Transforming Texts
- 1 April 1990
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Written Communication
- Vol. 7 (2) , 256-287
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0741088390007002004
Abstract
This article considers the complex processes involved in readers' and writers' construction of textual meaning: how people construct meaning from texts through reading and for texts through writing. Building meaning through reading entails organizing, selecting, and connecting. Readers use previously acquired knowledge to operate on textual cues, organizing mental representations that include material they select from the text and connect with material they generate. This constructivist characterization of the reading process extends also to literate acts in which people are writers as well as readers, those acts in which they compose texts by drawing from textual sources. To meet their discourse goals, writers perform textual transformations associated with the operations of organizing, selecting, and connecting as they appropriate source material for uses in different communicative contexts. They dismantle source texts and reconfigure content they select from these sources, and they interweave the source material with content they generate from stored knowledge. The article describes the kinds of transformations that occur through reading and writing, and proposes a way to think about tasks that invite writers to transform extant texts. Theoretical issues are raised, and suggestions are made for further research.Keywords
This publication has 64 references indexed in Scilit:
- Novelty in Academic WritingWritten Communication, 1989
- The role of encoding and retrieval processes in the recall of textDiscourse Processes, 1986
- Expanding Roles for Summarized InformationWritten Communication, 1985
- The Composing Process of College Students Writing from SourcesWritten Communication, 1985
- The Social Construction of Two Biologists' ProposalsWritten Communication, 1985
- Physicists Reading PhysicsWritten Communication, 1985
- Research on the Composing ProcessReview of Educational Research, 1983
- Role of rhetorical structure in text comprehension.Journal of Educational Psychology, 1982
- Frameworks for Comprehending DiscourseAmerican Educational Research Journal, 1977
- Communicating Technical InformationAmerican Journal of Physics, 1968