Description

Book Synopsis
The Flowering of a Tradition, which describes the development of technical, or practical, writing in England during the seventeenth century, from 1641 to 1700, follows Emergence of a Tradition, which tracks the emergence of English technical writing from 1475 to 1640, during the English Renaissance. Together, the books present the emergence and development of technical writing in England from 1475 to 1700 by describing and exemplifying the main characteristics and genres of technical writing as they appeared and flowered. Topics include format and page design; recognition of readers' needs in content and presentation; plain style; technical description; technical writing's contribution to the development of the paragraph; text and the use of technology in technical writing; the history of instructions; and the emergence and development of proposals and reports. The two books cover the major topics that continue to form the foundation of the teaching and practice of technical writing and help define the history of practical discourse during approximately 300 years of English history. The history of technical, or practical, writing has not yet been written, and these two books fill a major deficiency in the history of English technical writing. Chapters on the history of the proposal and the history of reports deal with topics never before researched. The chapter on the history of the paragraph shows that paragraphs existed 300 years before composition historians have stated, because technical writing has not been included in studies of the history of English discourse. Even though the majority of English writing is practical writing in any era, it continues to be ignored by social and literary historians. Only book-length studies of the type published here will fill this void. Technical writing will not become a discipline unless we have a series of books providing a clear foundation that unearths its existence and shows its contribution to all of our writing today, in the workplace and other nonacademic settings.

Table of Contents

Preface

Acknowledgments

CHAPTER 1.
Industry, the History of Trades, and the Development of Technical Writing

CHAPTER 2.
The Evolution of English Plain Style in the 17th Century: A Confluence of Sound, Format, Diction, Syntax, and Purpose

CHAPTER 3.
Technical Writing and the Development of the English Paragraph, 1473–1700

CHAPTER 4.
Format, Page Design, and the Visual Display of Information: The Contribution of Renaissance English Technical Writing

CHAPTER 5.
Instructions: The Oldest Form of Technical Writing—Tracking the Shift From Oral to Textual Instructions in English Estate Management Documents, 1200–1700

CHAPTER 6.
Technical Writing in Renaissance and 17th Century Shipwrightery: From Orality to Textuality

CHAPTER 7.
Emergence of Proposals in England: 13th–17th Centuries

CHAPTER 8.
Emergence of Reports in England, 1475–1700

CHAPTER 9.
Reflections, Perspectives, and Research Recommendations

Index

The Flowering of a Tradition

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    A Paperback by Elizabeth Tebeaux

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      Publisher: Baywood Publishing Company Inc
      Publication Date: 12/30/2014 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780895038449, 978-0895038449
      ISBN10: 0895038447

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The Flowering of a Tradition, which describes the development of technical, or practical, writing in England during the seventeenth century, from 1641 to 1700, follows Emergence of a Tradition, which tracks the emergence of English technical writing from 1475 to 1640, during the English Renaissance. Together, the books present the emergence and development of technical writing in England from 1475 to 1700 by describing and exemplifying the main characteristics and genres of technical writing as they appeared and flowered. Topics include format and page design; recognition of readers' needs in content and presentation; plain style; technical description; technical writing's contribution to the development of the paragraph; text and the use of technology in technical writing; the history of instructions; and the emergence and development of proposals and reports. The two books cover the major topics that continue to form the foundation of the teaching and practice of technical writing and help define the history of practical discourse during approximately 300 years of English history. The history of technical, or practical, writing has not yet been written, and these two books fill a major deficiency in the history of English technical writing. Chapters on the history of the proposal and the history of reports deal with topics never before researched. The chapter on the history of the paragraph shows that paragraphs existed 300 years before composition historians have stated, because technical writing has not been included in studies of the history of English discourse. Even though the majority of English writing is practical writing in any era, it continues to be ignored by social and literary historians. Only book-length studies of the type published here will fill this void. Technical writing will not become a discipline unless we have a series of books providing a clear foundation that unearths its existence and shows its contribution to all of our writing today, in the workplace and other nonacademic settings.

      Table of Contents

      Preface

      Acknowledgments

      CHAPTER 1.
      Industry, the History of Trades, and the Development of Technical Writing

      CHAPTER 2.
      The Evolution of English Plain Style in the 17th Century: A Confluence of Sound, Format, Diction, Syntax, and Purpose

      CHAPTER 3.
      Technical Writing and the Development of the English Paragraph, 1473–1700

      CHAPTER 4.
      Format, Page Design, and the Visual Display of Information: The Contribution of Renaissance English Technical Writing

      CHAPTER 5.
      Instructions: The Oldest Form of Technical Writing—Tracking the Shift From Oral to Textual Instructions in English Estate Management Documents, 1200–1700

      CHAPTER 6.
      Technical Writing in Renaissance and 17th Century Shipwrightery: From Orality to Textuality

      CHAPTER 7.
      Emergence of Proposals in England: 13th–17th Centuries

      CHAPTER 8.
      Emergence of Reports in England, 1475–1700

      CHAPTER 9.
      Reflections, Perspectives, and Research Recommendations

      Index

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