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Showing posts from November, 2014

Ted Howell

Ted Howell (English MA '10, now a PhD candidate at Temple University) presented a well-attended paper on "Howards End and the Anthropocene" at the Modernist Studies Association annual Conference in Pittsburgh, PA.

Dr. Hugh Ormsby-Lennon

Dr. Hugh Ormsby-Lennon recently published "Pinching Snuff: Dean Swift as Paralytic Gnomon in James Joyce's 'The Sisters,'" in  Swift Studies  29 (2014), 89-129.

Dr. Megan Quigley

On Saturday November 8th at 3:30 at the Modernist Studies Association annual Conference in Pittsburgh, PA, Dr. Megan Quigley participated in a round table on Weak Theory, joining scholars including Wai Chee Dimock, Eric Hayot, and Paul St. Amour, in presenting a vigorous investigation into this new approach to literary studies. She also chaired a panel earlier that day entitled "The Confluence of Breakdown."

Dr. Joseph Lennon

Joseph Lennon, PhD, published an essay, “‘Antiquity and Futurity' in the Writings of James Clarence Mangan” in The Man in the Cloak: Essays on James Clarence Mangan. (Palgrave MacMillan, Nov 2014. pp. 53-83). Dr. Lennon also published a suite of poems, “Flatland Haiku Summer” in  The Midwest Quarterly  55.2, (Winter 2014, pp. 78-80). He presented a paper at the 2013 American Conference for Irish Studies, Dublin, Ireland, “Old Hungers, New Politics: Late 19th Century Fasts and Food Strikes” (June 14, 2014). He delivered a lecture at the Chester Beatty Library in Dublin “Irish Orientalism: From Origin Legends to Celtic Revivals” (June 26, 2014).

Dr. Lauren Shohet

Lauren Shohet, Luckow Family Professor of English, published “Caroline Court Drama: Forming History,” in  Yearbook of English Studies  44:  Caroline Literature , ed. Rory Loughnane, Andrew Power, and Peter Sillitoe (2014), 69-86.

Dr. Travis Foster

Dr. Travis Foster published an article, “Campus Novels and the Nation of Peers,” in the Fall 2014 issue of  American Literary History .

Katharine McIntyre

Katharine McIntyre presented her paper, "'Time Be Time': The Intertwined Nature of Time and Technology in William Gibson's  Neuromancer " at the Mid-Atlantic Popular and American Culture Association conference in Baltimore, MD on November 7, 2014.

Kristin Danella

Kristin Danella presented her paper, "Piers the Plowman: A Medieval Conservative in the Midst of 14th century English Rebellion" at the Southern Atlantic Modern Language Association last weekend (11/8).

English Department Coffee Break, Monday, November 10

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