Monday, April 13, 2015

The Faculty Research Colloquium


The Department of English presents:

 The Faculty Research Colloquium

 “The Pedagogy of Sovereignty

by Cari Carpenter


Haudenosaunee Wampum Belt
"Native Nations treaty exhibit opens Sept. 21 at NMAI," Native News, Sept. 23, 2004. ttp://nativetimes.com/index.php/culture/history/10427-native-nations-treaty-exhibit-opens-sept-21-at-nmai

In this paper I describe several tactics of what I call a pedagogy of sovereignty. Such tactics include specific texts, digital resources, and activities all designed to give undergraduates entry into the complex terrain of American Indian political existence in the twenty-first century. I also consider techniques of emphasizing political difference while not re-invoking stereotypical beliefs in Natives’ inferiority or exoticism. This is not a matter of completely removing questions of cultural differences from the classroom, but of framing American Indians as peoples who do not fit neatly into the prevailing multiethnic model. This presentation raises a question I hope to return to in our discussion: how can we preserve and articulate realistic American Indian identities in the study of this literature?


April 22, 2015
2:30 p.m., 130 Colson Hall


Friday, April 10, 2015

A Little Spring Music

Obscure and the budget for the video doesn't even match the catering costs of one of those Bananarama videos, but Aztec Camera's "Deep and Wide and Tall" sounds like Spring to me.

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Dr. Smorul

Djuna Barnes, looking into the future and anticipating Kate's dissertation

Early this afternoon, the Tenants noticed a lot of commotion near 106 Colson. An announcement from Katy Ryan just made clear what all the fuss was about:

"I am delighted to announce that Kate Ridinger Smorul beautifully defended her dissertation, "Word Play: Modernist Women and Performative Writing." Committee members agreed that her dissertation was a pleasure to read and that she should assume a position of literary authority post-haste. 

Joining me in celebrating Kate's work (and pretending like we had something to deliberate when she left the room) were Lisa, Ryan, Dennis, and Juliana Spahr."

The Tenants join with her committee in giving Kate a hearty congratulations!



Monday, March 30, 2015

Amanda Bailey Wins Award

This news just in from Gwen Bergner:
 
"I am very happy to announce that our own PhD student Amanda Bailey has won the Society for Comparative Literature and the Arts (SCLA) Rutledge prize for graduate student writing for her paper 'Necessary Narration in Their Eyes Were Watching God.' She has been invited to submit it for consideration for publication in SCLA's journal The Comparatist."

Congratulations, Amanda!