Storied Charlotte
Storied Charlotte
  • Home
  • Storied Charlotte
  • Monday Missive

Contact Me

Office: Fretwell 290D
Phone: 704-687-0618
Email: miwest@uncc.edu

Links

  • A Reader’s Guide to Fiction and Nonfiction books by Charlotte area authors
  • Charlotte book art
  • Charlotte Lit
  • Charlotte Readers Podcast
  • Charlotte Writers Club
  • Column on Reading Aloud
  • Department of English
  • JFK/Harry Golden column
  • Park Road Books
  • Storied Charlotte YouTube channel
  • The Charlotte History Tool Kit
  • The Charlotte-Mecklenburg Story

Archives

  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • July 2021
  • June 2021
  • May 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • November 2020
  • October 2020
  • September 2020
  • August 2020
  • July 2020
  • June 2020
  • May 2020
  • April 2020
  • March 2020
  • February 2020
  • December 2019
  • November 2019
  • October 2019
  • September 2019
  • August 2019
  • July 2019
  • June 2019
  • May 2019
  • April 2019
  • March 2019
  • February 2019
  • January 2019
  • December 2018
  • November 2018
  • October 2018
  • September 2018
  • August 2018
  • July 2018
  • June 2018
  • May 2018
  • April 2018
  • March 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • December 2017
  • November 2017
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • August 2017
  • July 2017
  • June 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • December 2016
  • November 2016
  • October 2016
  • September 2016
  • August 2016
  • July 2016
  • June 2016
  • May 2016
  • April 2016
  • March 2016
  • February 2016
  • January 2016
  • December 2015
  • November 2015
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • September 2014
  • August 2014
  • July 2014
  • June 2014
  • May 2014
  • April 2014
  • March 2014
  • February 2014
  • January 2014
  • December 2013
  • November 2013

Monthly Archives: April 2019

Monday Missive - April 29, 2019

April 29, 2019 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive

Party Favors — Most people think of party favors as small gifts that are given to the guests at a party.  After the party is over, they can take these party favors home with them as mementos of the occasion.  I remember purchasing inexpensive toys that my wife and I gave away as party favors to the children who came to our son’s birthday parties during his early childhood years.  Nowadays, however, I like to think of party favors in a less materialistic way.  In a sense, the memories of our experiences at a party are similar to party favors.  Like conventional party favors, these memories are the takeaways that we bring home with us after going to a party, but unlike most conventional party favors, these memories can last for years.
 
During my thirty-five years as a member of our English Department, I have many lasting memories from the dozens of department parties that I have attended over the course of my career.  I remember dancing with Kay Horne at one of my first department parties back when Fred Smith was the chair.  I remember talking about Judy Blume’s novels with Ron Lunsford’s son, Christopher, back when Ron was the chair and Christopher was still a boy.  I remember having a long conversation with Blair Rudes about his experiences as a consultant on the film The New World back when Cy Knoblauch was the chair. I remember talking with Ernest Pereira about our mutual love of Greek food back when Malin Pereira was the chair.
 

Now that my wife and I host most of the department parties, I pay more attention to the experiences of the attendees of the department parties.  Like any party host, I want everyone at the party to have an enjoyable experience.  This past weekend, nearly fifty people came to the English Department’s spring party, which took place in our backyard.  During the the party, I took pleasure in seeing lots of people laughing and talking, but I was especially pleased to see Deje McGavran and Matt Rowney engaged in a long conversation.  As Jim McGavran’s wife, Deje has attended many English Department parties over the years, but prior to Saturday’s party, she and Matt had never met.  Matt, as many of you know, now teaches the courses on British Romanticism that Jim had taught for decades.  After the party, Deje told me how meaningful it was to her to get to know Matt.  I am sure that for both Deje and Matt their conversation  provided them with a sense of continuity and community.  There can be no better party favor.

Kudos  — As you know, I like to use my Monday Missives to share news about recent accomplishments by members of the English Department.  Here is the latest news:

Alan Rauch received a one-month research fellowship at the Library Company of Philadelphia (founded by Benjamin Franklin) and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.  Also, Alan recently presented a paper titled  “Knowledge, Assertion, and Contestation: Children and the Making of Expertise” at the British Women Writers Conference in Auburn, Alabama.

Thomas Simonson, one of our former undergraduate honors students in literature, will be entering the doctoral program in English at UNC Chapel Hill in the fall with a full-funding package.

Sophie Yates, one of our current graduate students, recently presented a paper titled “Moving between Space and Time: Mary Wollstonecraft’s A Short Residence in Sweden as Travelogue and Speculative Document” at the British Women Writers Conference in Auburn, Alabama.

Upcoming Events and Deadlines — Here is information about upcoming events and deadlines:

May 8 — Paula Martinac will launch her new novel, Clio Rising, at Park Road Books on Wednesday,  May 8, 2019, at 7:00 p.m.

May 11 — The Commencement for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will take place on Saturday, May 11, 2019, at 3:00 p.m.

May 13 — Final grades for the Spring 2019 term must be submitted by Monday, May 13, 2019, at noon.

Quirky Quiz Question —  Deje McGavran taught as a lecturer in our English Department for several years before joining the faculty in the English Department at a sister institution of higher education.  What is the name of this sister institution?

Last week’s answer: Malin Pereira, Becky Roeder, and Liz Miller

I am not the only member of the English Department who has connections to Madison, Wisconsin.  Three members of our faculty earned graduate degrees from the University of Wisconsin-Madison although only two of them earned their doctoral degrees from there.  Interestingly, two of these three faculty members started out in the same cohort of MA students.  What are the names of these three faculty members?  

Monday Missive - April 22, 2019

April 22, 2019 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive

Big Mouth hatching the giant purple Easter egg!

Behind the Scenes — Here is a little behind-the-scenes information about my Monday Missive.  I send it out on Monday, but I usually write it on Sunday.  And so I am writing this Monday Missive on Easter.  Every Easter I flash back on my most memorable Easter-related experience.  It happened in 1978 when I was making my living as a puppeteer in Madison, Wisconsin.  The manager of one of Madison’s big shopping malls hired me to do a series of puppet shows on the weekend before Easter.  I wrote a special show titled “The Giant Purple Easter Egg” for the event, and I still have the giant purple Easter egg that I used as a prop in the show.

That Saturday I arrived early in the morning before the mall opened to the public.  Upon my arrival, I discovered that the mall had also hired a young woman to hop through the mall dressed up as the Easter bunny.  She and I exchanged greetings, and then we met with the mall manager.  He and his crew took charge of setting us up in the middle of the mall.  They assigned me to a roped-off platform, and they situated the Easter bunny in a little garden patch with fake flowers and plastic carrots.

As I was assembling my stage and testing the mall’s booming sound system, I watched as all of the usually unseen workers prepared the mall for this big “Spring Gala” event.  They busily put up decorations, built a temporary runway for a spring fashion show, and set up signs, including a sign indicating when I would be doing my puppet shows.

The Easter bunny and I performed throughout the weekend, but the mall manager gave us a few opportunities to take breaks in an unmarked staff break room.  I will always remember the Easter bunny taking off her bunny head, revealing her sweat-drenched human head.  She then gulped down glass after glass of water.  When our break was over, she put her bunny head back on and resumed her hopping duties.  I think her job was harder than mine.

The experience of performing at this mall made me more aware and appreciative of all of the behind-the-scenes work that goes into putting on big events.  Similar preparatory work is taking place in the English Department this week for two big events that the department is sponsoring.  The first of these events is Gardens and Verses: An Earth Day Celebration, which will take place on Tuesday, April 23.  The second is the English Department Awards Ceremony, which will take place on Wednesday, April 24.  Please see below for more details about these events.  I know that members of our staff and faculty are already doing a lot of behind-the-scenes activities related to these events, and my appreciation goes to all of them. They are working hard to get ready, but at least they don’t have to hop around the campus in Easter bunny costumes.

The CLGO Powerhouse Takes Washington, D.C., by Storm —  The 2019 Popular Culture Association National Conference took place in Washington, D.C., from April 17 through April 20, and our department was very well represented.  Four members of the Children’s Literature Graduate Organization presented papers at this conference. Cassandra Grosh presented a paper titled “The Uglies Inside: Mental Health within Scott Westerfeld’s Uglies.”  Shannon Murphy presented a paper titled  “Exploring Reality and the Gender Binary in Little Women‘s ‘The P.C. and the P.O.'”  Jacquelyn Schaefle presented a paper titled “The Limited Perspective in the Journey to Self-Acceptance in Annie on My Mind,” and Jasmin Gonzalez Caban presented a paper titled “The Hybridity of Humanity: Posthumanism within Marissa Meyer’s The Lunar Chronicles.”  Paula Connolly, the faculty advisor for CLGO, was also at the conference, and she sent me the following email message from the conference:  “Our CLGO superstars have done a phenomenal job at PCA!!!”

Kudos  — As you know, I like to use my Monday Missives to share news about recent accomplishments by members of the English Department.  Here is the latest news:

Meghan Barnes recently published an article titled “Leveraging Digital Spaces for Pre-service Teachers to Practice Reading and Responding to Student Writing” in the Journal of Language and Literacy Education. Please click on the following link to read her article:  http://jolle.coe.uga.edu/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/BarnesChandler_JoLLE2019.pdf  She also published a book review of Educating for Empathy: Literacy Learning and Civic Engagement by Nicole Mirra in the Journal of Language and Literacy Education.

Paula Connolly recently presented a paper titled “Counterpointing the Cozy: Louise Penny’s Three Pines” at the Popular Cultural Association National Conference in Washington, D.C.

Boyd Davis recently gave the plenary address, “Aging Care Is a World Concern,” at the International Conference on Seniors, Foreign Caregivers, Families, Institutions: Linguistic and Multi-disciplinary Perspectives, co-sponsored by University of Insubria and University of Milan.

Dina Massachi, a graduate of our M.A. program, recently published an article titled “Metal Malleable Male:  The Tin Creations of L. Frank Baum and Todrick Hall” in The Baum Bugle.

Kirk Melnikoff was the invited respondent in the seminar “Shakespeare’s Enemies” at the Shakespeare Association of America Conference in Washington, D.C.

Liz Miller recently published a co-authored article in the journal Language Teaching Research titled “Caring and Emotional Labour: Language Teachers’ Engagement with Anxious Learners in Private Language School Classrooms.”

Jen Munroe recently presented a paper titled “Ecofeminism and the Restlessness of Motion,” in a roundtable she organized, “Wherefore Ecofeminism?” at the Shakespeare Association of America meeting in Washington, D.C.

Upcoming Events and Meetings — Here is a list of upcoming events and meetings:

April 23 — On Tuesday, April 23, our English Department and the UNC Charlotte Botanical Gardens will co-sponsor an event titled “Gardens and Verses:  An Earth Day Celebration.”  The event will take place in the Botanical Gardens from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.  The event will feature poetry readings about nature, on-site writing opportunities, and games all in celebration of the relationship between gardens and language.  Jen Munroe and Matt Rowney from the English Department and Jeff Gillman from the Botanical Gardens are the key organizers of this event.

April 24 — On Wednesday, April 24, our English Department Student Awards Ceremony will be held in the Dale Halton Room of the Atkins Library starting at 11:30am.

April 26 — On Friday, April 26, our last English Department meeting of the academic year will be held at 11-12:30 in the conference room (Fretwell 280C).

Quirky Quiz Question — I am not the only member of the English Department who has connections to Madison, Wisconsin.  Three members of our faculty earned graduate degrees from the University of Wisconsin-Madison although only two of them earned their doctoral degrees from there.  Interestingly, two of these three faculty members started out in the same cohort of MA students.  What are the names of these three faculty members?

Last week’s answer: Jimmy Carter
As a volunteer for Habitat for Humanity, Angie Williams now has a point in common with one of our former presidents. What former president regularly volunteers for Habitat for Humanity?

Monday Missive - April 15, 2019

April 15, 2019 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive

This Is What Community Engagement Looks Like —  Last week was National Volunteer Week.  In support of this national campaign, UNC Charlotte’s Office of Community Relations organized several volunteer opportunities for university employees.   Jennie Mussington and Angie Williams from our English Department both participated in this campaign.

On Monday, April 8, 2019, Jennie volunteered for “Operation Sandwich.”  Jennie and the other volunteers made over 2,000 sandwiches.  Jennie’s group made over 600 turkey and ham sandwiches within an hour, breaking their record from last years.  All of these sandwiches were donated to the Urban Ministry, the Men’s Shelter of Charlotte, McCrorey YMCA, the United Way of Cabarrus County, and other groups that help people in need of food. That same day, Angie volunteered for the Second Harvest Food Bank.  As part of her volunteer work, she helped put together 1,200 meal supplement backpacks.  On Thursday, April 11, Jennie volunteered at the Crisis Assistance Ministry, where she helped sort donation and stock shelves in their free store.  The next day, Angie volunteered for Habitat for Humanity.  She thought she was going to paint, but she ended up spending the day putting up sheet rock.

The Jennie’s and Angie’s willingness to volunteer on projects benefiting our community is in keeping with our departmental commitment to community engagement.  Many members of our department regularly participate in community engagement activities.  Here are just a few examples.  Meghan Barnes often volunteers with the homeless people who find shelter and assistance at Moore Place.  Janaka Lewis frequently gives talks and workshops on African American literature and history at area schools.  In fact, this week, she is giving a presentation called “Telling Stories, Talking about Biography” to third graders at Carl A Furr Elementary in Concord.  Many of our students also engage in community projects.  For example, at the recent Center City Literary Festival, students from both the English Learning Community and the Children’s Literature Graduate Organization volunteered their time.

When Angie was volunteering for Habit for Humanity, she wore a special shirt for the volunteers.  The following sentence was stamped on the front of this shirt:  “This is what community engagement looks like!”  And it’s true.  Community engagement does look like Angie, and Jennie, and Meghan, and Janaka, and ….  Well, the list is too long to mention everybody, so let’s just say that community engagement looks like the English Department.

Misty Morin’s Fulbright Award — Misty Morin, who is double majoring in English and Spanish, recently learned that she received a Fulbright Award to support her to travel to La Rioja, Spain, to teach.  In response to an email asking about the details of her Fulbright, she wrote, “I will be traveling to the autonomous community of La Rioja, Spain, to teach English to children.  My term begins in September and lasts through June.  I am also expected to lead an engagement project, and my proposal for this is to host events at libraries or community centers that invite children and their partners to engage in active reading.”  Speaking on behalf of the English Department, I congratulate Misty on receiving this Fulbright Award.

Kudos  — As you know, I like to use my Monday Missives to share news about recent accomplishments by members of the English Department.  Here is the latest news:

Christine Arvidson is featured on a podcast interview.  Please click on the following link to hear this interview:   https://charlottereaderspodcast.com/the-love-of-baseball-essays-by-lifelong-fans/

Meghan Barnes is featured in a podcast interview.  Please click on the following link to hear this interview:  olle.coe.uga.edu/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/Leveraging-Digital-Spaces-for-Pre-Service-Teachers-to-Practice-Reading-and-Responding-to-Student-Writing.m4a

Pilar Blitvich currently has the following three essays in production.  Her article titled “Politeness in Discursive Pragmatics” has been accepted for publication in a quo vadis issue of the Journal of Pragmatics.   Her book chapter titled “Spanish Retailer-Consumer Interactions on Facebook: A Variational Pragmatics Perspective on Conflict” will appear in Pragmatic Variation in Service Encounter Interactions (London: Routledge), and another book chapter titled “‘You are shamed for speaking it or for not speaking it good enough’: Paradoxical Status of Spanish in the US Latino Community” will appear in Handbook of Language in Conflict (London: Routledge).

Janaka Lewis recently presented a paper titled “Real Talk:  Social Justice, Adolescent Literature, and the Movement 4 Black Lives” at the College Language Association Conference in Raleigh.

Liz Miller recently gave an invited talk titled “‘Everything is Dangerous’: Exploring Research on Agency and Language Learning” at the Center for Multilingualism in Society across the Lifespan, at the University of Oslo.

Daniel Shealy recently wrote a blog post for the Little Women at 150 blog.  Please click on the following link to read his post:  https://lw150.wordpress.com/2019/03/18/chapter-xxxiv-a-friend/

Clayton Tarr recently had an essay titled “The Loss of Maidenhead: Rape and the Revolutionary Novel” published in Eighteenth-Century Fiction.

Upcoming Events and Meetings — Here is a list of upcoming events and deadlines:

April 23 — On Tuesday, April 23, our English Department and the UNC Charlotte Botanical Gardens will co-sponsor an event titled “Gardens and Verses:  An Earth Day Celebration.”  The event will take place in the Botanical Gardens from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.  The event will feature poetry readings about nature, on-site writing opportunities, and games all in celebration of the relationship between gardens and language.  Jen Munroe and Matt Rowney from the English Department and Jeff Gillman from the Botanical Gardens are the key organizers of this event.

April 24 — On Wednesday, April 24, our English Department Student Awards Ceremony will be held in the Dale Halton Room of the Atkins Library starting at 11:30am.

April 26 — On Friday, April 26, our last English Department meeting of the academic year will be held at 11-12:30 in the conference room (Fretwell 280C).

Quirky Quiz Question — As a volunteer for Habitat for Humanity, Angie Williams now has a point in common with one of our former presidents.  What former president regularly volunteers for Habitat for Humanity?

Last week’s answer: Lucille Ball
One of Ginger Rogers’s best friends ran an entertainment company called Desilu Productions. What is the name of this friend of Ginger Rogers?

Monday Missive - April 8, 2019

April 08, 2019 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive

Shall We Dance — Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers were both magnificent dancers on their own, but when they danced together they created cinematic magic.  One of the ten films that they did together was Shall We Dance, which came out in 1937.  I watched this film several years ago on my return flight after giving a talk at the National University of Singapore. The airline offered a whole array of old musicals, and I watched one after another.  I saw Shall We Dance on a tiny screen with the sound coming through the cheap earbuds that airlines provide on transoceanic flights, and yet I was still swept away by the power of Astaire and Rogers’s performance.  When the two of them appeared together on the screen, they seemed to engage in conversations just through their movements.   As dance partners, each augmented the performance of the other.  By lifting each other up, they succeeded in reaching heights that neither could reach as solo dancers.

Like Astaire and Rogers, our English Department excels when it collaborates with partners.  In recent years, the department has had the good fortune to dance with some wonderful partners, both in the Charlotte community and the campus community.  Two of our most frequent dance partners are the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library and the UNC Charlotte Botanical Gardens, and both of them are on our dance card this month.

On Wednesday, April 10, our English Department and the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library will co-sponsor a production titled “Challenging the Good Ole Ways:  Exploring Southern Childhood Narratives.”  The production will take place in the Francis Auditorium of the Main Library of the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library from 6:00 p.m. to 7:45 p.m. The production will feature twenty of our students who will perform a series of scenes and skits that reflect their inquiry into the unique experiences of Southern childhood.  The students will be joined by Ashley Hanson, a 2018 Obama Foundation Fellow, and actress Dame Jasmine Hughes from Placebase Productions.  Sarah Minslow, Henry Doss, and Sam Shapiro are the key organizers of this event.  This production is supported by a grant from the NC Humanities Council.

On Tuesday, April 23, our English Department and the UNC Charlotte Botanical Gardens will co-sponsor an event titled “Gardens and Verses:  An Earth Day Celebration.”  The event will take place in the Botanical Gardens from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.  The event will feature poetry readings about nature, on-site writing opportunities, and games all in celebration of the relationship between gardens and language.  Jen Munroe and Matt Rowney from the English Department and Jeff Gillman from the Botanical Gardens are the key organizers of this event.

As these two upcoming events demonstrate, the reach of our English Department is far greater because of our partnerships.  Our willingness to collaborate with various partners is a trait of the department that I just take for granted.  In a sense, the title of the film Shall We Dance captures this trait.  The phrasing suggests that it is a question, but there is no question mark.  The title is more of a statement than a question.  Perhaps the film should have been titled We Shall Dance.  In all of the films starring Astaire and Rogers there is no question that they will be dance partners  The same can be said about our department’s willingness to collaborate with our dance partners.

Kudos  — As you know, I like to use my Monday Missives to share news about recent accomplishments by members of the English Department.  Here is the latest news:

Meghan Barnes led a workshop titled “Writing on the Fringes” at the NC English Teachers Association Spring Symposium in Statesville this past Saturday.

Pilar Blitvich recently co-organized the inaugural Radical Right Research International Network (RIN) Workshop which was held at Swansea University. The purpose of the workshop was to bring together a network of researchers and stakeholders interested in the study of extreme far right groups from an interdisciplinary and global perspective.  This invitation-only event hosted scholars from Europe, Australasia, North America, and South America.  The panels consisted of papers which examined current trends within the radical right-wing scene, insights into current online/offline activities, hate speech and social media, as well as identity constructions of the far right.  Besides co-organizing the event, Pilar also presented a co-authored paper titled “Radical Right Women in Greece and Spain.”

Cara DeLoach, a recent graduate of our M.A. with a concentration in literature, will be entering the Ph.D. in Leadership and Policy Studies program at Vanderbilt University in the fall, with a full funding package.

Upcoming Events and Meetings — Here is a list of upcoming events and deadlines:

April 10 — The last EMPS (Early Modern Paleography Society) meeting of the year will take place Weds, April 10, 3:30-5pm in the Conference Room (280C).

April 10 — A group of twenty of our students will participate in a performance titled “Challenging the Good Ole Ways: Exploring Southern Childhood Narratives” on Wednesday, April 10, 2019, in the Francis Auditorium of the Main Library of the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library from 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. This “Performance Narrative” is part of a grant from the NC Humanities Council.

Quirky Quiz Question — One of Ginger Rogers’s best friends ran an entertainment company called Desilu Productions.  What is the name of this friend of Ginger Rogers?

Last week’s answer: Batman
What crime-fighting icon of American popular culture turned eighty this week? 

Monday Missive - April 1, 2019

April 01, 2019 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive
Going Beyond the Classroom — The learning process is not limited to the classroom, and the same holds true for the teaching process.  Examples of how learning and teaching go beyond the classroom abound in our English Department.  Over the past week, three such examples came to my attention, and I thought I would share them with you in today’s Monday Missive.

Last week, students from Jen Munroe’s ENGL 4072/5072: Ecologies of Eating in Early Modern England course traveled to Washington, DC, where they participated in a workshop on rare materials at the Folger Shakespeare Library, co-lead by Jen and the Folger’s Education Outreach Specialist, Rachel Dankert. Students spent the first part of the day viewing and discussing the material qualities and print production of early/first editions of the early modern print books and manuscripts they were studying in class, which included the first folio of Shakespeare’s works; in the afternoon they received training in working with rare materials and were able to work with the same rare texts as they did original research for their final papers (though the first folio sadly had to be put away). That day, the students were also able to mingle with scholars researching at the library as they attended the daily afternoon tea. Students commented during and after the trip about how meaningful it was to view these materials and to use them in their research as well as to spend time together and strengthen their sense of community with each other.

Just as Jen’s students were returning from their trip to the Folger Shakespeare Library, Alan Rauch took a group of students from our chapter of Sigma Tau Delta to Saint Louis to participate in the 2019 Sigma Tau Delta International Convention, which took place from March 27 to March 30.  Our students presented creative pieces and participated in a roundtable discussion.  However, they also took advantage of opportunities to learn from the students from other chapters and developed their networking skills.

A third example took place much closer to home.   On Friday, March 29, several of our students participated in UNC Charlotte’s Undergraduate Research Conference, which took place in the James H. Barnhardt Student Activity Center.  All of the student participants worked with a faculty advisor in preparing their presentations.  Clayton Tarr worked with Kathleen Griffin, one of our English undergraduates.  Kathleen presented an essay titled “The Unattainable Body of the Female Child in Children’s Literature: How Adults Control Parameters.”  Clayton reports that Kathleen “did a great job, especially during the question/answer period.”  Meghan Barnes served as the faculty advisor for two of our English majors who presented at the conference: Corinne Rigordaeva presented a paper titled “Building Classroom Rapport: How Teacher and Student Gender Roles Influence Communication,” and Charity Clark presented a paper titled “Communication: Male and Female Professors in the Classroom and Its Effects on Students.” Meghan reports that “and they each did a fabulous job!  For both students, this was their first experience conducting their own human subjects research and presenting in a ‘conference’ — I was incredibly proud of them.

As these three examples illustrate, the work of our English Department often transcends the classroom.  For our students and faculty members, the process of learning and teaching knows no bounds.

Kudos  — As you know, I like to use my Missives to share news about recent accomplishments by members of the English Department.  Here is the latest news:

Meghan Barnes recently published a co-authored article titled “You stick up for all kids”: (De)politicizing the enactment of LGBTQ+ teacher ally work” in Teaching and Teacher Education.  Please click on the following link to access the article:  https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0742051X18313295?dgcid=author

Boyd Davis recently published “Formulaic Language” in the Sage Encyclopedia of Human Communication Sciences and Disorders.   She also published a co-authored article titled “Represented Speech in Dementia Discourse” in the Journal of Pragmatics.

Janaka Lewis recently delivered a presentation titled “Finishing a Dissertation without Losing your Soul” for Social Science Research Council Proposal Writing and Dissertation Development Seminar, in Atlanta, Georgia.  She was also one of three speakers on the Local Leaders Panel, Levine Museum of the New South HERstory Day.

Juan Meneses participated as a respondent following the screening of Raoul Peck’s documentary I Am Not Your Negro as part of the UNC Charlotte International film Festival.

Alan Rauch was recently appointed to a three-year term on the PMLA Advisory Committee.

Upcoming Events and Meetings — Here is a list of upcoming events and deadlines:

April 10 — A group of twenty of our students will participate in a performance titled “Challenging the Good Ole Ways: Exploring Southern Childhood Narratives” on Wednesday, April 10, 2019, in the Francis Auditorium of the Main Library of the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library from 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. This “Performance Narrative” is part of a grant from the NC Humanities Council.

Quirky Quiz Question — What crime-fighting icon of American popular culture turned eighty this week?
Last week’s answer: Novello
The impetus to create the Center City Literary Festival was in response to the demise of a community-wide literary festival that was sponsored and organized by the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library for many years. What is the name of this former literary festival?

Skip to toolbar
  • Log In