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Volume 6 Call

CCCC at 75 Years
Engaging Our Abundant Past, Present, and Future

Guest Editors: Jennifer Sano-Franchini & Donnie Johnson Sackey

Call as PDF


The 2024 CCCC Annual Convention in Spokane, Washington, marks 75 years since the first CCCC was held in Chicago in April 1949. For more than the past seven decades, CCCC has adapted, developed, and changed given the evolving needs of its members and the changing contexts within which we work. For instance, this year marks the 50th anniversary of the landmark Students’ Right to Their Own Language, which was adopted at CCCC and published in CCC in 1974. In 1993, the organization took a significant step forward with the establishment of Scholars for the Dream, an initiative aimed at promoting diversity and equity within our field by supporting graduate students from underrepresented backgrounds. In 2014, CCCC further cemented its commitment to honoring excellence and promoting diversity with the institutions of the Anzaldúa Rhetorician Award, which recognizes the promise of graduate students who push disciplinary boundaries by making meaning out of sexual and gender minority experiences. In 2015, there was an effort to extend CCCC’s capacity as a trusted public voice on issues of writing and writing instruction, leading to the creation of the Emergent Research Award, which has since provided vital support to projects that address pressing societal challenges and contribute to the public discourse on literacy. Today, CCCC offers numerous Research Grants and Travel Awards in an effort to support members’ ability to conduct cutting edge research and to attend the in-person annual convention. In addition to these initiatives, CCCC has had the privilege of elevating 33 exemplars, individuals whose exceptional teaching, research, scholarship, and service to the profession have left an indelible mark on the discipline. Yet these important moments remain only a snapshot of the history of the organization.

For 75 years, CCCC has served as a platform for sharing transformational research, discussing teaching and learning strategies in changing times, considering emerging research trends, and nurturing interdisciplinary dialogue. To recognize and reflect upon these milestones, as well as to examine the spaces between and around them, we invite short essays, retrospectives and reflections, conversations, photo essays, and other multimodal pieces that speak to CCCC at 75 years. These pieces may touch upon any number of questions and topics, including but not limited to:

I. Histories

CCCC Organizational Histories 

CCCC Rhetorical Histories

II. CCCC in 2024

III. Looking to the Future

Spark is the ideal journal for this special issue, not only because of its online and openly accessible and multimodal format and its scholar-activist ethos, but also because it emerged from a CCCC initiative, where graduate student members saw a concern with the Convention and moved toward action. Ultimately, we hope to not only encourage reflection on the organization and its history, but also to create an opportunity that might benefit teacher-scholars in the field, whether or not they are able to attend the 2024 CCCC Annual Convention.

Formats 

Submitting a Proposal

Send your 200-word proposal to Jennifer Sano-Franchini (jennifer.sano-franchini@mail.wvu.edu) and Donnie Johnson Sackey (donnie.sackey@austin.utexas.edu) by Tuesday, April 30, 2024. In your proposal, please include your title, format, and a description of the piece, including how it connects to the special issue theme of CCCC at 75 Years.

Projected Timeline

CFP shared: Tuesday, April 2, 2024
Proposals due (200-words): Tuesday, April 30, 2024
Decisions sent: Tuesday, May 7, 2024
Full drafts due: Thursday, September 5, 2024
Reviews sent: Monday, December 2, 2024
Revisions due: Wednesday, February 7, 2025
Copyediting, proofing, and processing: February–March 2025
Special issue released: April 2025

Works Consulted

Bird, Nancy Kenney. The Conference on College Composition and Communication: A Historical Study of Its Continuing Education and Professionalization Activities, 1949-1975. Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 1977.

Blackmon, Samantha, Cristina Kirklighter, and Steve Parks. Listening to Our Elders: Working and Writing for Change. Utah State University Press, 2011.

Davis, Marianna W. History of the Black Caucus of the National Council of Teachers of English. National Council of Teachers of English, 1994.

Faber, Brenton. “Rhetoric in Competition: The Formation of Organizational Discourse in Conference on College Composition and Communication Abstracts.” Written Communication 13.3 (1996): 355–384.

García, Romeo, and Iris Ruiz, eds. Viva Nuestro Caucus: Rewriting the Forgotten Pages of Our Caucus. Parlor Press, 2019.

Lindemann, Erika. Reading the Past, Writing the Future: A Century of American Literacy Education and the National Council of Teachers of English. National Council of Teachers of English, 2010.

Royster, Jacqueline Jones, and Jean C. Williams. “History in the Spaces Left: African American Presence and Narratives of Composition Studies.” College Composition and Communication 50.4 (1999): 563–84.

Sano-Franchini, Jennifer, Terese Guinsatao Monberg, and K. Hyoejin Yoon, eds. Building a Community, Having a Home: A History of the Conference on College Composition and Communication Asian/Asian American Caucus. Parlor Press, 2017.

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