds us of the necessity for our writing classrooms to be sites of emotional inquiry, catharsis, and community-building. This book asks us to consider how critical thinking and written fluency can be fostered when we give language to the images associated with trauma. In the process, Fox proposes a pedagogy concerned with and deriving from the very humanity of our students.

      —Benjamin Batzer, University of Iowa

      Roy Fox’s Facing the Sky: Composing through Trauma in Word and Image is an eloquent and timely homage to the power of expressive writing as a way to heal. This alone would be good reason to love this book, especially since Fox isn’t content with simply showing how word and image can be transformative; he also examines why this is so, and in the process we come to see the qualities of personal narratives that yield the most meaning for a writer, and in turn, provide teachers of writing with the tools to teach them. Facing the Sky makes the courageous claim that we should invite students to write about trauma, and not simply because it might help them to feel better but because it teaches them things about writing that they might not learn as well any other way. Drawing on cases studies, Fox charts the moves that experienced writers make as they use their expertise to go from recording their losses to making meaning from them. These are exactly the kind of intellectual practices that animate any act of inquiry. But here the writers are deeply motivated and especially receptive to seeing the ways language and image can be deployed in discovery. Whether it’s Kate trying to come to terms with the sudden death of her husband, or Lucy confronting breast cancer, each writer is inspired by her faith in writing as a way of discovering what she didn’t know she knew. But it’s a process that involves zigs and zags, and part of the drama of Facing the Sky is witnessing each writer switch between public and private writing, and even between genres, as she attempts to find the stories that yield understanding. Facing the Sky is an especially timely and welcome contribution to the conversation about the importance of narrative in writing instruction. It’s a book that challenges the Common Core’s diminishment of narrative writing as little more than a “technique.” On the contrary, Fox shows that it is a powerful method of analysis and reasoning that also bears the priceless gift of self-knowledge.

      —Bruce Ballenger, author of The Curious Researcher and The Curious Writer

      Lauer Series in Rhetoric and Composition

      Editors: Catherine Hobbs, Patricia Sullivan, Thomas Rickert, & Jennifer Bay

      The Lauer Series in Rhetoric and Composition honors the contributions Janice Lauer has made to the emergence of Rhetoric and Composition as a disciplinary study. It publishes scholarship that carries on Professor Lauer’s varied work in the history of written rhetoric, disciplinarity in composition studies, contemporary pedagogical theory, and written literacy theory and research.

      Books in the Series

      Facing the Sky: Composing through Trauma in Word and Image (Fox, 2016)

      Expel the Pretender: Rhetoric Renounced and the Politics of Style (Wiederhold, 2015)

      First-Year Composition: From Theory to Practice (Coxwell-Teague & Lunsford, 2014)

      Contingency, Immanence, and the Subject of Rhetoric (Richardson, 2013)

      Rewriting Success in Rhetoric & Composition Careers (Goodburn, LeCourt, Leverenz, 2012)

      Writing a Progressive Past: Women Teaching and Writing in the Progressive Era (Mastrangelo, 2012)

      Greek Rhetoric Before Aristotle, 2e, Rev. and Exp. Ed. (Enos, 2012)

      Rhetoric’s Earthly Realm: Heidegger, Sophistry, and the Gorgian Kairos (Miller) *Winner of the Olson Award for Best Book in Rhetorical Theory 2011

      Techne, from Neoclassicism to Postmodernism: Understanding Writing as a Useful, Teachable Art (Pender, 2011)

      Walking and Talking Feminist Rhetorics: Landmark Essays and Controversies (Buchanan & Ryan, 2010)

      Transforming English Studies: New Voices in an Emerging Genre (Ostergaard, Ludwig, & Nugent, 2009)

      Ancient Non-Greek Rhetorics (Lipson and Binkley, 2009)

      Roman Rhetoric: Revolution and the Greek Influence, Rev. and Exp Ed. (Enos, 2008)

      Stories of Mentoring: Theory and Praxis (Eble and Gaillet, 2008)

      Writers Without Borders: Writing and Teaching in Troubled Times (Bloom, 2008)

      1977: A Cultural Moment in Composition (Henze, Selzer, and Sharer, 2008)

      The Promise and Perils of Writing Program Administration (Enos & Borrowman, 2008)

      Untenured Faculty as Writing Program Administrators: Institutional Practices and Politics, (Dew and Horning, 2007)

      Networked Process: Dissolving Boundaries of Process and Post-Process (Foster, 2007)

      Composing a Community: A History of Writing Across the Curriculum (McLeod and Soven, 2006)

      Historical Studies of Writing Program Administration: Individuals, Communities, and the Formation of a Discipline (L’Eplattenier and Mastrangelo, 2004). Winner of the WPA Best Book Award for 2004–2005.

      Rhetorics, Poetics, and Cultures: Refiguring College English Studies Exp. Ed. (Berlin, 2003)

      Facing the Sky

      Composing through Trauma in

      Word and Image

      Roy F. Fox

      Foreword by Peter Elbow

      Parlor Press

      Anderson, South Carolina

      www.parlorpress.com

      Parlor Press LLC, Anderson, South Carolina, USA

      © 2016 by Parlor Press

      All rights reserved.

      Printed in the United States of America

      S A N: 2 5 4 - 8 8 7 9

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Names: Fox, Roy F., author.

      Title: Facing the sky : composing through trauma in word and image / Roy F.

      Fox ; foreword by Peter Elbow.

      Description: Anderson, South Carolina : Parlor Press, [2016] | Includes

      bibliographical references and index.

      Identifiers: LCCN 2015044950 (print) | LCCN 2015045388 (ebook) | ISBN

      9781602354494 (pbk. : alk. paper) | ISBN 9781602354500 (hardcover : alk.

      paper) | ISBN 9781602354517 (pdf) | ISBN 9781602354524 (epub) | ISBN

      9781602354531 ( ibook) | ISBN 9781602354548 (Kindle)

      Subjects: LCSH: Creative writing--Therapeutic use.

      Classification: LCC RC489.W75 F69 2016 (print) | LCC RC489.W75 (ebook) | DDC

      615.8/516--dc23

      LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2015044950