Background
Katz, Steven Barry was born on October 27, 1953 in Albuquerque. Son of Elliot Saul and Leona Katz.
( Arguing for an oral theory of Reader Response Criticism...)
Arguing for an oral theory of Reader Response Criticism, Steven B. Katz conducts a philosophical investigation into the possibility and desirability of teaching reading and writing as rhetorical music. In the course of this investigation, Katz deals with New Physics, the sophists, Cicero, orality, epistemology, voice, writing, temporality, and sound. He demonstrates that Reader Response Criticismas part of a new sophistic that has entered the mainstream of pedagogy and practice in our cultureparallels the philosophy of science engendered by the Copenhagen school of New Physics, which theoretically holds that knowledge of subatomic phenomena is probable, relative, contingent, and uncertain, thus requiring more nonformalistic, nonrationalistic methods in understanding and reconstructing it; Katz shows how the same methods are required in the study of affect in reading and writing. Katz also demonstrates that, like New Physics, Reader Response Criticism, in its commitment to interpretation as the primary function and goal of writing about literature, must remain somewhat committed to the formalistic, rationalistic epistemology it seeks to redress. Basing his oral theory of Reader Response Criticism on notions of language as physical, sensuous, and musical and understanding reception as participatory performance rather that interpretation, Katz suggests a way to reconceptualize Reader Response Criticism. He accounts for "voice," "felt sense," "dissonance," and aesthetic response generally as it is created by the temporal, musical patterns of language, noting that the physical, musical dimension of language has been relatively neglected in contemporary movements in rhetoric, composition, and literature. Thus, set against the relationship between literature and science, especially between Reader Response Criticism and the philosophy of science engendered by New Physics, Katz examines the sophistic and Ciceronian conceptions of rhetoric. He reinterprets Cicero’s rhetorical theory in light of recent revisionist scholarship on the sophists and reevaluates his assigned position in rhetorical history as neo-Aristotelian by focusing on his oral notions of style as epistemic music. In so doing, Katz offers a new interpretation of Cicero within the sophistic tradition. Discussing the relationship between sophistic and Ciceronian conceptions of style as an oral, physical, nonrational, indirect form of knowledge and viewing philosophical conceptions of language as sensuous, temporal gestalten or "shapes" in consciousness, Katz suggests that response to and performance of the epistemic music of language can supplement analysis and interpretation in the teaching of reading and writing and can provide less formalistic, less rationalistic foundation for a reader response criticism as a new sophistic.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0809319039/?tag=2022091-20
( A rhetorical, multi-disciplinary guide, Writing in the ...)
A rhetorical, multi-disciplinary guide, Writing in the Sciences discusses the major genres of science writing including research reports, grant proposals, conference presentations, and a variety of forms of public communication. Multiple samples from real research cases illustrate a range of scientific disciplines and audiences for scientific research along with the corresponding differences in focus, arrangement, style, and other rhetorical dimensions. Comparisons among disciplines provide the opportunity for students to identify common conventions in science and investigate variation across fields.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0205616712/?tag=2022091-20
Katz, Steven Barry was born on October 27, 1953 in Albuquerque. Son of Elliot Saul and Leona Katz.
Bachelor, Michigan State University, 1977. Master of Arts, University Rhode Island, 1980. Doctor of Philosophy, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1988.
Instructor to associate professor English North Carolina State University, Raleigh, 1986—2004, director professional writing certified program, 1995—1997, 1999—2002, director Master of Science program technical communications, 1995—1998, professor, 2004—2006. Roy pearce professor Clemson University, South Carolina, since 2006, professional communicator, endowed chair.
( A rhetorical, multi-disciplinary guide, Writing in the ...)
( Arguing for an oral theory of Reader Response Criticism...)
Volunteer Against End World benefit. Member of Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (editor international and professional communication conference), Modern Language Association, National Communications Association, Association Teachers Technology Writing, Society Literature and Science, Science Fiction Poetry Association, Association Expanded Perspectives Learning, National Council Teachers English (award 1993), Rhetoric Society of America, International Society History Rhetoric (grantee 1999), Popular/American Culture Association.
Married Alison Burns, September 27, 1980. 1 child Jason Michael.