04-22-94 Lecture on Teenage Writing PROFESSOR WILL LECTURE ON HOW TEENAGE GIRLS USE WRITING COLUMBUS -- The letters, notes and diaries written by teenagers about their everyday life can be a useful resource for creative problem-solving. Amy Shuman, associate professor of English at The Ohio State University, will deliver a free, public lecture on this topic on Thursday, May 5, at 7:30 p.m. at Ohio State's Black Studies Community Extension Center, 905 Mt. Vernon Ave. The title of Shuman's lecture is "Get Outta My Face: Everyday Uses of Writing Among African-American Teenage Girls." Shuman studied the uses of everyday writing in an inner-city school attended by African-American, Puerto Rican-American and Anglo-American students. She will discuss the students' reaction to newspaper reports about racial violence at the school following an incident between two African-American girls. She will compare the letters that students wrote to the newspaper with other writing and stories about fights at the school. At the heart of these forms of communication is a powerful adolescent moral system for determining who has the right to talk about whom, according to Shuman. This moral system can lead to either violence or willingness to work toward a greater good. The stories, told and written, about life in the neighborhood and school may be used as a resource for creative problem-solving. This lecture is the last in a series which commemorates the 25th anniversary of Ohio State's College of Humanities. For more information on the lecture, contact Gail Summerhill in the College of Humanities at 292-1882. # [Submitted by: GERSTNER (gerstner@ccgate.ucomm.ohio-state.edu) Fri, 22 Apr 1994 09:05:01 -0500 (EST)] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.