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Monday Missive - April 20, 2015

April 21, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive

Earth Day treeEarth Day — The 45th celebration of Earth Day will take place on Wednesday, April 22, 2015. In my mind, Earth Day is associated with sustainability, eco-criticism, and nature writing. These topics all relate to the work that takes place in the English Department. I could list many examples, but I will limit

myself to the work of three of our faculty members. This semester, Jen Munroe is teaching two courses that consider issues of “sustainability”–the first a graduate seminar titled “Thinking Green: Ecological Approaches to Texts” and the second a grad/undergrad course on “Shakespeare and Ecofeminism.” In both courses, students wrote a blog post where they considered a current environmental issue with a specific focus on its implications for questions of race, class, and/or gender. Greg Wickliff also teaches courses that relate to environmental issues. Last summer he taught a course in which he had his students write about the natural and historic dimensions of a specific place. Alan Rauch frequently writes about nature and sustainability in his scholarly work. Within the past month he has given two scholarly presentations on the environmental themes in the work of W. H. Hudson, the author of Green Mansions: A Romance of the Tropical Forest (1904). As these examples demonstrate, the English Department honors the values associated with Earth Day all year long.

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:

Lil Brannon recently learned that the UNC Charlotte Writing Project has been awarded $10,000 of federal funds for the second half of the $20,000 two-year award for the site’s 2014-2016 SEED Teacher Leadership Development Grant.

Alan Rauch recently gave a presentation titled “Terra Rima: W. H. Hudson, Environmentalism, and the Collapse of Nature” at the 10th Annual meeting of the British Society for Literature and Science in Liverpool.

Greg Wickliff recently published an article titled “Draper, Darwin, And The Oxford Evolution Debate Of 1860” in Earth Sciences History. He also presented a paper titled “Toward New Imponderables: John William Draper’s Chemistry and Physics Experiments, 1836 – 1842” at the Southern
History of Science and Technology Conference that recently took place at VCU in Richmond.

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

April 21 — Jen Munroe will give a talk titled “King Lear and Environmental Justice” at 4:30 in Fretwell 290B. Her talk is part of the the Shakespeare in Action’s “36 in 6” initiative.

April 24 — Matthew Rascoff (UNC VP of Learning Technology & Innovation) will be driving in from General Administration on Friday, April 24, to give a talk on UNC’s vision for the future of on-line teaching. The talk will be in the seminar room (290B Fretwell) from 2:00-3:30.

April 26 — The English Department Spring Party will take place on Sunday, April 26, from 5:00-8:00 at the home of Pilar and Tom Blitvich.

April 28 — On Tuesday evening, April 28th, at 6:30 pm here in the foyer of Fretwell, we will host an Exhibition of Work for students with interests in Technical/Professional Writing or Language and Digital Technology. Professional writers and editors from the Charlotte Chapter of the Society for Technical Communication will be joining us to talk with students about their work. All students and faculty are welcome. Light refreshments will be provided.

April 29 — The English Department Student Awards Ceremony will be held on Wednesday, April 29 at 12:30 in the Dale Halton Room of the University Library.

Earth Day-Quotes

Quirky Quiz Question — The celebration of the first Earth Day took place in 1970. Does anybody know the name of the Senator from Wisconsin who is responsible for making Earth Day an annual event?

Last week’s answer: American Literature

Monday Missive - April 13, 2015

April 14, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive

Shapiro and Shapiro — As part of the English Department’s involvement in the area of film studies, we are offering a topics course this coming fall semester on Alfred Hitchcock’s films, including The Birds, Psycho, and Thirty-Nine Steps.  The person who is teaching this course is Sam Shapiro, who is a manager at the main branch of the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library.  He is also the long-time film programmer at the public library.  Sam has taught as an adjunct faculty member in the American Studies Program for many years, but this fall he will be teaching for English.

Sam Shapiro

Sam Shapiro

I find it fitting that Sam will be teaching in the English Department, for he is the son of Morton (Marty) Shapiro.  When Charlotte College became the University of North Carolina at Charlotte in 1965, Marty Shapiro was listed as one of the original members of the English Department.  Marty taught in the department until his retirement in 1993.   Today Marty lives in the Memory Care Unit at The Summit at SouthPark .  Although Marty is no longer able to remember much about his years as an English Professor, the fact that his son now has connections to the department helps perpetuate the Shapiro legacy.

Link to Charlotte College 1965 Yearbook (pg 40 for English Department faculty) http://library.digitalnc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/yearbooks/id/2094/rec/23

Public Intellectuals Conference Follow-Up — The Sixth Annual Conference on Public Intellectuals took place this past weekend at UNC Charlotte Center City, and several members of the English Department participated.  Paula Connolly gave a presentation titled “Young Public Intellectuals:  Abolitionist Literature for Children,”  and Juan Meneses presented on “Jeanette Winterson and Napoleon’s Doctrine.” Sarah Minslow gave a presentation on “Australian Children’s Authors as Public Intellectuals,” and Alan Rauch spoke on “The Un-Greening of W.H. Hudson:  How a Major Voice for Ecological Awareness Was Lost.”  Also, both Alan and Paula Eckard participated on a panel discussion on “The Publishing and Editing of Public Intellectuals.”

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:

Liz Miller recently gave a presentation titled “Continuing the Conversation: Coming Together for Social Sustainability” at the Integrated Network for Social Sustainability Conference held at UNC Charlotte Center City.

Ralf Thiede attended the 82nd SouthEastern Conference on Linguistics (SECOL) in Raleigh this weekend, presenting two papers.  One, with Kristin Brown (a former English major of ours now teaching at Gaston College), was titled “Colonial Shadows: Two Creole Bible Translations” and documented linguistically how a bible can be a colonial power tool or an icon of emancipation.  His other paper, “Your Brain on Story,” explored how the brain’s information management (memory, perception, expectation, association, selection) shares basic features of storytelling.  Ralf was elected vice president of SECOL at the business meeting.

Six graduate students took the M.A. Exams on March 28, and they all passed their exams.  I congratulate all of them.

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

April 26 — The English Department Spring Party will take place on Sunday, April 26, from 5:00-8:00 at the home of Pilar and Tom Blitvich.

April 29 — The English Department Student Awards Ceremony will be held on Wednesday, April 29 at 12:30 in the Dale Halton Room of the University Library.

Quirky Quiz Question — Marty Shapiro taught a wide variety of courses during his years in the English Department, but he especially enjoyed teaching courses in his area of speciality.   What was Marty’s area of speciality?

Last week’s answer: MSNBC

 

Monday Missive - April 6, 2015

April 06, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive

Public Intellectuals — For the past six years, I have been participating in the Public Intellectuals Conference, which until this year, has taken place at Harvard University. Last year I co-organzied the conference, and this year I am helping host the conference here in Charlotte. The 6th Annual Public Intellectuals Conference will take place at UNC Melissa PerryCharlotte Center City on April 10-11, 2015. This conference is not a gathering of public intellectuals although some of the participants could be classified as such. Rather, it provides a forum for scholars to discuss the careers and contributions of prominent public intellectuals. A good example of such a person is Melissa Harris-Perry, who spokeat UNC Charlotte last week. In some cases, presenters focus on particular public intellectuals while in other cases, the focus is on political or cultural movements in which public intellectuals participate.

Over the history the conference, we have have never agreed on a precise definition of what constitutes a public intellectual, but this hasn’t stopped us from having lively discussions. In fact, I think the inherent vagueness of the term contributes to the liveliness of these discussions. Last year, for example, I made the case for Dr. Seuss being a public intellectual even though the members of the public with whom he shared his ideas were young children. One could argue that preschoolers are too young to understand intellectual discourse. For me at least, such debates contribute to the pleasure of participating in this conference.

As I contemplate the topic of public intellectuals, I am impressed with how many members of our English Department can be seen as public intellectuals. I am aware of numerous examples of members of our department who make an effort to share their work as intellectuals with a broader public. Here are some examples from the past month. Paula Connolly spoke to over 150 people about her book Slavery in American Children’s Literature, 1790-2010 as part of the Personally Speaking series. Ron Lunsford was featured in an article published in the Charlotte Post in which he shared his expertise on the evolution of language. Alan Rauch received a two-year appointment to the Baldwin Library Scholars Council with the expectation that he will help develop programming for the Baldwin Library of Historical Children’s Literature, which is located in Gainesville, Florida. These are just three recent cases of members of our English Department sharing their academic expertise and intellectual insights with the larger public. Such engagement is a hallmark of public intellectuals.

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:

Katie Hogan recently presented a paper titled “Nature as ‘Safe House’ in Alison Bechdel’s Fun Home” at UNC Asheville’s Navigating Normativities: Queer Studies Conference.

Paula Martinac, who teaches a creative writing course as a part-time faculty member, recently presented a paper titled “The Magical History Tour: Imagining the Lesbian Past” at UNC Asheville’s Navigating Normativities: Queer Studies Conference.

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

April 8 — Matt Johnson will give a presentation titled “Pressing Matters: The Conservation of Books and their Enduring Legacy” as part of the Julian D. Mason Talks on Rare Books. The event will take place at the Atkins Library’s Halton Room and will begin at 3:30 p.m.

April 8 — A poetry reading featuring Anne-Marie Fyfe and C. L. Dallat will take place in the English Department Seminar Room (Fretwell 290B) from 5:00-6:00 pm.

Quirky Quiz Question — In thinking about Melissa Harris-Perry as a public intellectual, I am reminded that she both a professor at Wake Forest University and a host of a weekly television program. Does anybody know the name of the network that airs the Melissa Harris-Perry Show?

Monday Missive - March 30, 2015

March 30, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive

international-womens-day-themeWomen of the World — UNC Charlotte’s International Women’s Day Celebration took place on March 26, 2015. Both Pilar Blitvich and Boyd Davis were among the 2015 Honorees who were celebrated at the event. This much deserved recognition underscores the prominent roles that the English Department’s faculty, staff, and students have long played in supporting women’s and gender studies on our campus. I think it worth noting that the first director of UNC Charlotte’s Women’s Studies Program was Shelley Crisp, who taught in the English Department at the time, and the current director of the the Women’s and Gender Studies Program is Katie Hogan, who is also a member of the English Department.

A literal example of women from the English Department playing feminist roles can be seen during Tuesday’s performance of The Vagina Monologues. This production will take place on Tuesday, March 31, 2015, at 7:00 pm in the McKnight Hall. The performers include Janaka Lewis, Tiffany Morin, and Angie Williams from the English Department as well Shannon Bauerle and Allison Walsh, who are part of our department’s greater sisterhood. When Eve Ensler wrote this play in 1996, she wanted to express support for female solidarity on a global level. This theme also runs through her more recent work titled I Am an Emotional Creature: The Secret Life of Girls around the World, which came out in 2010. Given Ensler’s global perspective, Tuesday’s performance of The Vagina Monologues is a perfect follow-up to last week’s International Women’s Day Celebration.

Sanskrit — When our friend and colleague Jim McGavran passed away at the end of last year, he was serving as a juror for Sanskrit, UNC Charlotte’s literary arts magazine. Two other members of the English Department, Chris Davis and Lara Vetter, also served as the literature jurors for this year’s edition of Sanskrit. This edition is now published. I thumbed through the issue this weekend, and I was pleased to see that it is dedicated to Jim McGavran.

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:

Sonya Brockman’s article titled “Social Anxieties and Social Metamorphosis in The Taming of the Shrew” has been published in Journal of Early Modern Studies and available online at http://www.fupress.net/index.php/bsfm-jems/article/view/15808.

Paula Connolly was interviewed by the New Books Network. The interview is part of the New Books Network’s discussion of African American Studies. Here is a link to the interview: http://newbooksinafroamstudies.com/2015/03/26/paula-t-connolly-slavery-in-american-childrens-literature-1790-2010-u-of-iowa-press-2013/

Dina Massachi, one of our graduate students, presented a paper titled “What Makes a Child’s Utopia: Thomas More and L. Frank Baum” at UNC Greensboro’s Power of Place conference.

Hannah Mayfield, one of our graduate students, presented a paper titled “Gender in the Gift Economy: Where Gender Stands in Discourse 2.0” at UNC Greensboro’s Power of Place conference.

Kirk Melnikoff has been given a contract to edit James IV by Robert Greene. The play will be printed in the Anthology of Non-Shakespearean Drama, Ed. Jeremy Lopez (Routledge, 2019).

Liz Miller recently presented a paper titled “(In)convenient fictions: Ideologies of multilingual practice and repertoires as resource for constituting identity and social order” at the Georgetown University Roundtable conference. She also presented a paper titled “The Ideology of Agency and the Neoliberal Self” at the American Association of Applied Linguistics conference in Toronto. Both papers were part of colloquia she helped organize.

Julia Morris, one of our graduate students, recently presented a paper titled “The Evolved Female Métier in Anna Kanvan’s Let Me Alone” at the 7th Annual Southeast Regional Graduate Conference held at Florida State University in Tallahassee, Florida.

Olivia Rines, a current grad student and co-president of EGSA, has been accepted into the Applied Linguistics Ph.D. at Arizona State University. She is one of only three applicants to have been offered financial support in the form of a generously funded TAship, tuition waiver and health benefits.

Becky Roeder presented a paper titled “Conflict & Community: Spanish in the Linguistic Landscape of Charlotte, NC” at the Georgetown University Roundtable in Linguistics (GURT) conference.

Megan Weaver, a graduate of our M.A. Program, has been accepted into a PhD program at Old Dominion University (with a first-year fellowship).

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

March 31 — A performance of The Vagina Monologues (faculty and staff cast) will take place on Tuesday, March 31, at 7pm in McKnight Hall (Cone Center). Angie, Janaka, and Tiffany will each be performing in this important event. This year’s production is being directed by Shannon Bauerle, a former English grad student, ELC Coordinator and part-time instructor. All proceeds will benefit Safe Alliance. Admission tickets are $10. For admission ticket and a t-shirt $15. ONLY CASH will be taken at the door. To purchase tickets online:https://ecom.uncc.edu/C21561_ustores/web/store_main.jsp?STOREID=104&SINGLESTORE=true

April 2 — Micah Nathan, our visiting creative writing professor, will have a reading/book signing at Park Road Books (4139 Park Road) on Thursday, April 2, at 7:00 pm. If you need directions to the bookstore, please click on the following link: http://www.parkroadbooks.com/

April 8 — Matt Johnson will give a presentation titled “Pressing Matters: The Conservation Books and their Enduing Legacy” as part of the Julian D. Mason Talks on Rare Books. The event will take place at the Atkins Library’s Halton Room and will begin at 3:30 p.m.

April 8 — A poetry reading featuring Anne-Marie Fyfe and C.L. Dallat will take place in the English Department Seminar Room (Fretwell 290B) from 5:00-6:00 pm.

Quirky Quiz Question — In remembering the role that Shelley Crisp played in establishing UNC Charlotte’s Women’s Studies Program, I am reminded that Shelley went on to become the Executive Director of a major nonprofit organization in North Carolina. Does anybody know the name of the organization that Shelley headed?

Last week’s answer: University of Iowa Press

Monday Missive - March 23, 2015

March 24, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive

TuesdayTuesday — As the days of the week go, Tuesdays are usually unremarkable, but every now and then a remarkable Tuesday comes along. David Wiesner’s picture book Tuesday deals with such a day. In this Caldecott-winning book, an amazing phenomenon occurs one “Tuesday evening, around eight.” Hundreds of frogs are sitting on their lily pads in a quiet pond when suddenly the lily pads levitate. Flying on their lily pads, the frogs swoop into a nearby town and have a series of wild nocturnal adventures. Well, in our own way, we are about to have a remarkable Tuesday, too. We will start soaring tomorrow at 11:00 with the first of our English Major Day events, and we will continue with our adventures into the evening with Paula Connolly’s presentation for the Personally Speaking Series.

This year’s English Major Day features three workshops and a keynote address by Micah Nathan. The first workshop is titled “The English Major as Preparation for a 21st-Century Career” and will take place in Fretwell 290B from 11:00-12:15. The second workshop is on “Preparing for Graduate School” and will take place in Fretwell 290B from 12:30-1:45. The final workshop is titled “Publishing a Book” and will take place in Fretwell 290B from 2:00-3:15. Micah’s keynote address is titled “In Defense of the English Major.” He will speak in Storrs 110 starting at 4:00 pm. For more information about English Major Day, please click on the following link: http://english.uncc.edu/sites/english.uncc.edu/files/media/English_Majors_Days_2015_R.pdf

Paula Connolly’s presentation for the Personally Speaking Series will begin at 6:30 pm in the Halton Reading Room of Atkins Library. She will talk about her book Slavery in American Children’s Literature, 1790-2010. A reception and book signing will follow at 7:30 pm.

As you make your plans for Tuesday, please make every effort to attend as many of these events as you can fit into your schedule. Also, please encourage your students to participate in these events. If you are flying in on a lily pad, let me know and I will try to arrange for special lily pad parking for you.

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:

JuliAnn Ávila recently published a chapter titled “Traveling Down a Desire Line: Surviving Where Community and Academia Meet” in a volume titled Reimagining the Public Intellectual in Education: Making Scholarship Matter.

Pilar Blitvich recently presented a paper titled “Transnational Identity and Citizen Discourse: Latinos Versus Immigrants” at the Georgetown Round Table on Linguistics Conference: Diversity, Super-diversity: Socio-cultural Linguistics Perspectives. The conference was held at Georgetown University on March 13-15.

Lil Brannon had an essay titled “Unintended Consequences” published in the February issue of College Composition and Communication.

Nicole Cruse, one of our graduate students, has been accepted into the linguistics PhD Program at the University of Connecticut. She has also been chosen as an IGERT Fellow, which includes a substantial stipend. She’ll start there in the fall.

Laura Erturk, a graduate of our M.A. program, has been accepted into the linguistics PhD Program at the University of South Carolina. She’ll start there in the fall.

Jeffrey Leak recently participated in the Virginia Festival of the Book. He was one of the featured authors for a panel on “African Americans in Mid-Century America: Power, Literature, and the Black List.”

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

March 24 — The English Major Day will take place on March 24. The event will include three workshops and a keynote address by Micah Nathan.

March 24 — Paula Connolly will give the fourth and final presentation in this year’s Personally Speaking Series. The event will take place at the Atkins Library and will begin at 6:30 p.m. She will speak about her book Slavery in American Children’s Literature, 1790-2010.

March 27 — The English Department Meeting will take place in the Conference Room from 11:00-12:30.

March 27 — Balaka Basu will deliver a presentation titled “Play the Game: Reading Digitally with Children’s Literature” in the Conference Room from 1:00-2:00. This presentation is sponsored by the English Department’s Faculty Development Committee.

Quirky Quiz Question — Paula Connolly’s talk for the Personally Speaking Series will focus on her book Slavery in American Children’s Literature, 1790-2010. This book was published by the same press that published two of Jim McGavran’s collections. Does anyone know the name of this press?

Last week’s answer – Dennis Kay

Monday Missive - March 16, 2015

March 17, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive

Studying Abroad — Last week I received a report about our English majors who are studying abroad during this academic year. The report includes a listing of the countries where our majors have gone to study. These countries include Australia, Brazil, Japan, Netherlands, Poland, Spain, and the United Kingdom. What stands out in this report is the large number of our students who went to London over the spring break as part of our Shakespeare in England course (ENGL 4050/5050). Andrew Hartley is the faculty member in charge of this class. I recently asked Andrew about the course, and he provided me with the following information:

“Fourteen students (mainly English and theatre majors) spent a week in London and Stratford, a packed trip which included six theatre productions and visits to such landmarks as the Tower of London, Westminster Abbey and Hampton Court. One of the highlights was a guided tour of the Houses of Parliament by Baroness Josie Farrington, a sitting peer in the House of Lords, including observing Question Time and being admitted to the thirteenth century undercroft chapel which is not generally open to the public. In Stratford the group got to relax in the pub with the cast of the Royal Shakespeare Productions we had seen (Love’s Labour’s Lost, Much Ado About Nothing, and a stunning staging of Dekker’s Shoemaker’s Holiday). We had performance workshops there and at the Globe, and the students learned the delights of pasties, pints of bitter, and some of the best Indian food in the world! They were a wonderful group: punctual, amiable and enthusiastic throughout.”

2015-03-04 08.54.53I have talked with several of the students who went on this trip, and they describe it as a once-in-a-lifetime experience. As these students know, the experience of studying abroad is often a highlight in our students’ college years. I know that for my son (who turns 22 today) the experience of studying architecture in Barcelona last fall proved to be a wonderful and very memorable semester. I encourage all of us to help make this experience a reality for more of our students.

Seuss-a-Thon — This past Saturday the fourth annual Seuss-a-Thon took place at Park Road Books, and it was a great success. Co-sponsored by the English Department and Park Road Books, the Seuss-a-Thon is tied to the National Education Association’s Read Across America event. I am very pleased with the English Department’s enthusiastic suessathon Alan 2015support of this event. Numerous faculty and staff members participated, including Valerie Bright, Sarah Minslow, Meg Morgan, Tiffany Morin, Anita Moss, Jen Munroe, Alan Rauch, and Angie Williams. The participants also included a number of our current students, including Angelica Chakraborty, Shannon Homesley, Amanda Loeffert, Julia Morris, Joye Palmer, and Nancy Partridge. Tiffany Morin and the English Learning Community ran a crafts table where children created all sorts of Dr. Seuss-related art projects. Two faculty members from the College of Education—Heather Coffey and Adriana Medina— also participated. For more information about the Seuss-a-Thon, please click on the following link: https://exchange.uncc.edu/2015-seuss-a-thon-to-feature-favorite-author-books/

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:

Paula Connolly recently published an article titled “Reframing History: Insider/Outsider Paradigms in Ten Books about Slavery” in Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures, 6.2 (Winter 2014): 134-147.

Adam Padgett, a graduate of our M.A. program, has been accepted into the Composition and Rhetoric PhD Program at the University of South Carolina. He’ll start there in the fall with an assistantship, tuition waiver, and stipend.

Ralf Thiede recently published a review of Hugh Crago’s Entranced by Story: Brain, Tale and Teller, from Infancy to Old Age. His review appeared the Children’s Literature Association Quarterly, 40.1 (Spring 2015): 85-88.

Heather Vorhies recently learned that her paper “Doing Business Over There: Misunderstanding Early Nineteenth Century Women’s Writing in the Place of Business” has been accepted for presentation at the Feminisms and Rhetorics Conference to be held at Arizona State University, October 28-31, 2015.

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

March 16 — In collaboration with Women’s and Gender Studies and Africana Studies, the Early African American Women Writers class (ENG 3050) will host Dr. Trimiko Melancon, author of Unbought and Unbossed: Transgressive Black Women, Sexuality, and Representation and co-editor of Black Female Sexualities, on Monday, March 16 at 5 pm in Fretwell 206 for a talk on Black Women, Sexuality, and Culture. Books will be available at 4:30. This event is open to interested faculty, students, and the public.

March 24 — The English Major Day will take place on March 24. The event will include three workshops and a keynote address by Micah Nathan. Here is a link to the schedule: http://english.uncc.edu/sites/english.uncc.edu/files/media/English_Majors_Days_2015_R.pdf

On March 24 — Paula Connolly will give the fourth and final presentation in this year’s Personally Speaking Series. The event will take place at the Atkins Library and will begin at 6:30 p.m. She will speak about her book Slavery in American Children’s Literature, 1790-2010.

Quirky Quiz Question — This semester Andrew Hartley is teaching the Shakespeare in England course. As many of you know, Andrew is the Robinson Distinguished Professor of Shakespeare. Andrew is the second professor to hold this position. Does anybody remember the name of the first person to hold this position?

Last week’s answer: Beth Gargano and Susan Gardner

Monday Missive - March 9, 2015

March 09, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive
Sketch Artist: Jon Bailiff

Sketch of panelists and moderators by Jon Bailiff.

The Freedom to Read — I have written and spoken about the censorship of children’s literature on many occasions over the span three decades, but my recent speaking engagements in Singapore stand out as a highlight in my career as an anti-censorship activist. Since Singapore gained its independence a half century ago, the government has imposed controls on the publication and distribution of books and other forms of printed material. This aspect of Singapore society came into play last year when the government’s National Library Board decided to remove several children’s picture books from the public libraries on the grounds that these books were not “pro-family.” These books included Jean Davies Okimoto’s The White Swan Express: A Story about Adoption, in which a lesbian couple adopts a baby from China, and Justin Richardson and Peter Parnell’s And Tango Makes Three, in which two male penguins hatch and raise a baby penguin. The banning of these two books sparked an international controversy. Eventually the National Library Board decided not to ban these books but instead moved them to the adult section of the libraries.

In response to this controversy, my long-time friend Robin Hemley, who now teaches at Yale-NUS (National University of Singapore), organized a series of events related to the censorship of children’s literature, culminating in a panel presentation titled “What Children Shouldn’t Read: A Global Controversy.” I was one of four participants on the panel. The others were authors Susie Bright, Suchen Christine Lim, and Jean Davies Okimoto. The event took place in a packed auditorium on the campus of the National University of Singapore. For two hours we gave presentations, responded to the other panelists’ points, and answered questions from the audience. The event was covered by the Singapore press and monitored by university and governmental officials. I later learned that this panel presentation was one of the first times that the topic of censorship was discussed openly in Singapore. As I came to understand, the panel presentation was one of several recent incremental steps toward greater freedom in Singapore. I know that the other panelists and I were honored to play a small role in this change.

Welcoming Micah Nathan — Please join me in welcoming fiction writer Micah Nathan to the department. Micah arrives this week as a visiting professor, and he will stay with us for approximately one month. While he is here, he will teach an advanced fiction writing course and deliver the keynote address for our English Major Day on March 24. Micah’s publications include the novel Gods of Aberdeen (2005), the novel Losing Graceland (2011), and the collection Jack the Bastard and Other Stories (2012). For more information about Micah’s writings, please visit his website: http://www.micahnathan.com/ Micah is also a writer-in-residence at Kingston University in London, and his visit to our department is part of our larger efforts to collaborate with Kingston University in the area of creative writing.

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:

Alan Rauch and Suzan Alteri of the Baldwin Library of Historical Children’s Literature received a $5000 grant from the American Library Association’s Carnegie-Whitney Fund to develop the exhibit: “Woman Authored Science Books for Children, 1790-1890.”

The research of Becky Roeder and Boyd Davis came up in last Friday’s ‘Charlotte Talks’ with Mike Collins. Walt Wolfram and Jeff Reaser from NCSU talked about their new book, Talkin’ Tar Heel, and they referred to sociolinguistic research conducted here in our department. They discussed how much identity (and ego) is tied up in language varieties, and you can hear a sound clip in which Boyd unpacks all the information that is read merely from how someone talks – in this case, her very own speech. Here is the link:http://wfae.org/post/talkin-tarheel-0

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

March 14 — The fourth annual Seuss-a-Thon will take place from at Park Road Books from 11:00-3:00. Co-sponsored by the English Department and Park Road Books, this event will involve people reading their favorite Dr. Seuss books aloud to children.

March 24 — The English Major Day will take place on March 24. The event will include three workshops and a keynote address by Micah Nathan. More details will be announced soon.

On March 24 — Paula Connolly will give the fourth and final presentation in this year’s Personally Speaking Series. The event will take place at the Atkins Library and will begin at 6:30 p.m. She will speak about her book Slavery in American Children’s Literature, 1790-2010.

Quirky Quiz Question — Micah Nathan’s visiting position in our department is tied to our collaboration with Kingston University. Two members of the English Department have served as the faculty advisor for the UNC Charlotte’s students who participate in the study-abroad program at Kingston University. Can you name these faculty members?

Last week’s answer: Malaysia

Monday Missive - February 23, 2015

February 23, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive

singapore-skylineSingapore Bound — Singapore is one of the smallest nations in the world in terms of its physical size, but it looms large in my plans for spring break. Several months ago I received an invitation from a program jointly sponsored by Yale University and the National University of Singapore (YaleNUS College) to participate in an international symposium on censorship. Titled “What Children Shouldn’t Read: A Global Controversy,” the symposium will take place on March 3-4, although there will be related events before and after the official symposium.

I am by no means the only English Department faculty member who is engaged in projects that relate to global issues and themes. I could list at least a dozen examples, but I will limit myself to three. Pilar Blitvich’s research on pragmatics is international in nature, and she regularly publishes in European linguistics journals. Juan Meneses’s research on postcolonial literature transcends national boundaries. Alan Rauch is the series editor for Intersections in Literature and Science, a book series published by University of Wales Press. Every year, numerous members of our department present papers at international conferences or conduct research outside the United States. Nowadays UNC Charlotte is incorporating the theme of globalism in its educational and research mission, and the English Department is clearly a participant in this development. As Shakespeare once wrote, “All the world’s a stage.” The English Department is already a player on this very wide stage.

CLGO Colloquium — On February 20, the Children’s Literature Graduate Organization sponsored an event titled “Mockingjays, Mirrors, and Mysterious Missions: A Colloquium on Dystopias, Distortions, and Other Worlds.” Five graduate students presented papers at this event. Amanda Loeffert presented a paper titled “Fighting in Flats: How Kamala Khan is Revolutionizing the Female Superhero.” Dina Massachi presented a paper titled “What Makes a Child’s Utopia: Thomas More and L. Frank Baum.” Hannah Mayfield gave a paper on “Katniss Everdeen and Her Band of Not So Merry Men: The Outlaw Hero’s Journey from Myth to Dystopia,” and Julia Morris delivered a paper titled “Battle on the Playground: A Discussion of War in Rowling’s Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix.” Richard Smith presented on “Weird Stones, Familiar Places: The Other World of Alan Garner’s The Weirdstone of Brisingamen.” The colloquium concluded with a faculty panel discussion featuring Balaka Basu, Paula Connolly, and Beth Gargano.

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:

Boyd Davis co-edited with Dena Shenk a special issue of American Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease & Other Dementias (February 2105). The theme of this special issue is “Technology and Dementia.”

Allison Hutchcraft recently had four poems accepted for publication in the May 2015 issue of The Kenyon Review.

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

February 27 — Mid-term grades are due by noon on Friday, February 27.

Quirky Quiz Question — Singapore is a city-state located on an island very near a much larger Asian country. What is the name of this larger Asian country?

Last week’s answer: Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Monday Missive - February 16, 2015

February 16, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive

Immortality — In the beginning of The Hobbit, Bilbo Baggins answers a series of knocks on his round door. Each time he opens the door, a dwarf walks in, and soon there is quite an assemblage of them. After gathering in Bilbo’s home, they talk of treasured memories and future plans, and then they set about the more serious business of preparing for the immediate challenges that await them. I was reminded of this scene last Saturday. Around 1:00 in the afternoon, I started answering series of knocks on the main door to the English Department. Each time I opened the door, a graduate student entered the lobby. Soon they formed a convivial party of six. They quickly began exchanging greetings and chatting amongst themselves, but they clearly shared a sense of purpose. They gathered together on Saint Valentine’s Day to celebrate and remember a beloved professor: a professor from whom they had all taken courses; a professor who had helped them appreciate the treasure of literature; a professor named Jim McGavran.

These six graduate students—Brook Blaylock, Yekaterina Dolmatova, Beth Greene, Lisa K. McAlister, Joye T. Palmer, and Breanne Weber—all agreed to participate in the  upcoming “Celebration of the Life of James McGavran.” As part of this event, they will give an oral reading of William Wordsworth’s “Ode: Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood.” They spent much but not all of Saturday afternoon in the Conference Room diligently rehearsing their performance. From my office, I could hear them reading Wordsworth’s poem, but I could also hear them sharing stories about Jim’s courses and laughing at amusing things that Jim did in class. After a few hours, they (c) The Wordsworth Trust; Supplied by The Public Catalogue Foundationinformed me that they were ready to recite the poem. I joined them in the Conference Room, and they proceeded to amaze me with their professional and passionate presentation.

After the graduate students left, I sat in my office and reflected on the notion of immortality. Wordsworth’s poem revolves around this theme, but I found myself thinking about Jim’s enduring spirit. The experience of spending an afternoon with Jim’s students helped me realize that his wisdom, his passion for the British Romantics, and his love of poetry and nature writing live on through his students. As a result of Jim’s deep commitment to teaching, he achieved his own form of immortality. Such is Jim’s legacy.

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:

JuliAnna Ávila will journey to Middlebury College on February 24 to speak at a workshop for faculty and students about the changing nature of academic English.

Chris Davis recently had two poems published in an anthology titled Words Without Walls: Writers on Addiction, Violence, and Incarceration (Trinity University Press). He also had a poem titled “Along the Crimes Against Nature Trail, Look,” accepted by Exit 7, a journal published in Kentucky.

Janaka Lewis participated in the panel discussion of “Living Thinkers: An Autobiography of Black Women in the Ivory Tower” for the Center for Graduate Life on Feb. 12. The event was coordinated by English Literature Master’s Student and Graduate Life Fellow Kristen Reynolds.  Also, Janaka will read her poem “New Southern Blues” from 27 Views of Charlotte on Wednesday, February 18, at 6 pm at North County Regional Library, Huntersville.

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

February 18 — Historian Lawrence Friedman will deliver a lecture titled “Inconvenient Visionaries: Crafting World Peace” on Wednesday, February 18, from 4:00 to 5:30 in Fretwell 290B. This lecture is sponsored by the American Studies Program.

February 20 — “A Celebration of Jim McGavran” will take place on Friday, February 20, from 2:00-4:30 in the Rowe Recital Hall (Rowe 140). The official program will begin at 2:30 to be followed by a reception in the main lobby of Rowe.

February 27 — Mid-term grades are due by noon on Friday, February 27.

Quirky Quiz Question — While William Wordsworth was composing “Ode: Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood,” he was in frequent contact with another Romantic poet with whom he shared a close friendship. What is the name of this other Romantic poet?

Last week’s answer: The Carolina Israelite

Monday Missive - February 9, 2015

February 09, 2015 by Mark West
Categories: Monday Missive

Rosey E. Pool during a Black Nativity tour in England (ca. 1965), with (a.o.) Marion Williams, Alex Bradford, Vinette Carrol and Madeleine Bell.

Black History Month — February is Black History Month. One aspect of this history is the longstanding and mutually supportive relationship between African Americans and Jews. Jeffrey Leak’s most recent research project deals specifically with this relationship. Jeffrey began this project by studying the life and career of the African American poet Robert Hayden. In the process of conducting his preliminary research, he discovered a fascinating connection between Hayden and Rosey E. Pool, a Jewish editor from England. This spring Jeffrey plans to go England to examine Pool’s papers. I asked Jeffrey about his research trip, and he sent me the following information:

I’ll be journeying to England to visit the archives at the University of Sussex, located in Brighton. I’ll be looking through the papers of Rosey E. Pool (1905-1971), who grew up in the Jewish quarter of Amsterdam. While training to become an English teacher, she came across a poem by the Harlem Renaissance poet Countee Cullen; as a result, she she developed a life-long passion for African American poetry and culture. Her family was interned at Westerbork Transit camp, but only she survived. During that time, they would sing what were referred to as Negro Spirituals. At war’s end she continued to celebrate and analyze African American poets, editing volumes of poetry in England. She lectured widely here in the U.S. at historically black colleges and universities in the 1950s and ’60s. She was a major voice for black literature in Europe, and her archive provides a social and cultural history of African American writers from the vantage point of Great Britain and Western Europe.

Jeffrey’s research relates to a larger story with intriguing ties to the Charlotte area. Last year the Levine Museum of the New South sponsored an exhibit titled “Beyond Swastika and Jim Crow: Jewish Refugee Scholars at Black Colleges.” As this exhibit made clear, many historically black colleges and universities, including Johnson C. Smith University, provided teaching opportunities for Jewish refugees from Europe during the World War Two era. African Americans and Jews also collaborated during the Civil Rights Movement. Charlotte’s own Harry Golden is an important example of a prominent Jew who played a key role in this movement. As we celebrate Black History Month, we should make note of this chapter in African American history and remember the strength that comes from forming alliances and coalitions.

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:

Amanda Loeffert, a graduate student in our children’s literature concentration, recently had a paper accepted for presentation at the upcoming Children’s Literature Association Conference. Her paper is titled “Fighting in Flats: How Kamala Khan is Revolutionizing the Female Superhero.”

Katie Hogan recently had a chapter titled “The Academic Slow Lane: Creating Alternative Professional Identities” accepted for publication Staging Academic Women’s Lives (State University of New York Press).

Dina Massachi, a graduate student in our children’s literature concentration, recently had a paper accepted for presentation at the upcoming Children’s Literature Association Conference. Her paper is titled “Starving for Readers: The Epidemic of Glamorizing Eating Disorders in Young Adult Fiction.”

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

February 10 — The third presentation in this year’s Personally Speaking Series will take place on Tuesday, February 10, at 6:30 at UNC Charlotte Center City. John David Smith will speak about his recent book Lincoln and the U.S. Colored Troops. On March 24, Paula Connolly will give the fourth and final presentation in this year’s Personally Speaking Series. She will speak about her book Slavery in American Children’s Literature, 1790-2010.

February 16 — The Vagina Monologues (faculty and staff cast) – Monday, February 16 at 7pm in McKnight Hall (Cone Center). Angie, Janaka, and Tiffany will each be performing in this important event. This year’s production is being directed by Shannon Bauerle, a former English grad student, ELC Coordinator and part-time instructor. All proceeds will benefit Safe Alliance. Admission tickets are $10. For admission ticket and a t shirt $15. ONLY CASH will be taken at the door. To purchase tickets online:https://ecom.uncc.edu/C21561_ustores/web/store_main.jsp?STOREID=104&SINGLESTORE=true

February 20 — “A Celebration of Jim McGavran” will take place on Friday, February 20, from 2:00-4:30 in the Rowe Recital Hall (Rowe 140). The official program will begin at 2:30 to be followed by a reception in the main lobby of Rowe.

Quirky Quiz Question — Charlotte’s Harry Golden used his own periodical to voice his support for the Civil Rights Movement. Does anybody know the name of this periodical?

Last week’s answer:

The Last Studebaker – Robin Hemley
Crossing Blood – Nanci Kincaid
Dog on the Cross – Aaron Gwyn
Six Figures – Fred Lebron
The Petals of Your Eyes – Aimee Parkison

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