Translation of : They say / I say : the moves that matter in academic writing.
Preface. Demystifying academic conversation -- Introduction. Entering the conversation -- Part 1. "They say". "They say" : starting with what others are saying -- "Her point is" : the art of summarizing -- "As he himself puts it" : the art of quoting -- Part 2. "I say". "Yes/No/Okay, but" : three ways to respond -- "And yet" : distinguishing what you say from what they say -- "Skeptics may object" : planting a naysayer in your text -- "So what? Who cares?" : saying why it matters -- Part 3. Tying it all together. "As a result" : connecting the parts -- "You mean I can just say it that way?" : academic writing doesn't mean setting aside your own voice -- "But don't get me wrong" : the art of metacommentary -- "He says contends" : using the templates to revise -- Part 4. In specific academic contexts. "I take your point" : entering class discussions -- "Don't make them scroll up" : entering online conversations -- "What's motivating this writer?" : reading for the conversation -- "On closer examination" : entering conversations about literature -- "The data suggest" : writing in the sciences -- "Analyze this" : writing in the social sciences -- Readings. Don't blame the eater / David Zinczenko ; Hidden intellectualism / Gerald Graff ; "Rise of the Machines" is not a likely future / Michael Littman ; The new Jim Crow : mass incarceration in the age of colorblindness / Michelle Alexander ; Everything that rises must converge / Flannery O'Connor.
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English language -- Rhetoric.Persuasion (Rhetoric).Report writing.