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Those are key names for me too. I met them all at the deer-in-a-bottle conference in Fredericton early on : was it 1992?

Russ Hunt not only helped start things happening in the 1980s, but also kept them going through the next decades. One good idea he put into action was the Inkshed listserv. For years, it was a lifeline for me and others scattered across the country. He also created and maintained the Inkshed website until 2011. Russ, I miss seeing you at conferences!

And speaking of Jim Reither, Louise Wetherbee Phelps does just that in the newest book from Inkshed Publishing, Cross-Border Networks in Writing Studies. Her chapter focusses on Reither as one of the "Four Scholars, Four Genres" central to the development of discourse and writing studies in Canada through his editorship of the Inkshed newsletter. "This humble genre, the organizational newsletter," as she calls it, has a lot to account for.

Margaret


On 4/10/2017 5:27 PM, Paré, Anthony wrote:
[log in to unmask]">
Sorry to jump in here again, but it would be horribly remiss of us not to
mention the central role of Russ Hunt and Jim Reither, especially, and
Doug Vipond and Thom Parkhill as well, in the founding of Inkshed.

They are responsible for helping to set in motion a million good ideas.

Anthony 



On 2017-04-10, 2:11 PM, "casll-l: Canadian Association for the Study of
Language and	      Learning (Inkshed) on behalf of Russell Hunt"
<[log in to unmask] on behalf of [log in to unmask]> wrote:

As someone who goes all the way back with Inkshed, I too would like to
thank all the people over the years who've pushed my thinking and writing
-- and reading -- and made a profound difference to my teaching, and my
life.

I imagine some people will remember that I've been saying, off and on,
since about Inkshed 25, that it seemed to me about time to recognize
that, as Anthony says, all things, etc. I do sort of wish we'd found a
way to put it in a longboat and set it out to sea aflame. You can't
always get what you want.

But if you try sometimes you can get what you need, and Inkshed was, for
most of my professional life, what I needed. My gratitude will last as
long as I do.

-- Russ

(May I add that I agree with Brock and the Board -- and, I expect,
everybody else-- that keeping as much of the record archived as we can
would be a good thing. When the CASLL-L list is shut down, I'd be happy
to do whatever I can to help make sure all these conversations over the
decades are accessible to posterity.)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
     To leave the list, send a SIGNOFF CASLL-L command to
[log in to unmask] or, if you experience difficulties,
        write to Russ Hunt at [log in to unmask]

       To view or search the list archives, go to
  https://listserv.utoronto.ca/cgi-bin/wa?A0=CASLL-L
                   -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      To leave the list, send a SIGNOFF CASLL-L command to
 [log in to unmask] or, if you experience difficulties,
         write to Russ Hunt at [log in to unmask]

        To view or search the list archives, go to
   https://listserv.utoronto.ca/cgi-bin/wa?A0=CASLL-L
                    -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-


-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- To leave the list, send a SIGNOFF CASLL-L command to [log in to unmask] or, if you experience difficulties, write to Russ Hunt at [log in to unmask]

To view or search the list archives, go to https://listserv.utoronto.ca/cgi-bin/wa?A0=CASLL-L -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-