Subramanian Publishes in The Atlantic

Sushma Subramanian, journalist and assistant professor in the Department of English, Linguistics, and Communication, has published a story in The Atlantic about an emerging form of depression in Japan, colloquially called "modern-type depression." In her piece "A ‘Modern’ Depression Is Creeping Into Japanese Workplaces," she explores the work of Japanese scientists studying the social changes that have contributed to this condition.   … [Read more...]

Whalen Publishes in The Journal of Creative Writing Studies

Associate Professor of English Zach Whalen has just published an article in a special issue of The Journal of Creative Writing Studies on "Creative Making as Creative Writing." His article, "The Many Authors of The Several Houses of Brian, Spencer, Liam, Victoria, Brayden, Vincent, and Alex: Authorship, Agency, and Appropriation," is an artist's statement reflecting on how creating a computer-generated book like Whalen's 2017 work The Several Houses of Brian, Spencer, Liam, Victoria, Brayden, Vincent, and Alex invites readers to reconsider the idea of what it means to be an author. Whalen's book draws on several different databases to create an essentially infinite variation on the nursery rhyme "This is the House that Jack Built;" these databases contain the work of hundreds of contributors, so Whalen argues in this article that the novel is best considered a collaboration among many instead of the work of a single individual or computer. … [Read more...]

Goldman Co-Edits Special Issue of The Journal of Hip Hop Studies Devoted to Kanye West

Adria Goldman, Assistant Professor of Communication, is one of three guest editors of a special issue of The Journal of Hip Hop Studies devoted to Kanye West. According to the abstract, “The goal of this project, ‘I Gotta Testify: Kanye West, Hip Hop, and the Church,’ is to add a new perspective to the scholarly discourse on Hip Hop and Christianity within classrooms, religious institutions, and popular culture by focusing on Kanye. We chose to focus on Kanye because he has been one of Hip Hop’s most influential artists in the past decade. Furthermore, Kanye is one of the most polarizing celebrities in America and across the globe. His music, fashion, political views, and family (which includes the Kardashians) dominate discourse on social media, blogs, television, and other forms of mass media. With the exception of Julius Bailey’s 2014 edited book, The Cultural Impact of Kanye West, there has been little scholarly work published on Kanye. Bailey’s book contained just one essay, … [Read more...]

Foss Publishes Book Review

Professor of English Chris Foss has published a 1500-word book review of Jay Timothy Dolmage’s watershed work Academic Ableism: Disability and Higher Education in Journal of Literary and Cultural Disability Studies, one of the top two scholarly journals in the field of disability studies today. The book’s charge is “not just to recognize where and how ableism happens, but to ask what the impact will be of exposing it, what the cost might be of assigning blame, and what the forces are that make it imperceptible, what the euphemisms are that disguise it, and how it comes to be normalized, even valorized in academia” (58). Dolmage sets up his argument in a superb Introduction that exposes “the university as a rhetorical space that holds a history of injustice in its architecture” (9). After noting higher education’s inextricable imbrication with the shameful histories of eugenics and colonial science, Dolmage transitions into a disheartening assessment of the state of the … [Read more...]

Rochelle Publishes Short Story

Professor of English Warren Rochelle recently  published  his flash fiction short story “Ever After”  in Migration, a queer science fiction annual flash fiction anthology. … [Read more...]

Scanlon Guest Edits Humanities Journal Issue

Mara Scanlon, Professor of English, served as invited Guest Editor for a special issue of the journal Humanities called “The Sister Arts Since 1900: Poetry and the Visual Arts.”  The issue is prompted by the fact that the relation of poetry and visual art to each other, to imitation, mimesis, and the “real,” to pleasure and analysis, to ethics, to the senses, and to craft prompted rich dialogue and debate through at least the 18th century but is oddly flagging in contemporary critical conversation, possibly replaced by or transformed into an emphasis on multimodal and multimedia writing.  Inviting essays on ekphrastic poetry and its opposite, photos or art inspired by poems; illuminated text and the art of the book; illustrated poetry for adults and children; the work of artist-poets; collaborations between artists and writers or installations, exhibits, and volumes that combine poetry and photography/visual art; broadsides; concrete and visual poetry; and unique conceptions like the … [Read more...]

Whalen Publishes Essay of Media Archeaology in Digital Studies

Zach Whalen, Associate Professor of English, recently had his article “Teaching with Objects: Individuating Media Archaeology in Digital Studies” published in The Journal of Interactive Technology and Pedagogy. Whalen's article describes a Digital Studies 101 assignment where students take apart old technology and endeavor to map the origins of individual components. … [Read more...]

Haffey Publishes Book

Professor Kate Haffey has published the book Literary Modernism, Queer Temporality: Eddies in Time​. This book explores the intersection between the recent work on queer temporality and the experiments of literary modernism. Haffey argues that queer theory’s recent work on time owes a debt to modernist authors who developed new ways of representing temporality in their texts. By reading a series of early twentieth-century literary texts from modernists like Woolf, Eliot, Faulkner, and Stein alongside contemporary authors, this book examines the way in which modernist writers challenged narrative conventions of time in ways that both illuminate and foreshadow current scholarship on queer temporality. In her analyses of contemporary novelists and critics Michael Cunningham, Jeanette Winterson, Angela Carter, and Eve Sedgwick, Haffey also shows that these modernist temporalities have been reconfigured by contemporary authors to develop new approaches to … [Read more...]

Finkelstein Publishes Article

Professor Richard Finkelstein's article “Amicitia and Beneficia in Timon of Athens is forthcoming in a 2020 issue of Studies in Philology, published at UNC-Chapel Hill. His essay “Dormitory Shakespeare on YouTube” will appear in a Festschrift for Christy Desmet, edited by Robert Sawyer and Matt Kozusko, to be published by Farleigh Dickinson. … [Read more...]

LaBreche Coedits Special Issue of Marvell Studies Journal

Ben LaBreche, Associate Professor of English, along with Ryan Netzley of Southern Illinois University, recently coedited a special issue of Marvell Studies, which publishes the leading edge of research on Andrew Marvell, his texts and readers, words and worlds. This most recent issue is on theoretical approaches to Marvell’s poetry and contains essays by John Garrison (on object-oriented erotics in Marvell’s verse), Jason Kerr (on vulnerability as an ontological feature of humans), and Brendan Prawdzik (on the limits of eco-criticism for Marvell studies and the concept of "greenwashing"). In addition, this issue contains reviews of Brendan Prawdzik’s Theatrical Milton: Politics and Poetics of the Staged Body and Alex Garganigo’s Samson's Cords: Imposing Oaths in Milton, Marvell, and Butler. … [Read more...]