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Bonnie E. Cone Professor in Civic Engagement Professor of English, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
AUTHOR

Mark West

Monday Missive - October 19, 2015

October 19, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive
nuevolution
¡NUEVOlution! Latinos/Latinas and the New South — Over the next two weeks both the UNC Charlotte’s Center for the Study of the New South and the Charlotte Teachers Institute are sponsoring events related to Latinos/Latinas in the New South.  On Wednesday, Oct. 21, the Center for the Study of the New South is co-sponsoring a community conversation about the relationship between the Latino and the African-American communities in Charlotte.  The program will begin at 6:30 p.m. at the Palmer Building (formerly known as Fireman’s Hall) at 2601 East Seventh Street. The event is open to the public without charge, but registration is requested: register here.   On Tuesday, October 27, the Charlotte Teachers Institute is focusing one of its “Exploding Canons” events on the changing role of Latinos/Latinas in the New South.  The program will begin at 5:15 p.m. at the Levine Museum of the News South and will feature a panel discussion moderated by our Dean, Nancy Gutierrez.  Participants will also be able to view the Levine Museum’s “¡NUEVOlution!” exhibit.  The event is free and open to the public.

The topic of Latinos/Latinas in the New South is of interest to several members of the English Department.  Maya Socolovsky addresses this topic in her book titled Troubling Nationhood in U.S. Latina Literature.  In her book, Maya examines fiction by several contemporary Latina authors, and she shows how these works reflect changing attitudes concerning nationality among recent immigrants to the New South and elsewhere in the United States.  Another member of the English Department who has taken an interest in this topic is Becky Roeder.  Recently, Becky, in collaboration with former graduate student Chase Walden, has studied Spanish on public signage in the first ring suburban area of Charlotte along Eastway between N. Tryon and Central.  Liz Miller is addressing this topic in one of her classes.  Liz’s graduate-level class, Seminar in Language, Culture, and Society (ENGL 6127), will be focusing on the intersection of language, race and ethnicity over the next few weeks. One of the research articles that her students will present and discuss focuses on the ideologies that inform Anglo-Americans’ joking use of “Mock Spanish” and how such seemingly innocuous utterances can reinforce racial/ethnic inequality.  As these three examples illustrate, the English Department is engaged in the recent conversations related to Latinos/Latinas in the New South.

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

Pilar Blitvich recently gave a presentation on “Digital Discourse, Conflict and Identity” at the Oberman Institute of Advanced Studies at the University of Iowa. She also led a round-table discussion on the topics of her most recent research (digital discourse, multiparty communication, massive on-line polylogues, native digital versus digitized theoretical models, globalization/transnational identities and the digital transnational public sphere).

Valerie Bright recently published an article titled “My Hedgehog Stories” in RISE:  A Children’s Literacy Journal.

Paula Martinac‘s short story, “Comfort Zone,” was accepted for publication by The Raleigh Review.

Upcoming Events and Deadlines— Here are some dates to keep in mind:

October 28 — A poetry reading featuring Coen Crisp and Quentin Talley will take place on October 28 at 4:00 p.m. in Fretwell 290B.
November 4 — Bryn Chancellor will give a reading and sign her new book, When Are You Coming Home?, at Park Road Books at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 4. http://www.parkroadbooks.com/event/2015-11

Quirky Quiz Question — In Latino/Latina culture, a major holiday is celebrated in the beginning of November.  What is the name of this holiday?  For extra credit, what is the Spanish name for this holiday?

Last week’s answer: DC

The Folger Shakespeare Library was founded by Henry Clay Folger and Emily Jordan Folger.  It opened in 1932 and is known today as the premier center for Shakespeare studies outside of Great Britain.  In what American city is the Folger Shakespeare Library located?

Monday Missive - October 12, 2015

October 12, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive

Folger Shakespeare Libary transcribathon

Researching at the Folger Shakespeare Library — Last Wednesday, Jen Munroe participated in the first annual EMROC transcribathon (Early Modern Recipes Online Collective, for which she is on the Steering Committee and a founding member). The event was held in partnership with the Folger Shakespeare Library and took place at their site. Jen coordinated the event with the Folger Shakespeare Library’s Curator of Manuscripts, Heather Wolfe, and Paul Dingman, Project Manager for EMMO (Early Modern Manuscripts Online). A total of 89 transcribers, including some of our MA students (Taryn Dollings, Robin Kello, Kailan Sindelar, and Breanne Weber), worked on site or remotely from Berlin to California over twelve hours to transcribe the manuscript recipe book of Rebeckah Winche (1666) from the Folger’s holdings. Over the course of the day, the participants collectively finished transcribing the entire book (over 200 pages). The transcribed manuscript will be housed in the Folger’s EMMO database (which will be public access).

The EMROC transcribathon was covered by the BBC, who also interviewed Jen and the Folger’s Curator of Manuscripts about the event. Those interviews and story should be out soon. The following is a link to the blog post from the EMROC website that recaps the day and includes a wonderfully strange set of recipes transcribed by our own Breanne Weber (who, by the way, won both of the transcribathon sprints last Wednesday): http://emroc.hypotheses.org/714

Shakespeare in Action Presents… Garret Sullivan from Penn State University will deliver a presentation titled “A Pair So Famous: Memory, Sexuality, and Selfhood in Antony and Cleopatra” on Wednesday, October 14, at 4:00 pm in Fretwell 290B. Sullivan is the author of several books, including The Drama of Landscape: Land, Property, and Social Relations on the Early Modern Stage, Memory and Forgetting in English Renaissance Drama: Shakespeare, Marlowe, Webster, and Sleep, Romance and Human Embodiment: Vitality from Spenser to Milton.

Upcoming Events and Deadlines— Here are some dates to keep in mind:

October 16 — The English Department Meeting will take place on October 16 from 11:00 to 12:30 in Barnard 244.

October 19 — The deadline to apply for a Faculty Research Grant is October 19. For more information, click on the following link: http://research.uncc.edu/proposal-development/locating-funding

Quirky Quiz Question — The Folger Shakespeare Library was founded by Henry Clay Folger and Emily Jordan Folger. It opened in 1932 and is known today as the premier center for Shakespeare studies outside of Great Britain. In what American city is the Folger Shakespeare Library located?

Last week’s answer: Rootabaga

Carl Sandburg is most famous for his poetry and his biography of Abraham Lincoln, but he also wrote original fairy tales for children.  His collection of children’s tales has the name of a vegetable in its title.  What is this vegetable?

Monday Missive - October 5, 2015

October 05, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive
Carl Sandburg and Harry Golden
Harry Golden and Carl Sandburg — In the recently published Carolina Israelite:  How Harry Golden Made Us Care about Jews, the South, and Civil Rights, Kimberly Marlowe Hartnett writes about Golden’s vast network of friends and colleagues.  One of his dear friends was the writer Carl Sandburg, and Hartnett does a wonderful job of describing this relationship in her biography.  As Hartnett explains, Golden and Sandburg had many of the same heroes, including Clarence Darrow, Abraham Lincoln, and Margaret Sanger.  Golden was also a great admirer of Sandburg’s poetry. Golden and Sandburg met in 1948, and the two soon became close friends.  Sandburg was then living on a farm near Flat Rock, North Carolina, and Golden often traveled to Flat Rock to visit Sandburg.  Eventually, Golden wrote a book about Sandburg.  In her biography, Hartnett captures the nuances of Golden’s friendship with Sandburg.  She draws on the correspondence between the two men as well as their personal recollections.  As a result, readers of her biography come away with a sense of sitting on the porch with these two giants, listening in on their conversations.  Such are the treats that await the readers of Hartnett’s biography.

Hartnett will be talking about her biography tomorrow evening in the Atkins Library’s Halton Reading Room.  Her talk will be followed by a panel presentation, and our own Paula Eckard is one of the panelists.  This event starts at 6:30 and concludes at 8:00 with a reception and book signing.  For more information, please click on the following link:  http://library.uncc.edu/harrygoldentalk

Our Newest Honorary Member of the English Department — By the power vested in me as the Chair of the English Department, I am proud to proclaim Alison Walsh to be our newest honorary member of the English Department.  Alison is the Director of Student Support Services, but she has a long-time interest in the field of English Studies.  She was an English major at Appalachian State University with a concentration in creative writing.  She has studied film history and criticism, and she took film classes with Sam Shapiro.  This past weekend, Alison gave her first paper at an academic conference (see below for details).   She gave her presentation on the films of Coen Brothers, and from all accounts her presentation was a big success.   Since she is now an honorary member of the English Department (retroactive to cover this past weekend), her success is our success.

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

Bryn Chancellor gave a reading from her new book, When Are You Coming Home?, last week at University of North Carolina at Greensboro, hosted by its MFA program in creative writing as part of its visiting writers’ series.

Paula Eckard‘s review of Carolina Israelite:  How Harry Golden Made Us Care about Jews, the South, and Civil Rights was recently published in The Charlotte Viewpoint.  Here is the link:  http://www.charlotteviewpoint.org/article/3465/Carolina-Israelite%5D%5D-How-Harry-Golden-Made-Us-Care

Beth Gargano‘s entry on “Victorian Education and Literature” recently came out in the  Blackwell Victorian Encyclopedia. Also, two of her poems– “The Dream Visit” and “Harvest”–appeared in Fall 2015 in Vox Populi: A Public Sphere for Politics and Poetry.

Jeffrey Leak was interviewed for an NPR story dealing with Henry Dumas.  Here is the link:
http://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/2015/10/01/433229181/henry-dumas-wrote-about-black-people-killed-by-cops-then-he-was-killed-by-a-cop

Aaron Toscano recently gave a presentation titled “Games of Conquest:  A Cultural Analysis of Video Games” at the annual conference of the Popular Culture Association of the South.

Alison Walsh recently gave a presentation titled “A Cruel Sense of Humor:  Comedic and Disruptive Violence in the Films of the Coen Brothers”

Upcoming Events and Deadlines— Here are some dates to keep in mind:
October 9 — Mid-semester reports of unsatisfactory grades are  due on Friday, October 9th at noon.
October 19 — The deadline to apply for a Faculty Research Grant is October 19.  For more information, click on the following link:   http://research.uncc.edu/proposal-development/locating-funding

Quirky Quiz Question — Carl Sandburg is most famous for his poetry and his biography of Abraham Lincoln, but he also wrote original fairy tales for children.  His collection of children’s tales has the name of a vegetable in its title.  What is this vegetable?

Last week’s answer: Tuscaloosa
Marty Shapiro grew up in New York City, but he moved to the South after serving in the Army during the early 1950s.  He received his Ph.D. in American Literature from the University of Alabama.  Does anybody know the name of the city where the University of Alabama is located?

Monday Missive - September 28, 2015

September 29, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive
Morton ShapiroRemembering Marty Shapiro — When I became a member of the English Department in 1984, many of the faculty members who had built the Department in the 1960s were still teaching, including Morton (Marty) Shapiro.  Marty joined the English Department in 1964 and continued to teach in the department until he retired in 1993.

I have many fond memories of Marty.  I remember talking with him about his childhood in New York City.  My father grew up in New York around the same time period, and this connection led me to feel a sense of kinship with Marty.  He was an avid lover of films, and I occasionally ran into him at the Manor Theater where we would talk a bit about whatever film we had just seen.  Marty helped found the Charlotte Film Society, and he sometimes shared with me news of the Film Society’s doings.  Marty was proud of his children, Sam and Julie, and he liked to talk about them.  I struck up a friendship with Sam, and Marty seemed pleased that his son and I were friends  The last time I saw Marty was at Park Road Books quite some years ago, but I remember talking with him about a course that Sam was teaching for the American Studies Program. I was the director of the program at the time, and Marty liked the fact that Sam was teaching at the same university where he had pursued his teaching career for nearly thirty years.  When I learned that Marty had died on September 11, I contacted several faculty members who also knew Marty and asked them about their memories of Marty.

In her email to me, Boyd Davis wrote, “Marty Shapiro liked good books, good films, and good talk, which he defined as being wit and crackle about good books and good films. He was passionate about his field, American Literature, and especially concerned that students work first to become critical and thoughtful readers of primary source material before doing anything else.”

Jay Jacoby wrote about Marty’s tastes in food and literature: “Marty and I did not always have the same tastes for food (he loathed my gefilte fish balls suspended in horseradish gelatin–go figure, right?  We both liked, and dined together at, Katz’s Deli in NYC–famous for its “Send a salami to your boy in the army”) or literature (I never understood his liking Henry James or Saul  Bellow).  We did enjoy many of the same films and, in my early days at UNCC, playing tennis at the old JCC on Sharon Amity.  It was good to have a landsman in the department, someone to say Happy New Year to every fall and to exchange Hanukkah at the department Holiday parties.”

Anita Moss wrote about Marty’s approach to teaching:  “When I was a young instructor in the English Department in 1972, Marty was exceptionally kind and generous to me.  He invited me to sit in on his classes if we happened to be teaching the same texts.  Once in the summer he was teaching American Literature, and I was teaching British literature, but we were both exploring the Victorian period.  Marty invited me and my class to join him and his class on a field trip to a lovely Victorian home on The Plaza, named “Victoria.” The home-owners gave us a well-informed tour, but I was delighted with how much Marty knew and shared about architecture and interior design of the period.  As other colleagues have mentioned, Marty loved classical music, but I remember how we shared our enthusiasm for great jazz singers–Ella Fitzgerald, Dinah Washington, Sarah Vaughn, Lena Horne, and the much younger singer, Chris Connor.  Marty did not enjoy tedious meetings, but he came alive when the talk was about literature, art, or music.  Then he became animated with his vital interests in ideas and art. I am glad that I knew him and that he shared his interests with colleagues, friends, and students for so many years.”

Paula Eckard took a course from Marty as an undergraduate student, and she sent me an email about this experience:   “As a young undergraduate in Marty Shapiro’s Major American Writers course, I was introduced to many of the writers that I teach today.  I took his class, which met in Winningham, during a hot summer school session.  I recall the course being equally intense, especially when we discussed Melville.  One day I was late for class after running out of gas at the intersection of Highways 29 and 49.  I was fearing my professor’s wrath when I finally got to class. Instead he responded with kindness and humor, something I had not expected. Since then, I’ve tried to treat students with the same positive regard that he showed to me.”

Marty’s family will have a visitation on Wednesday, October 7, and the clubhouse of Quail Hollow Estates, from 5:30pm until 7:30 pm.  The address is 7301 Quail Meadow Lane, Charlotte, NC 28210.  Here is the link to an obituary:  http://www.throbertson.com/index.php/2014-12-25-20-56-36/299-morton-shapiro-september-11-2015

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

Aaron Gwyn‘s Wynne’s War was recently published in France. The novel has received very positive reviews from the French press including a glowing review in Le Monde.  For those of you who read French, here is the link:  : http://www.lemonde.fr/livres/article/2015/09/24/westerns-sans-frontieres_4769426_3260.html.

Joan Mullin, along with Jan Rieman and Cat Mahaffey from the University Writing Program, recently gave a presentation titled “Practicing What We Preach: Growing Pains of a Stand Alone Unit” at a meeting of the Carolina Writing Program Administrators.

Alan Rauch‘s lengthy entry titled “Victorian Science” has just been published in Blackwell’s four-volume Encyclopedia of Victorian Literature. 

Kristen Reynolds, one of our graduate students, received a 2015-16 Graduate Life Fellowship.

Upcoming Events and Deadlines— Here are some dates to keep in mind:

September 28 — CLGO is hosting a Mad Hatter tea party in front of Fretwell and Cato Lawn today from 10-1. Free food and coffee are available.
October 9 — Mid-semester reports of unsatisfactory grades are  due on Friday, October 9th at noon.
October 19 — The deadline to apply for a Faculty Research Grant is October 19.  For more information, click on the following link:   http://research.uncc.edu/proposal-development/locating-funding

Quirky Quiz Question — Marty Shapiro grew up in New York City, but he moved to the South after serving in the Army during the early 1950s.  He received his Ph.D. in American Literature from the University of Alabama.  Does anybody know the name of the city where the University of Alabama is located?

Last week’s answer: Chapel Hill, NC

The Storied Life of A. J. Fikry  is published by Algonquin Books.  Although Algonquin Books is now a division of Workman Publishing, the editorial office is still located in the same community where the publisher was founded in 1983.  Where is Algonquin Books located?

Monday Missive - September 21, 2015

September 21, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive
The Versatility of English — Bill Hill, the Senior Associate Dean for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, regularly reads the Monday Missives, and he often sends me responses to the quirky quiz questions.  For last week’s question, I asked people to identify the two departments for which Jay Jacoby served as interim chair, and Bill responded correctly that these departments were Art and English.  This question prompted Bill to think about the various English professors who have served as interim chairs for departments other than English over the years.  After exchanging several emails, Bill and I came up with the following list:

Jay Jacoby – Art
Cy Knoblauch – Biology
Ron Lunsford – Philosophy

Jim McGavran – Dance and Theater

Malin Pereira – Africana Studies

Mark West – Art

There is no other department in the College that has provided six interim chairs for other departments.  The various leadership roles that English professors have played over the years is a reflection of the strength of the English Department, but this record of leadership also reflects the versatility of the discipline of English.  The critical insights and the reading and writing skills associated with English are readily transferable to other disciplines as well as to interdisciplinary fields.  It is worth noting that the current directors of four of the interdisciplinary programs in the College come from English.  Here is the list:

Paula Eckard – American Studies

Beth Gargano – M.A. Program in Liberal Studies

Katie Hogan – Women’s and Gender Studies

Aaron Toscano – Humanities, Technology, and Sciences Minor

The versatility of English also benefits our students.  I was reminded of this last week when I viewed a a video about our Technical/Professional Writing Program.  One of our current graduate students, Yekaterina Dolmatova, interviewed two of our recent program graduates and produced a short, five-minute video. It’s now on the University’s Youtube channel.  As this video demonstrates, the versatile nature of our program helps prepare our students to succeed when they enter the workforce. Here is the link to the video: https://youtu.be/glp1fHcjSD8

Charlotte Mecklenburg Library Community Read Program — The Charlotte The Storied Life of A.J. FikryMecklenburg Library is sponsoring a series of events designed to encourage members of the Charlotte community to read and discuss a common text this fall.  This program will take place between September 28 and October 17.  The text that has been selected for this year is Gabrielle Zevin’s The Storied Life of A. J. Fikry.  This 2014 novel deals with a cranky bookstore owner who gradually forges connections with other people through their shared love of books.  In many ways, the novel is a celebration of books, bookstores, and the reading life.  I have agreed to lead several book discussions focused on this novel at various library locations.  For more information about this program, please click on the following link:    http://www.cmlibrary.org/about_us/in_the_news/#!/pressrelease/charlotte-mecklenburg-library/r/charlotte-mecklenburg-library-unveils-2015-community-read-titles,c9820275

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

Chris Davis recently learned that he has been selected for a winter residency at the Sundress Academy for the Arts.

Sarah Minslow will be speaking at local libraries about censorship as part of Freedom to Read Week. She will speak on Monday, Sept. 28th 6pm at Independence Library, Thursday, Oct. 1st at 6pm at Matthews Library, and Saturday, Oct. 3 at 2 pm at Uptown Library. Please come along and add to the conversation.

Lara Vetter recently presented a paper titled “Espionage and Psychoanalysis in H.D.’s Late Prose” at a conference on “H.D. and Feminist Poetics” in H.D.’s birthplace, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.

Upcoming Events and Deadlines— Here are some dates to keep in mind:

October 9 — Mid-semester reports of unsatisfactory grades are  due on Friday, October 9th at noon.
October 19 — The deadline to apply for a Faculty Research Grant is October 19.  For more information, click on the following link:   http://research.uncc.edu/proposal-development/locating-funding

Quirky Quiz Question — The Storied Life of A. J. Fikry  is published by Algonquin Books.  Although Algonquin Books is now a division of Workman Publishing, the editorial office is still located in the same community where the publisher was founded in 1983.  Where is Algonquin Books located?

Last week’s answer: Art and English
In addition to teaching in the English Department, Jay Jacoby served as the interim chair for two departments.  Can you name these departments?

Monday Missive - September 14, 2015

September 14, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive
Jewish Literature and Culture — Today is Rosh Hashanah, which marks the start (or head) of the Jewish New Year.  I did not know much about Rosh Hashanah or the other Jewish holidays when I was growing up even though my father came from a long line of Polish Jews.  My father identified with Jewish-American culture, but he was not an observant Jew, so our family did not celebrate Jewish holidays during my childhood.

jay jacobyWith the birth of our son (Gavin), my wife and I decided to introduce Gavin to some Jewish traditions, and one of the people I turned to for advice on this matter was Jay Jacoby.  Jay was then a professor in the English Department, and he and I had many conversations over the years.  An expert on Jewish culture, Jay explained to me the significance of several of the major Jewish holidays.  Like my father, I am not a religious man, but I took an interest in the stories that Jay told about these holidays.

More than any other professor in the English Department at the time, Jay introduced our students and faculty to the rich tradition of Jewish literature and culture.  He regularly taught a course on Jewish-American literature, and he often wrote conference papers and articles on related topics.  The article that he wrote titled “The Golem in Jewish Literature” is still cited today even though it was originally published in 1984.  Jay retired in 2004, and he now lives in Asheville where he is involved in UNC Asheville’s Center for Jewish Studies.

Several current members of the English Department share Jay’s interest in Jewish literature and culture.  Here are three examples.  Jeffrey Leak is currently researching the connections between mid-twentieth-century African American poets and Rosey Poole, a Jewish scholar and editor who lived in Holland and Great Britain.  Alan Rauch has taken an interest in graphic novels that deal with Jewish themes, and he will be teaching a course on this topic in the spring semester.  Maya Socolovsky has written on Allegra Goodman’s most recent novel, The Cookbook Collector, which deals with contemporary Jewish-American culture.

The topic of cookbooks reminds me that Jewish holidays almost always have some sort of food connection.   Apples dipped in honey is associated with Rosh Hashanah.  In keeping with this culinary tradition, I will bring in some apple-honey tarts of my own invention tomorrow and set them out in the faculty/staff lounge.  In the meantime, I wish you all a happy Jewish New Year.

Upcoming Events and Deadlines— Here is a date to keep in mind:

October 19 — The deadline to apply for a Faculty Research Grant is October 19.  For more information, click on the following link:   http://research.uncc.edu/proposal-development/locating-funding

Quirky Quiz Question — In addition to teaching in the English Department, Jay Jacoby served as the interim chair for two departments.  Can you name these departments?

Last week’s answer: Alexander Calder
What is the name of the American sculptor who is largely responsible for introducing mobiles to the art scene?

Monday Missive - September 7, 2015

September 08, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive

book mobileFostering Creativity — Today is Labor Day, but in the Charlotte area, it is also Yard Art Day. Deborah Triplett, a Charlotte photographer, created Yard Art Day a few years ago. As she explains on the event’s website, she invites participants “to celebrate their creative spirit by displaying or performing their own works of art in their front yards or balconies for the public” (http://www.yardartday.org/). This year I created a “book mobile” for Yard Art Day. I love books and I love mobiles and other forms of kinetic art, so I decided to create a work that integrates both of these loves.

One of the main reasons I am a big supporter of Yard Art Day is that it fosters creativity. Most of us who participate in Yard Art Day are not professional artists, but we enjoy being creative and sharing our creations with an appreciative audience. Fostering creativity is also at the core of the English Department’s DNA. The most obvious example of this side of our department is our burgeoning creative writing program. Many of the students who take our various creative writing courses relish the opportunity to write poems and short stories, and they take pleasure in sharing their creative work with their classmates.

However, our creative writing teachers are not the only members of our department who foster their students’ creativity. For example, our faculty members in the area of technical and professional writing regularly sponsor an exhibition of their students’ work. I attended this event last semester, and I was very impressed with the high level of creativity that our students brought to their projects. Other faculty members in our department encourage their students to experiment with theatrical projects, film and digital productions, and various visual presentations, ranging from formal conference posters to free-for-all collages.

The creative dimensions of our department spin around us in unpredictable but appealing ways. It’s sort of like a mobile.

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

Chris Davis recently had a poem titled “Idol” accepted by Hawaii Review for a “Literature of Crime” issue.

Andrew Hartley was a guest speaker this Labor Day weekend at Dragon Con, which is one of the largest fantasy conventions in the world. An interview with him appeared in the Daily Dragon. The person who conducted the interview is Nancy Northcott, who is an affiliated member of our department. Here is the link: http://dailydragon.dragoncon.org/2015/discussing-books-and-audiobooks-with-a-j-hartley/

Liz Miller recently presented a paper titled “Relational Agency: An Emerging Perspective in Applied Linguistics” at the annual conference of the British Association of Applied Linguistics, held in Birmingham, England.

Jennifer Munroe recently had an article titled “Shakespeare and Ecocriticism Revisited” published in Literature Compass. Here is the link: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/enhanced/doi/10.1111/lic3.12251/

Lance Phillips’s poem “Sericulture” was published last month in 33rd edition of New American Writing. Here’s a link: http://www.newamericanwriting.com/current.htm.

Daniel Shealy recently had a chapter titled “Little Women in Its Time” published in Critical Insights: Little Women, edited by Gregory Eiselein and Anne K. Phillips.

Upcoming Events and Deadlines— Here are some dates to keep in mind:

September 10
— Shakespeare in Action is co-sponsoring a guest lecture by Sujata Iyengar titled “Why Shakespeare’s King John Leaves out the Magna Carta” at 4:30 in Fretwell 290B.

October 19 — The deadline to apply for a Faculty Research Grant is October 19. For more information, click on the following link: http://research.uncc.edu/proposal-development/locating-funding

Quirky Quiz Question
— What is the name of the American sculptor who is largely responsible for introducing mobiles to the art scene?

Last week’s answer: runcible spoon
In her article about Edward Lear’s nonsense poetry, Sarah Minslow discusses many of Lear’s poems. One of Lear’s most famous poems is “The Owl and the Pussy-Cat.” In this poem, the owl and the pussy-cat eat “slices of quince” with an unusual utensil. What is this utensil called in the poem?

Monday Missive - August 31, 2015

August 31, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive
gemsHidden Gems — Student Niner Media recently published a tabloid called Welcome Back to UNC Charlotte 2015.  I thumbed through it this weekend and came across an interesting article titled “Hidden Gems in the UNC Charlotte Course Catalog” by Casey Aldridge, the Opinion Editor for the student paper.  In her article, she features several of the most “exciting” courses offered at UNC Charlotte this fall, and nearly half of them are classes being taught by members of our department.  She especially highlights “Sexing Shakespeare,” which Kirk Melnikoff and Kent Brintnall are co-teaching.  She also includes Tony Jackson’s “I Can’t Believe My Eyes:  Storytelling, Movies, Science Fiction” and Valerie Bright’s “Blood, Sweets, and Beers:  Forbidden Food in Literature and Culture.”

As this article underscores, the English Department is offering a wide range of engaging courses, and the preliminary enrollment figures indicate that a record number of students are signing up for these classes.  The current enrollment figures for our undergraduate courses (including LBST courses) add up to a total of 2,335 seats filled.  Last fall semester, we had 2,079 seats filled.  This represents a 12% increase.  In reviewing these figures, I am very pleased that the English Department is having such success in attracting so many students to our courses.

News from Our English Learning Community — Tiffany Morin, the Director of our English Learning Community, recently sent me the following report:

The members of the English Learning Community are settling in after completing their first week of college. This year we have 18 very enthusiastic students, who are ready to start planning their Fall Events.  They are currently completing their profile collages, so you can soon learn more about the individual members from the ELC bulletin board, located by 290-B. If you would like to involve the ELC in any upcoming events, please contact Tiffany Morin.

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

Sarah Minslow recently published an article titled “Challenging the Impossibility of Children’s Literature:  The Emancipatory Qualities of Edward Lear’s Nonsense” in Bookbird:  A Journal of International Children’s Literature.

Coleen Muir published an article titled “The Price of Diversity.”  It was published through The Rumpus on August 25. Here is the link:  http://therumpus.net/2015/08/the-price-of-diversity/

Quirky Quiz Question — In her article about Edward Lear’s nonsense poetry, Sarah Minslow discusses many of Lear’s poems.  One of Lear’s most famous poems is “The Owl and the Pussy-Cat.”  In this poem, the owl and the pussy-cat eat “slices of quince” with an unusual utensil.  What is this utensil called in the poem?

Last week’s answer: Harold Hill and Miss Marian

Does anybody know the name of the salesman in The Music Man?  For extra credit, does anybody know the name of the librarian?

Monday Missive - August 24, 2015

August 24, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive

Cymbalism — Over the course of the summer, I have been following the construction of the new Vickie and Gene Johnson Marching Band Center.  This building will house UNC Charlotte’s new marching band, and the members of the band have been practicing this summer.  A few days ago, I saw a group of about five or six students playing the cymbals.

This scene brought back memories of my ill-fated and short-lived career as the cymbals player in my small high school.  I played the bassoon back in those days, but during the marching band season, they had to find another instrument for me to play since the bassoon is not an instrument that one can play while marching.  I was a pretty good bassoonist, but the cymbals and I were not made for each other.  One night during a football game, the band was supposed to play the national anthem.  We performed in the bleachers, and right in the middle of our performance, the handle strap on one of the cymbals ripped apart just as I was crashing the cymbals together.  Like Captain America’s mighty shield, my cymbal hurdled through the air.  Everyone near me quickly scrambled to get out of the way before they were beheaded by my disc of destruction.  Luckily, only my cymbal and my ego were damaged.

The birth of UNC Charlotte’s marching band also reminded me of the famous muOriginal_movie_poster_for_the_film_The_Music_Man_1962sical The Music Man.  In this musical, as you may remember, a fast-talking salesman sails into a small town and tries to convince the townsfolk that they need a marching band, complete with uniforms that he would be happy to sell them.  Initially, the salesman is just working a scam, but when he meets the town’s librarian, the situation starts to change.  She represents the wisdom and knowledge associated with books, the values associated with integrity, and an optimism tied to a deep faith in the fundamental goodness of the human heart.  Madame Librarian, as she is called in one of the musical’s songs, transforms the hustler’s hullabaloo into something meaningful and memorable for the townsfolk.  In this regard, I think that Madame Librarian and the English Department have a lot in common.  How’s that for cymbalism?

English staff 3Staff News — All three members of the English Department staff have recently signed up for important training sessions and programs.  Here are the details:

Jennie Mussington – Front Desk Safety and Security training – all day class off campus on Friday, July 17

Monica Alston – Notary Public – all day class at CPCC on Saturday, August 8. Monica is waiting on her official Notary Public number so she can take her oath then the Department will have their very own Notary Public on hand.

Angie Williams – UNC Charlotte Continuing Education Meeting and Event Planning Program – all day class every other Friday and Saturday, September 25 – November 14.

The English Department is fortunate to have such a dedicated staff.

New Part-Time Faculty Members — This fall semester several new part-time faculty members are joining the English Department.  Our new adjunct faculty are:

Julia Intawiwat who is teaching ENGL 2116 Introduction to Technical Communication
Jessica Morton who is teaching ENGL 3100 Approaches to Literature
Coleen Muir who is teaching ENGL 2126 Introduction to Creative Writing

Lance Phillips who is teaching ENGL 2127 Introduction to Poetry Writing
Sam Shapiro who is teaching ENGL 2090 Topics in English: The Films of Hitchcock

Please join me in welcoming these new colleagues to our department.

Upcoming Events and Deadlines— Here are some dates to keep in mind:
–CLAS All Faculty Mtg & Breakfast     Friday, August 28       8:30-10:00am

 Fretwell 100

–English Department Mtg   Friday, August 28          11–12:15pm

Fretwell 290B

Quirky Quiz Question — Does anybody know the name of the salesman in The Music Man?  For extra credit, does anybody know the name of the librarian?

Last week’s answer: Ralf Thiede

Heather Vorhies’s account of her recent trip to Germany reminds me that Heather is not the only member of our department who presented a paper at a conference in Germany this summer.  Can you name the other member of our department who presented a paper in Germany this summer? 

Monday Missive - August 17, 2015

August 18, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive
Chance Encounters — This past Saturday I ran into two people whom I had not seen for several years.  One was the former principal of an elementary school that our son attended in the late 1990s, and the other was a former UNC Charlotte faculty member who retired a number of years ago.  After exchanging greetings, both of them asked me if I had retired yet.  I found this question to be a bit unsettling, but I wasn’t exactly sure why.  The next day I was in an art supply store looking at picture frames when a woman came up to me and introduced herself.  “You won’t remember me,” she said, “but I took your Children’s Literature class five years ago, and it was one of my favorite classes.”  We chatted for a few minutes, and she informed me that she was an accounting major and took my class as an elective.  “I was just trying to get three credits,” she said, “but I ended up loving your class.  I will always remember your passion for children’s literature.”

As I thought about these three chance encounters, I realized that one of the reasons I have no desire to retire is that it would limit my opportunities to share my love of children’s literature and to make a difference in students’ lives.  I consider myself fortunate that my job and my interests so closely align.  This fall semester marks the beginning of my 32nd year as a member of the English Department, and as always I am looking forward to teaching my children’s literature class.  I am also looking forward to working with all of you as we kick off a new academic year.

News from Our Foreign Bureau — This summer I have been reporting on news about members of our department who have been globe trotting this summer.  This week I am featuring Heather Vorhies.  I asked Heather about her European adventures, and she sent me the following report:

I presented “Transatlantic Adaptations of Hugh Blair’s Lectures on Rhetoric” at thGermany lockse International Society for the History of Rhetoric in Tubingen, Germany, on July 29. It was the perfect place for the conference–the Rhetoric Department at the University of Tubingen is 500 years old. We didn’t get too much other travel in around the conference, but my husband and I did make it to Baden-Baden for the thermal spas (105 degree water coming up from the ground!) and to Frankfurt to walk around the skyscrapers and find locks all over the bridges.  It seems that couples go to bridges with an inscribed lock to “solidify” their relationship (most had the two names and the date).  The bridges were absolutely COVERED with them! And I was surprised to see that you could get an inscription on a combination lock.

 
Jen Munroe’s Latest Blog Post.  Jen recently sent me a report about her blog dealing with early modern recipes.  Here is her news:

Here is the link to my latest blog post for the Recipes Project. It deals with the question of “earth” and sustainability in a recipe from a book I’ve been working with. At the end, you will see that transcription credit goes to Kailan Sindelar, one of our grads. She and Breanne Weber have been working with me this summer (Kailan as part of a DR and Breanne just for fun) to transcribe the manuscript recipe book of Lady Frances Catchmay (digitized from the Wellcome Library in London but on the Folger software system we have partnered with). It’s been incredibly difficult work for them, too, as the entire book is in multiple hands, all secretary, which is a difficult handwriting to read, and the hand in this book is especially challenging. So, kudos to them! And the least I could do is give Kailan transcription credit for the recipe I used in my post. Their transcriptions are part of the EMMO (Early Modern Manuscripts Online) database that is housed at the Folger and will be part of the EMROC (Early Modern Recipes Online Collective) database once we parcel the two.  So, here is the link to my blog: https://recipes.hypotheses.org/author/jennifermunroe
Kudos— As you know, I like to use my Monday Missives to share news about recent accomplishments by members of our department.  Here is the latest news:

Andrew Hartley recently learned that Tor Publishing will bring out Steeplejack, the first volume in his new YA fantasy series, in June 2016.  For more information about Andrew’s summer activities, please click on the following link:  http://ajhartley.net/whats-going-on/summer-2015/

Upcoming Events and Deadlines— Here are some dates to keep in mind:
Here is a list of upcoming meetings and events that will take place this month:

–University Convocation     Thursday, August 20    9:00am coffee, 9:30-11 Convocation

 McKnight Hall
–Day of Convocation           Monday, August 24     11:00-5:00pm (faculty arrive at 10:15)

 Halton Arena

–CLAS All Faculty Mtg & Breakfast     Friday, August 28       8:30-10:00am
 Fretwell 100

–English Department Mtg   Friday, August 28          11–12:15pm

Fretwell 290B

Quirky Quiz Question — Heather Vorhies’s account of her recent trip to Germany reminds me that Heather is not the only member of our department who presented a paper at a conference in Germany this summer.  Can you name the other member of our department who presented a paper in Germany this summer?

Last week’s answer: Mortimer
In my upcoming presentation at the Waltonwood retirement community, I will talk about the history of Disney’s animated movies, including his Mickey Mouse movies.  When Mickey made his first film appearance, he was not called Mickey Mouse.  What was Mickey’s original name?
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