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Monthly Archives: June 2019

Monday Missive - June 24, 2019

June 24, 2019 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive

Three Gardeners — Given that our first summer session is nearly over, I have a sense that we are already half way through the summer of 2019, but this sense is nonsense.  In reality, the summer of 2019 started on June 21, which was just last Friday.  The start of summer, after all, is dictated by the summer solstice, not by the Registrar’s Office and its academic calendar. 

The arrival of summer reminds me of my early attempts at planting a garden after moving to Charlotte in the summer of 1984.  My parents loved gardening, and I grew up helping them in our family’s various gardens. However, when I tried to replicate my parents’ approach to gardening here in Charlotte, I failed miserably.  I remember, for example, planting snow peas in June, just like my parents always did, only to see them wither up and die in the intense heat of July without producing a single snow pea.  I gradually realized that my parents’ approach to gardening worked perfectly in the cold climate and high altitude of my childhood home in the mountains of Colorado, but my parents’ approach was not at all suited to the growing conditions in Charlotte.

The person who attempted to teach me how to garden in the South was an English professor named James Hedges.  Jim, as he was generally known, was an avid gardener, and he often brought home-grown vegetables to share with everybody in the department.  Jim told me what plants grow best in our region.  He also told me when to plant them and how to prepare our dense, clay soil to make it more conducive to cultivating plants.  Jim was a linguist by training, but he also had an expertise in American folklore and occasionally taught courses on this topic.  He knew all sorts of folktales and folklore related to plants. For example, when I mentioned to Jim that pokeweed grew in my backyard, he told me about several folk remedies related to the perceived medicinal qualities associated with pokeweed.  He also told me that I could use the purple juice from the pokeweed berries as an ink, and I actually did this with my son when he was little.  Jim died many years ago, but I still remember how he combined his love of gardening and his scholarly interest in American folklore.

Like Jim Hedges, James Hathaway (the husband of Dean Nancy Gutierrez) has a passion for gardening.   I always enjoy talking with James about his garden and his amazing successes at growing unusual plants, such as rare peppers and exotic flowers.  James is also a poet, and he draws on his interest in gardening in his poetry.  He often writes poems about the life cycle of plants.  His poems usually include specific details that are grounded in botanical science, but they also can be read on a metaphorical level.  His poems tend to be about the rhythms of nature and the interrelationship between life and death, growth and decay, summer and winter.

Jen Munroe also has a passion for gardening.  She has a large, organic garden, and she enjoys including the produce from her garden in the meals that she prepares.  For Jen, gardening relates to her scholarship in the area of ecocriticism.  She often writes about the cultural and historical significance of gardens.  An example is her book Gender and the Garden in Early Modern English Literature.  In this book, she not only examines practical gardening books published in England in the 16th and 17th centuries, but she also discusses how images of gardens figure in the literature from this period.

For all three of these gardeners, their passion for growing plants has connections to their scholarship and writing.    As the examples of Jim, James and Jen demonstrate, gardening is about more than growing vegetables and flowers; it also relates to aesthetics, cultural history, and the living planet that we call Earth.  As Voltaire once wrote, “We must take care of our garden.”

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:

Dina Massachi, a graduate of our M.A. program, recently presented a paper titled “‘Things haven’t been the same since that house fell on my sister’:  MGM’s Sister Witches, and the Post-MGM Ozs That Love Them” at Oz, the National Convention, in Gray, Louisiana. 

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

July 1 — Final grades for the first summer session courses are due by noon on Monday, July 1.  July 1 —The first day of classes for the second summer session is Monday, July 1.

Quirky Quiz Question — What is the title of Voltaire’s famous work that includes the passage about caring for gardens.

Last week’s answer: Alabama

What state serves as the setting for To Kill a Mocking Bird?

Monday Missive - June 17, 2019

June 17, 2019 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive

Exploring the Diversity of Southern Childhoods — On Thursday and Friday of this week, Sarah Minslow and I are co-hosting a curriculum development workshop for thirty-two K-12 teachers titled Exploring the Diversity of Southern Childhoods. This workshop will take place at UNC Charlotte Center City.  The first day of the workshop will focus on Jacqueline Woodson’s Brown Girl Dreaming, and the second day will focus on the film version of Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird.   The workshop speakers include Janaka Lewis, Ashli Stokes, and Sam Shapiro.   

This two-day workshop is truly a collaborative undertaking. Scott Gartlin and Robin Mara from the Charlotte Teachers Institute have helped with the planning of the workshop, and Angie Williams has provided valuable administrative support.   Peter Stanton and Kristen Morse of the CLAS Office of Research have helped us deal with the details involved with administering a large external grant.  Without the help of all of these people, Sarah and I would never have been able to organize this workshop.

The Exploring the Diversity of Southern Childhoods curriculum workshop is the concluding event related to a two-year initiative funded by the North Carolina Humanities Council.  Titled the Child in Southern Literature and Film, this initiative has resulted in a number of events, including a film series, author presentations, a student performance, and several participatory activities for children.  The Charlotte Mecklenburg Public Library has partnered with us throughout the entire two years.  In many ways, this initiative is part of the English Department’s longstanding commitment to combine cultural education and civic engagement.  

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:

Balaka Basu recently presented a paper titled “Social Work and Classism in Novels for Girls” at the Children’s Literature Association Conference held in Indianapolis.

Ralf Thiede recently presented a paper titled “A Developmental Approach to Empathy through Children’s Literature” at the Children’s Literature Association Conference held in Indianapolis.

Lara Vetter recently gave a plenary talk titled ““On Love and the American Canon: H.D., Robert Duncan, and ‘Venice-Venus'” at the Robert Duncan Centennial Conference, Sorbonne University, Paris, France.  She also chaired a session titled “Duncan, H.D. and Beyond.”

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

July 1 — Final grades for the first summer session courses are due by noon on Monday, July 1.  July 1 —The first day of classes for the second summer session is Monday, July 1.

Quirky Quiz Question — What state serves as the setting for To Kill a Mockingbird?

Last week’s answer: Maine

The musical Carousel is set in a part of the United States where it really doesn’t start getting warm until June.  In which state is Carousel set?

Monday Missive - June 10, 2019

June 12, 2019 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive

June Is Bustin’ Out All Over — As a high school student, I performed in our school’s production of Carousel, and I still know all of the songs from this Rodger and Hammerstein musical.  One of my favorites is “June Is Bustin’ Out All Over.”   This song popped into my head last week, not only because it is now June, but also because department-related news was bustin’ out all over.   So here are just some of the news items that crossed my desk last week.

I learned that Matt Rowney has been selected as a recipient of the Frances Lumsden Gwynn Award.  This award comes with a stipend that Matt can use in support of his research.  I know that I speak for the whole department in congratulating Matt on receiving this award.

I learned about Becky Roeder’s recently aired series of interviews on local dialect variation.  The interviews aired on WBTV’s “On Your Side Tonight” with host Jess Dyer. If you are interested in having a look, the three five-minute episodes aired on May 8, May 15, and May 24 and can be found by searching online for WBTV “How do you say.”  These interviews underscore our department’s commitment to community engagement.

I learned that Janaka Lewis has now officially started her four-week National Humanities Center’s summer residency at the Research Triangle Park.  During her residency, she will work on a project titled “Black Girlhood and the Power of Belonging.”

I also learned that many members of our English Department are taking research trips this month.  I initially tried to keep track of everybody’s travel plans, but there are just too many trips for me to remember.  For the purposes of today’s Monday Missive, I will simply say that the members of our department are going “All over the meadow and the hill . . . Just because it’s June, June, June!”

Saying Goodbye to Heather Vorhies — I was working in my office the other day when Heather Vorhies stopped by to say goodbye.  We talked about her plans for the future, and I thanked her for her for her many contributions to our department.  

After Heather left my office, I reflected on the impact that she had during her five years at UNC Charlotte.  She provided the Writing Resources Center with excellent leadership.  She regularly taught our graduate students in her course titled “Theory and Practice of Tutoring ” and another graduate course on the “Rhetoric of Science.” The students in these courses benefited from her insights.  She also contributed to the English Department through her research.  Her scholarship on the rhetoric of science added to the department’s overall strength in the intersection of the cultural and textual history of science; I know, for example, that many of our faculty members have taken a particular interest in her scholarship on gender and the rhetoric of science.  She also participated in the department’s community engagement activities.  For example, Heather, along with her mother, regularly participated in the department’s annual Seuss-a-Thon. 

I will miss having Heather as a colleague.  I know that I speak for the entire English Department in wishing Heather all the best as she begins a new chapter in her life.

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:

Ralf Thiede presented a talk titled “Embracing Paradoxes in Cognitive Linguistics” at the 86th SouthEastern Conference on Linguistics in Boca Raton, Florida.  At the same conference, Kathryn Morris, one of our undergraduates, presented a talk titled “Changing Channels: Discourse Community in Video Game Chat Servers.”  She was accompanied by Becky Roeder.

Quirky Quiz Question —  The musical Carousel is set in a part of the United States where it really doesn’t start getting warm until June.  In which state is Carousel set?

Last week’s answer: Bill Hill

Shawn Long is the second professor from the Department of Communication Studies to serve as an associate dean in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.  Who was the first?

Monday Missive - June 3, 2019

June 03, 2019 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive
Shawn Long and Elizabeth Yang

Shawn Long, the Real Deal — I associate certain phrases with particular people, and the phrase I associate the most with Shawn Long is “the real deal.”  Shawn does not use this phrase a lot.  He only uses it when he is paying a person a high compliment.  If Shawn tells you that you’re “the real deal,” he is praising you for your sincere commitment to excellence and your willingness to put others above yourself.  These are qualities that Shawn has long valued.  Although it is not in Shawn’s nature to boast about himself, all of us who have had the privilege of working with Shawn know that these qualities are reflected in his approach to administrative service.  Based on the many years that I have known Shawn, I can say with certainty that Shawn truly is the real deal.

I first got to know Shawn in 2010 when he became the Chair of the Department of Communication Studies.  At the time, I was an associate dean in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, so I came into frequent contact with him.  He impressed me right away with his deep commitment to the faculty and students in his department.  Some years later, we switched roles.  Shawn became an associate dean, and I became a department chair.   In his work as the Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and more recently as the Senior Associate Dean, Shawn has collaborated with the English Department on various projects and has helped the department cope with some of the challenges that have come our way.  I could provide lots of specific examples of Shawn’s involvement in the English Department, but for the purposes of today’s Monday Missive, I will focus on two recent examples.  

Last spring Shawn reached out to the English Department about a program that he started called the Multicultural Pre-doctoral Summer Teaching Fellowship.   He shared with me information about Elisabeth Yang, one of the people who received this fellowship.  He asked if the English Department would be willing to provide Elisabeth with an opportunity to develop her teaching.  After consulting with Jen Munroe, I told Shawn that we would schedule her to teach a course during the first summer session and that I would be happy to mentor Elisabeth over the summer.  Elisabeth is currently teaching a liberal studies course for English, and all of us who have gotten to know her are very pleased to have her as a visiting member of our department.  Shawn made this happen.

Another example of Shawn’s involvement with the English Department has to do with providing space for our graduate teaching assistants.  The decision to have our graduate teaching assistants devote the second year of their assistantships to teaching in the English Department meant that we needed to provide them with office space.  I contacted Shawn about this matter, and he provided the funding to create our new Graduate T.A. Office, which is conveniently located next to the office of Lara Vetter, our Director of Graduate Studies.  Shawn made this happen.

Shawn is about to leave UNC Charlotte to become the new Dean of the College of Humanities and Social Sciences at Kennesaw State University in Atlanta, Georgia.  I know that I speak for the entire English Department in wishing Shawn the very best as he takes on this new role.  I am sure that no matter what great things the future has in store for Shawn, he will always be the real deal.

Alan Rauch Receives Award from the Office of Disability Services — Alan Rauch has been selected as a recipient of the Office of Disability Services 2018-2019 Accessibility Excellence Award for Outstanding Faculty/Staff.  Alan is one of only six faculty members across the entire university to receive this award.  The student who nominated Alan wrote, “Professor Rauch has done something that in my 15 years of school has never been done before.  He made me interested in books.”  For more information about this award, please click on the following link:  https://inside.uncc.edu/news-features/2019-05-28/accessibility-excellence-award-recipients-named

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 “Posing for the Camera: An Analysis of Pre-service Teachers’ Discursive Practices During a Video Analysis Session” in the journal i.e.: Inquiry in Education.  To access this article, please click on the following link: https://digitalcommons.nl.edu/ie/vol11/iss1/9/

Daniel Shealy recently presented a paper titled “Louisa May Alcott’s Forgotten Flower Fable” at the American Literature Association conference in Boston.

Katherine Tallent, one of our former B.A. and M.A. students in literature, will begin work this fall on a Masters of Library and Information Studies degree, with full funding, at UNC-Greensboro.

Quirky Quiz Question —  Shawn Long is the second professor from the Department of Communication Studies to serve as an associate dean in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.  Who was the first?

Last week’s answer: WINGS

After the Beatles disbanded in 1970, Paul McCartney formed a new band with his first wife, Linda Eastman.  What is the name of this band?

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