Tag Archives: department of english

Graduate students honored for research and teaching

President Dunn congratulates honored graduate students at the Graduate Research and Creative Scholar and Graduate Teaching Effectiveness awards ceremony.

A total of 52 graduate students in the College of Arts and Sciences were honored by the university as winners of the Graduate Research and Creative Scholar and Graduate Teaching Effectiveness awards. Eleven students received further distinction as All-University Graduate Research and Creative Scholars, and were  honored as All-University recipients of the Graduate Teaching Effectiveness Awards.

Graduate Research and Creative Scholar Awards for 2011-12

All-University Scholars from the College of Arts and Sciences:

  • Michelle Barger, geosciences
  • Timothy Edwards, psychology
  • Isurika Fernando, chemistry
  • Dustin Hoffman, English
  • Taylor Paskin, biological sciences
  • Ryan Sibert, geosciences
  • Stephen Spates, communication
  • Anthony Squiers, political science
  • Lydia Walker, comparative religion

Department Scholars

  • Sara Bijani, history
  • Gerardo Bohorquez Gonzalez, Spanish
  • Caitlin Callahan, Mallinson Institute for Science Education
  • Mary Sajini Devadas, chemistry
  • Katherine Ellison, history
  • Leticia Espinoza, Spanish
  • Nicole Fonger, mathematics
  • Tamrat Gashaw, economics
  • David Johnson, English
  • Lucas Kanclerz, geography
  • Ian Kerr, anthropology
  • Maxwell Kirchhoff, political science
  • Scott Marley, physics
  • Christina Sheerin, psychology
  • Benjamin Slager, biological sciences
  • Michelle A. Suarez, interdisciplinary health sciences
  • Cynthia Visscher, sociology

Graduate Teaching Effectiveness Awards

All-University Graduate Teachers

  • Matthew Arsenault, political science
  • Skylar Bre’z, history and gender and women’s studies
  • Colleen Cullinan, psychology
  • Kevin Douglass, chemistry
  • Krystal Howard, English
  • Kathryn Kestner, psychology
  • Kate Rowbotham, Mallinson Institute for Science Education
  • Kristin Sovis, English

Department Graduate Teachers

  • Clara Adams, chemistry
  • David Barry, sociology
  • Emily Beard, communication
  • Erica D’Elia, anthropology
  • Holly DeVrou, Spanish
  • Racha El Kadiri, geosciences
  • Carolina Gonzalo Llera, Spanish
  • Alexandra Haase, biological sciences
  • Justin Hanig, economics
  • Kara Krebs, political science
  • Daniel Kueh, biological sciences
  • Bryan Phinezy, mathematics
  • Buddhi Rai, physics
  • Daniel Serfas, geography
  • Kelly Sparks, Mallinson Institute for Science Education
  • Kathryn Titus, geosciences
  • Scott Watson, comparative religion
  • Adam Wolfe, history

English alum Adam Pasen wins top playwriting prize

Ph.D. student Adam Pasen wins the Kennedy Center Ten-Minute Play Award.

by Katy TerBerg

Department of English Ph.D. candidate Adam Pasen is the latest recipient of  the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival’s Ten-Minute Play Award—thus putting another notch in his professional career belt.

“The Ten-Minute Play Award is given at the national level by the Kennedy Center each year to one play deemed the best in that submission period,” said Pasen.

The title of Pasen’s play is “Starf*cker.” The story takes place between two Hollywood hopefuls outside the mansion of an A-List star. “It is the exploration of the shallow and the profound and a deconstruction of the rom-com genre,” he said. “On a semiotics level it is also a rumination on the instability of labels and the imprecision with which they capture the soul of the person they attempt to describe.”

According to Pasen, the 10-minute play is rapidly growing in popularity and significance. “The 10-minutes are easily the most competitive in terms of sheer volume of entries,” he said.

To win, the play must be selected as one of six regional finalists in one of the eight regions (each region received about 100 plays) and then be chosen as one of two winning regional plays to advance. Of those 16 plays, four are chosen to receive readings at the Kennedy Center, and of those four, one is named the winner.

Pasen, who holds an M.A. in English and Rhetoric from Northwestern University,  is a 2012 Ph.D. graduate in English – Creative Writing with a focus in Playwriting. He recently presented his dissertation,  a play titled “Tea with Edie and Fitz,” to Drs. Steve Feffer, Jon Adams, Cynthia Klekar and Terry Williams.

He has published several plays, scenes, adaptations, and musicals across the United States. He  also is a prominent actor around Kalamazoo and in his hometown of Chicago.

Links:

Department of English
Adam Pasen
Kennedy Center

 

Creative writing alum debuts novel

English grad Jason Skipper hits the publishing trail with new book.

by Katy TerBerg

Texas native Jason Skipper, who received his Ph.D. in Creative Writing at WMU in 2005, has released his debut novel, “Hustle,” which chronicles the lives of three Texan men struggling to make up for their past, and somehow set course for the future.

Skipper earned his Master’s of Creative Writing at Miami University before heading north to Michigan to pursue his Ph.D. While at WMU, Skipper served as fiction editor for “Third Coast,” a national literary magazine published at WMU. His stories have earned him numerous literary awards from respected publishing companies, including Zoetrope: All-Story, Glimmer Train, and Crab Orchard Review. He currently teaches creative writing and literature at Pacific Lutheran University and lives in Tacoma, Wash.

His coming-of-age novel features an alcoholic ex-con grandfather; a philandering seafood salesman son; and a struggling musician grandson. Each were hustlers in different areas. Grandfather hustled for money, the son hustled  women, and the grandson has hustled for fame. They all are now hustling for redemption.

This multi-character, multi-layered story caught the attention of several authors, including Charles Baxter, Peter Orner, Stuart Dybek, and Jaimy Gordon, who gave “Hustle” a glowing review. Gordon referred to the book as “A Southern portrait of the artist as a young man, with marvelous characters that keep you savoring every scene.”

More information about the book and upcoming event information may be found on Skipper’s official website, http://www.jasonskipper.com.

Links:
Department of English

Creative writing alum Sean May writes musical comedy

By Katy TerBerg

At the helm of the Go Comedy! Improv Theater in Ferndale, Mich. is WMU alum Sean May. May wrote and currently stars in the Theater’s latest project, “ROBOCOP! THE MUSICAL,” which runs June 1 through August 4.

WMU Department of English creative writing alum Sean May presents RoGoCoP! The Musical.

“We have been open for over three years, making Detroit audiences laugh through an abundance of of shows,” said May of Go Comedy! Improv Theater.

“ROBOCOP! The Musical,” originally entitled “RoGoCop! The Musical,” is a parody of the 1987 sci-fi/action film of a similar name. It transfers the story of a robotic policeman on route in a dystopian future.

Reviewer John Quinn of the online magazine “Encore Michigan, says “May’s writing is a smart re-imagination of the original film script. He includes some of the original dialogue which, in this newer context, is ROFLMAO funny. He also manages to skewer the odder aspects of the movie, and the action film genre in general,” said Quinn.

May, who received bachelor’s degrees in media studies and creative writing in 2001, won the undergraduate award in creative writing while attending WMU. He sees the creative writing and media studies experiences as great tools in fostering his playwriting skills, and continues to develop his craft at Go Comedy! Improv Theater.

“Just thought I would reach out and try to get some exposure for my great little theater,” joked May on the WMU College of Arts and Sciences LinkedIn alumni group.

Go Comedy! Improv Theater also holds workshops and classes for interested improv performers and May continues to write tongue-in-cheek musicals and host improv shows. More information is available on the website.

Links:
Department of English

LIKE  Go Comedy! Improv Theater on Facebook

Sean May’s website

 

 

Undergrad earns fellowship to Columbia College for MFA

Creative Writing major Samantha Schaefer has been given the Follett Graduate Merit Award to pursue her MFA at Columbia College.

By Katy TerBerg

Samantha Schaefer, a WMU creative writing major who graduated cum laude from the Lee Honors College on April 28, is the recipient of a Follett Graduate Merit Award from Columbia College Chicago.

The award, offered to just four incoming students annually, recognizes outstanding accomplishments and the potential for continued excellence in the college’s Creative Writing-Poetry MFA program. Samantha will receive $12,100 toward tuition and fees each academic year. “It’s basically a merit award given to an applicant whose portfolio is considered of esteemed quality,” said Schaefer.

While a student at WMU, Schaefer was involved in a number of activities, including Gold Company II and Onomatopoeia Writer’s Society, a reading series for undergraduate creative writers that she co-founded. She also served for three years as the peer advisor and assistant of the Department of English’s Prague Summer Program, which she attended as a student in 2009.

“I studied abroad twice, once in Prague, Czech Republic and once in Rome, Italy,” said Schaefer.

Her writing has been published on campus in the “Laureate,” the “Albion Review” and “Asylum Lake Press.” Schaefer is the co-editor of the “Black Tongue Review (a charitable literary arts magazine based out of Chicago).”

“While attending CCC I plan on obtaining my MFA in Poetry as well as hopefully exploring alternative forms of poetry including Erasure poetry and three dimensional poetry. I am planning on taking a teaching pedagogy course this fall so that I can teach as an adjunct professor in the spring of 2013,” said Schaefer of her graduate college goals.

“My advice for any and all creative writing majors would be to find a mentor, said Schaefer. “Having a good relationship with my professors is what has really helped me to explore and develop as a writer. I would also advise students to study abroad if it is at all possible. One’s writing undergoes enormous growth under the pressures and joys of travel.”

Links:
Department of English

Samantha Schaefer’s blog
Follett Graduate Merit Award

Jaimy Gordon’s “Lord of Misrule” in the spotlight again

By Katy TerBerg

Prize-winning author and WMU Professor of English Jaimy Gordon.

WMU has been fortunate enough to have great authors in its faculty and  students, and Professor of English, Jaimy Gordon, is setting the bar a little higher. Gordon published her third novel, “Lord of Misrule,” in 2010 to critical acclaim. Gordon’s novel won the National Book Award for Fiction in 2010 and was voted one of Amazon’s Best Books of the Month in November of 2010.

Most recently, Gordon has been selected as one of the longlist finalists for The Orange Prize for Fiction, the UK’s only annual book award for fiction written by a woman. According to the official website for the award, The Orange Prize, which is celebrating its 17th year, celebrates “excellence, originality, and accessibility in women’s writing throughout the world.”

The announcement coincides with International Women’s Day. The Orange Prize for Fiction shortlist will be announced on April 17, with readings occuring on May 29 and an awards ceremony on May 30.

“Lord of Misrule” is about “trying to figure out what the shape of your luck on Earth is and, one way or another, come to terms with that. It’s very much about courting that message from the gods that you were destined for something special, and most of the characters of the book have to settle for what they get,” said Gordon in an interview.

It is difficult to determine whether Gordon was destined for the award or if her hard work and dedication led her to the achievement, but it is clear that Gordon’s efforts have not gone unnoticed. As Gordon herself said, “You certainly expect your family, the future generations, to remember you or have some impression of you.”

We believe Gordon will continue to leave a lasting impression.

Links:

Department of English
About Jaimy Gordon

The Orange Prize for Fiction

 

WMU to Offer Rhetoric and Writing Major/Minor fall 2012

by Helena Witzke

WMU will be adding a new major/minor in the fall of 2012, in order to broaden not only its students’ academic horizons, but their professional ones as well.

Sprau Tower in Fountain Plaza

Starting in September, the Department of English will offer a degree in rhetoric and writing, (formerly known as the practical writing degree). The program will involve several English faculty members, notably Dr. Charlotte Thralls, professor, and Dr. Brian Gogan, assistant professor.

As Gogan writes, “The Rhetoric and Writing Studies program replaces the old Practical Writing program and, as its name suggests, one of the new program’s cornerstones is rhetoric—the use of language to effect change, create meaning, and spur action.

“Apart from a new name, the updated degree boasts cutting-edge courses. These courses will provide students with more opportunities to study and practice writing in a wide range of genres, using a variety of writing technologies.”

Fall 2012 course offerings include:
•        Introduction to Professional Writing
•        Rhetoric, Writing, and Culture
•        Grant Writing for Professionals
•        Parody and Rhetoric

“Since employers consistently rank the ability to write effectively as among the most desirable traits they seek in new employees, the new program complements any existing plan of study—either as a 33-credit major or as a 20-credit minor,” said Gogan.

For more information about the Rhetoric and Writing Studies program, please visit the program’s website.

Links:

The Rhetoric and Writing Studies page

 

Witschi book Named Outstanding Academic Title by Choice

By Katy TerBerg

Dr. Nicolas Witschi, professor of English.

Rodeos, shootouts, saloons, and John Wayne?

When you think of the American West, are these the images that come to mind? Why?

WMU professor Dr. Nicolas Witschi reveals in his latest book that the history of the American West is far richer and more complex than the world of “Gunsmoke” and “Bonanza.”

Witschi, professor of English at WMU, recently edited and released a book titled “A Companion to the Literature and Culture of the American West” (Wiley-Blackwell, 2011). The book has been named by Choice—a literary magazine that selects and publishes 7,000 reviews of literary and academic works annually—as an Outstanding Academic Title for 2011.

“I am of course delighted and honored,” noted Witschi, “even as I’m humbled by the recognition that it is the amazing work of my 32 other contributors who have made the book what it is.”

“A Companion to the Literature and Culture of the American West” features essays written by leading scholars in western American cultural studies. The book offers a comprehensive approach to cultural expressions originating in the west, and focuses on the challenges found within and between the different historical and cultural groups that define the west’s  distinctive regions. It examines the familiar icons and ideas about the west (such as cowboys, wide-open spaces, and violence) and their intersections with urbanization and other regional complexities.

According to the Choice announcement, “Every year, Choice subject editors single out for recognition the most significant print and electronic works reviewed in Choice during the previous calendar year. Appearing annually in Choice’s January issue, this prestigious list of publications reflects the best in scholarly titles and attracts extraordinary attention from the academic library community.”

Composed of more than 35,000 librarians, faculty, and key decision makers, Choice was recommended in an independent survey as “the best short critical evaluations of new titles available anywhere.” It is also worth noting that Witchi’s companion book is far and away the only major text to reflect the current state of scholarship on the American West.

The yearly list is very selective, declaring only 10 percent of more than 7,000 reviewed works to be worthy of the Outstanding Academic Title status which includes:
• overall excellence in presentation and scholarship,
• importance relative to other literature in the field,
• distinction as a first treatment of a given subject in book or electronic form,
• originality or uniqueness of treatment,
• value to undergraduate students, and
• importance in building undergraduate library collections.

Witschi’s list of previous publications on the American West is extensive, and he has written on the culture, history and important figures of the region, and on the ongoing impact the American West continues to have in the United States.

Links:
Witschi’s WMU homepage
More Outstanding Academic Titles
“A Companion to the Literature and Culture of the American West” is available online

 

 

Sigma Tau Delta reports second largest induction class in the chapter’s history

58 English students were inducted into the WMU Alpha Nu Pi chapter of Sigma Tau Delta.

The 58 members inducted this year into the Western Michigan University Alpha Nu Pi chapter of Sigma Tau Delta marks the second largest induction class in the chapter’s history.

Thanks to ongoing support for the Sigma Tau Delta Membership Fund from faculty, friends of the Department of English—and especially Dr. Alex Enyedi, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences—all 58 students will receive their lifetime memberships free of charge.

This year’s induction will bring the total number of WMU students who have received their memberships at no cost to themselves to 234. Thanks to all of you for your generous support of these worthy students.

The 2011-12 Faculty Honorary Inductee into the Alpha Nu Pi chapter of Sigma Tau Delta is none other than our own Dr. Todd Kuchta, associate professor, of Modern British Literature; Postcolonial Studies; and Cultural Studies. http://www.wmich.edu/english/directory/faculty/kuchta

More information on the Alpha Nu Pi chapter, its WMU and national involvement, members, and other news is available on the WMU Sigma Tau Delta blog. Further, any requests about the group itself may be sent to Dr. Lisa Cohen Minnick, professor of English and faculty adviser of the Alpha Nu Pi chapter.

Congratulations to the Fall 2011 student inductees:
Shantell Ann Aiken
Brittany Marie Aguinaga
Nicole Lynnae Allen
Catherine Bailey
Briana Marie Barnett
Kalani Barbara Bates
Michael Berry
Dustin Brown
Rosie Sharhonda Capps
Micah Isaac Carlson
Emily Chaney
Andrew J. Draper
Madison Edwards
Roslyn Marie Ellis
Erin E. Faultersack
Sebastian Fryer
Beth A. Fuller
Michael Joseph Gahry
Allison Glismann
Melissa Hall
Patrick Heflin
Thomas Kimble
Valerie Krzewski
Jared Seth Madden
Kimberly Ann Mattern
Kelsey McClure
Christen McCool
Shannon Katharine McCullough
Christy McDowell
Christopher George Miller
Kaitlyn Mitchell
Benjamin Adam Moran
Ellen Rachel Murad
Jessica Neuenschwander
Erin Maureen O’Connor
Maureen Elizabeth Pfaff
Kelsey L. Pretzer
Kimberly May Reikow
Cheryl Ririe-Kurz
Jordan Samuel Rossio
Devin Ryan
Samantha Rae Sandler
Nickolas Schrader
Tracy Sever
Joshua Paul Soloc
Alex J. Stacy
Jacob P. Szydzik
Katherine Nicole TerBerg
Taline Breann Topouzian
Paige Van De Winkle
Krista Lynn Van Prooyen
Lauren Vitu
Ashley Lauren Wall
Sarah J. Watkins
Molly Elizabeth White
Jennifer Leigh Wiley
William R. Witters IV
Amy Yuengert