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 · Walter J. Ong's "psychodynamics" of orality, and contrast them with the charactenstics of written discourse in a more thoroughly textual- ized society. Ong argues that the discourse

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Page 1:  · Walter J. Ong's "psychodynamics" of orality, and contrast them with the charactenstics of written discourse in a more thoroughly textual- ized society. Ong argues that the discourse
Page 2:  · Walter J. Ong's "psychodynamics" of orality, and contrast them with the charactenstics of written discourse in a more thoroughly textual- ized society. Ong argues that the discourse
Page 3:  · Walter J. Ong's "psychodynamics" of orality, and contrast them with the charactenstics of written discourse in a more thoroughly textual- ized society. Ong argues that the discourse
Page 4:  · Walter J. Ong's "psychodynamics" of orality, and contrast them with the charactenstics of written discourse in a more thoroughly textual- ized society. Ong argues that the discourse
Page 5:  · Walter J. Ong's "psychodynamics" of orality, and contrast them with the charactenstics of written discourse in a more thoroughly textual- ized society. Ong argues that the discourse
Page 6:  · Walter J. Ong's "psychodynamics" of orality, and contrast them with the charactenstics of written discourse in a more thoroughly textual- ized society. Ong argues that the discourse
Page 7:  · Walter J. Ong's "psychodynamics" of orality, and contrast them with the charactenstics of written discourse in a more thoroughly textual- ized society. Ong argues that the discourse
Page 8:  · Walter J. Ong's "psychodynamics" of orality, and contrast them with the charactenstics of written discourse in a more thoroughly textual- ized society. Ong argues that the discourse
Page 9:  · Walter J. Ong's "psychodynamics" of orality, and contrast them with the charactenstics of written discourse in a more thoroughly textual- ized society. Ong argues that the discourse
Page 10:  · Walter J. Ong's "psychodynamics" of orality, and contrast them with the charactenstics of written discourse in a more thoroughly textual- ized society. Ong argues that the discourse