MISCELLANY – September 27, 2021

On September 8, 2021, Rob Tally gave an invited talk, “On Academic Book Reviewing,” for a meeting of the Equipe de Récherche en Littératures de l’Afrique Noire et de la Diaspora, Université de Lomé, Lomé, Togo. On September 24, 2021, Rob gave the keynote address (“The Place of Geocriticism”) for Space, Place, and Topography: Geographical Imaginations in Indian Writings in English, a virtual conference sponsored by the Departments of English of Seva Bharati Mahavidyalaya, Kapgari, and Subarnarekha Mahavidyalaya, Gopiballavpur, West Bengal, India. On October 1, 2021, Rob will give a featured talk titled, “Critique as Virtue,” for The Ethics of Critique in a Time of Precarity and Pandemic, a research conference of the National Research Foundation (NRF) Korea–U.S. Special Cooperation Program. Rob is also the event’s co-organizer, with Dr. Youngmin Kim of Dongguk University in Seoul.

MFA fiction graduate and Lecturer Sandra Sidi has placed 2nd in Narrative Magazine’s 2021 Spring Short Story Contest for her piece “To Save a Butterfly.”

Geneva Gano presented research on poet Robinson Jeffers on the “New Scholarship in Jeffers Studies” panel sponsored by the Tor House Foundation and Robinson Jeffers Association on August 26.

Octavio Pimentel will participate in the City of Kyle’s “Dialogue for Peace and Progress 2021 – Celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month” on Friday, October 1, starting at 7 p.m. Octavio will present “Empowering Latinx Composition Students: Recognizing their Lenguage y Cultura en la Clase de Escritura (Language and Culture in the Writing Classroom)” at the 2022 CCCC Annual Convention in Chicago, Illinois.

Miriam Williams’ article, “Archives, Rhetorical Absence, and Critical Imagination: Examining Black Women’s Mental Health Narratives at Virginia’s Central State Hospital from 1891-1936,” (co-authored with Natasha N. Jones of Michigan State) has been accepted for publication in a special issue on social justice in IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication.

Roger Jones’ tanka sequence “Early Pandemic” has been accepted for publication in Ribbons​, the official publication of the Tanka Society of America. His tanka prose poem “Short Cuts” was published in Ribbons ​in August.

Susan Morrison presented a talk, “Pilgrimage and Metaphor: Agency for Medieval Women Pilgrims and Writers,” at the 13th International Colloquium Compostela on Medieval Women on Pilgrimage in Christianity, Judaism and Islam in Santiago de Compostela, Spain (entirely Zoom conference).

MISCELLANY – SEPTEMBER 7, 2021

Octavio Pimentel will present, “Black Lives Matter and Antiracist Projects in Writing Program Administration,” at the 2021 NCTE Annual Convention in Louisville, KY. Octavio’s article, “The Push for the 1974 Statement…Once Again,” appears in Writing Program Administration and chapter, “Dandole Gas: Un Profe con Sangre del Fil,” is forthcoming in Cross-Talking With An American Academic of Color: Essays in Honor of Victor Villanueva. 

 

MFA graduate Kaitlyn Burd’s novel, We Love You, Daisy Buchanan, was named the winner of the Writers’ League of Texas’s Manuscript Contest in the General Fiction category.

 An interview with Cyrus Cassells by Michael Hettich appears in Hole in the Head Review. 

Susan Morrison was one of two speakers in a keynote conversation for the “Climate/Changes/ Global Perspectives” Environmental Humanities International Online Summer Symposium through the University of Würzburg, Germany. Susan’s poem, “The Song of the Lark,” appeared in The Ekphrastic Review.

Miriam Williams’ article, “Gun Control and Gun Rights: A Conceptual Framework for Analyzing Public Policy in Technical Communication,” was published in the August issue of Technical Communication Quarterly.

Eric Leake’s response essay, “Entering Decolonial Translation through Dwelling and Storytelling,” was published in The Expanding Universe of Writing Studies: Higher Education Writing Research (Peter Lang). Eric presented, “Living and Languaging Abroad and Cultivating Empathy,” via Zoom at LinGOcultura, a festival of languages and cultures hosted by Nova Gorica, Slovenia, and Gorizia, Italy, as European Capitals of Culture 2025.

Three poems by Vanessa Couto Johnson appear in TERSE Journal

 MFA graduate Leticia Urieta’s book, Las Criaturasis forthcoming from FlowerSong Press.

  MFA graduate Tomás Q. Morín’s poem,”Sartana and Machete in Outer Space,” is featured in Virginia Quarterly Review. 

 MA Literature grad Tina Žigon has just started teaching high school English at the International School of Minnesota, a private college preparatory school just outside of Minneapolis.

  The MA Literature program congratulates the Spring and Summer 2021 graduates for successfully completing their degrees during these trying times, writing about a wide variety of fascinating topics:

Christopher Concepcion Malave, “Representations of Children in Fairy Tales and Disney Adaptations,” Area Exam, Dir. Teya Rosenberg

Moriah Grayson, “The Swamp and the Monster: Space, Liminality and Empathy in Maleficent and The Shape of Water,” Thesis, Dir. Robert T. Tally, Jr.

Luise Noé, “Intermedial Reparations After Postmodernism: The Intermedial Turn in Jeffrey Eugenides’s Middlesex and Louise Erdrich’s Shadow Tag,” Thesis, Dir. Robert T. Tally, Jr.

Jennifer Ricks, “Trusting the Child Narrator in Literature,” Area Exam, Dir. Teya Rosenberg

Rosie Sedgwick, “Cheat Codes of the Gods: Narrative and Greek Mythology in Video Games,” Dir. Suparno Banerjee

Christopher Solis, “Family Dysfunction in McEwan’s The Cement Garden, Lessing’s The Fifth Child, and Callenbach’s Ecotopia,” Area Exam, Dir. Allan Chavkin

Aaryn Stafford “Youth Reactions to Death in Children’s and Young Adult Literature,” Area Exam, Dir. Graeme Wend-Walker

Samantha Van Dale “Recycled Tropes, Suffocating Stereotypes, or Hope for Film Heroines,” Thesis, Dir. Rebecca Bell-Metereau

Raquel Zuniga, “Healing Self, Healing Community: A Chicana Feminist Analysis of Historical and Intergenerational Trauma in Anzaldúa’s and Cisneros’s Writing,” Thesis, Dir. Sara A. Ramírez.

English major Beyonce Morales has accepted a paid internship with the Texas Faculty Association (TFA). Her duties will include developing the organization’s social media presence, collaborating on the TFA newsletter, and researching subjects of interest to TFA officers.