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10 Cardozo Arts & Ent. L.J. 681 (1991-1992)
Collaborative Authorship and the Teaching of Writing

handle is hein.journals/caelj10 and id is 691 raw text is: COLLABORATIVE AUTHORSHIP AND THE
TEACHING OF WRITING
ANDREA A. LUNSFORD* AND LISA EDE**
The concepts of author and authorship, so radically destab-
lized in contemporary literary theory-and in current discursive
practice in fields as far removed as engineering and law-have
also been problematized in the field of rhetoric and composition
studies, where scholars have challenged the traditional exclusion
of student writing from claims to real writing and author-
ship, explored the ways in which authority is experienced by stu-
dent writers, and increasingly sought to map various models of
composing processes.
Beginning with a 1983 essay called Why Write ... Together?,'
we have attempted to add to this conversation by probing the
concept of authorship that informs the teaching of writing in the
United States. We began this research guided by the following
questions:
1. What specific features distinguish the processes of collabora-
tive authorship from those of single authorship? Can these
features or processes be linked to any features of the result-
ing products? In short, how can we best define collaborative
authorship?
2. Is there a limit to how many people can write together? Are
projects such as the Oxford English Dictionary, the Bible, the
Short Title Catalogue, elaborate computer programs, encyclo-
pedias-all often involving more than 100 authors-exam-
ples of collaborative authorship?
3. In what ways, if any, does collaborative authorship affect the
way we view the traditional writer-audience relationship?
4. What epistemological implications does collaborative author-
ship hold for traditional notions of creativity and originality?
5. How might the ethics of collaborative authorship be ex-
amined and defined? In cases of group authorship, where
* Professor of English, Ohio State University. B.A., 1963, M.A., 1965, University of
Florida; Ph.D., 1977, Ohio State University.
** Professor of English, Oregon State University. B.S., 1969, Ohio State University;
M.A., 1970, Unviersity of Wisconsin; Ph.D., 1974, Ohio State University.
I Lisa Ede & Andrea A. Lunsford, Why Write ... Together?, 1 RHETORIC REV. 150
(1983).

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