Welcome to the English Department

English forms the cornerstone of the humanities. In a variety of courses in literature, writing, and the English language, SHSU English students find a source of personal enrichment, and they develop verbal, analytical, and cultural skills readily adaptable to a variety of careers. English students learn to write with grace and precision, to read and analyze texts with accuracy, to conduct research and organize a welter of materials, to speak and listen well-in short, to sharpen their critical thinking and critical inquiry skills. These skills are highly valued by prospective employers. When our graduates leave SHSU with a degree in English, they are prepared for career opportunities or advanced study in technical and professional communication, teaching, journalism, government service, editing, law, and business.

Readings @ The Wynne Home
Monday, May 12, and Tuesday, May 13
6 p.m.
1428 11th Street

Monday, May 12
Amanda Nowlin-O’Banion & Drew Lopenzina

Amanda Nowlin-O’Banion is a writer of fiction and nonfiction. She is the winner of the Tex Emerging Writer Award, was nominated for Best New American Voices 2006, and has published fiction in The Dallas Morning News and Conversely. Currently, she is finishing her first novel, The Greenest Grass, and teaching creative writing at Texas A&M University.

Drew Lopenzina is an assistant professor of English at Sam Houston State University with a focus in Early American and Native American literature. His current research includes a book-length project concerning the acquistion of European forms of literacy by Native Americans and provisionally titled Red Ink: Native Americans Picking up the Pen in the Colonial Period. His short fiction and poetry has appeared in journals such as The Massachusetts Review, Peregrine, and Concrete Wolf. He’s currently working on a poetry manuscript entitled Commisary.

Tuesday, May 13
SHSU Graduate Student Reading

Each Tuesday evening this semester, Dr. Scott Kaukonen’s Graduate Creative Writing Workshop in Fiction has met at the Wynne Home. This evening’s reading will feature the students from that workshop, all currently graduate students in the M.A. program in English at Sam Houston State University. Readers will include Joshua Bowen, Melanie Sweeney, Dana Allen, Kimberly Ferguson, Julia Guthrie, and David Sweeten. Readings will include both fiction and poetry.

A special thanks to the Wynne Home Arts Center, the City of Huntsville, and Linda Pease, cultural services director for the City of Huntsville, for their gracious generosity in making the Wynne Home available for the workshop and these events.

peabodyReinventing the Peabody Sisters

Julie E. Hall, associate professor of English, has co-edited a collection of essays on the famous nineteenth-century New England sisters and writers, Elizabeth Palmer Peabody, Mary Peabody Mann, and Sophia Peabody Hawthorne. Titled Reinventing the Peabody Sisters and published in 2006 by University of Iowa Press, the volume's sixteen essays reenvision these significant writers and thinkers, reconsidering as well their confrontations with Transcendentalist thought, reform movements, the U.S. Civil War, changing views of women, African Americans, Native Americans, and individuals abroad. Individual essays consider, among other things, Elizabeth Peabody's transcendentalism and conversations; Mary Mann's novel Juanita and transcendental writing for children, The Flower People; and Sophia Peabody Hawthorne's collaboratively produced journal with famous husband, Nathaniel Hawthorne. Professor Halls' essay, "'At the Crisis of Our Fate': Sophia Hawthorne's Civil War Correspondence," examines two groups of unpublished archival letters authored by Hawthorne during the U.S. Civil War. According to Patricia Valenti, author of Sophia Peabody Hawthorne: A Life, Reinventing the Peabody Sisters"provides marvelous insights into the origins and the impact of mid nineteenth-century American art, philosophy, literature, education, and reform movements—a must-read for the student of these disciplines."

Chaucer and HDTV Bell

Assistant professor Kimberly Bell, along with Eileen Joy, Myra Seaman, and Mary Ramsey, has edited a new collection of essays, entitled Cultural Studies of the Modern Middle Ages (Palgrave Macmillan). The essays collected in this volume demonstrate that, when certain medieval and contemporary cultural texts are placed alongside each other, such as a fourteenth-century penitential handbook and the reality television show Survivor, they reveal certain mentalities and social conditions that persist over long durations of time. Several of the essays address overtly political subjects, such as political torture and suicide terrorism, while other essays attend to the various ways in which certain “real-life” fictions and cultural entertainments have always overdetermined our understanding of history, our current moment, and ourselves.

Dr. Bell herself provides the collection's opening essay, "Models of (Im)Perfection: Parodic Refunctioning in Spike TV's The Joe Schmo Show and Geoffrey Chaucer's 'Tale of Sir Thopas.'" Other sample essay titles include, "Back to the Future: Living the Liminal Life in the Manor House and the Medieval Dream Vision," by Betsy McCormick; "The Crisis of Legitimation in Bush's American and Henry IV's England," by Daniel T. Kline; and "Torture, Inquisition, Medievalism, Reality, TV," by Steve Guthrie. For more information, consult Palgrave Macmillan's website.

Professor Receives NEA Fellowship

Assistant professor of English Scott Kaukonen has been recognized by the National Endowment for the Arts as a recipient of the organization’s 2008 Literature Fellowship in Prose, a $25,000 prize.

Kaukonen was one of 42 writers from across the nation selected for the fellowship out of more than 777 applicants.

“It's money to allow you to write. In my case, it'll allow me to take the summer off from teaching and focus solely on my writing, which is, quite frankly, invaluable,” he said. “I'm currently finishing a novel, and so I'll likely be involved in revisions over the summer and/or starting a new project.”

Kaukonen said the award is significant not only because of the money involved but because it’s a highly-competitive fellowship that is ultimately decided upon by a jury of peers.

“There's a select group of established writers who read through all the anonymous manuscripts and whittle them down and then spend a weekend in (Washington) D .C. in a hotel conference room, reviewing the finalists and discussing the work and making the decisions,” he said.

For his application, Kaukonen submitted his short stort story, "Punnett's Squares," from his collection of stories, Ordination. "Punnett's Squares" won the 2004 Nelson Algren Prize from The Chicago Tribune, while the collection won the 2004 Ohio State Prize for Short Fiction.

“From a personal standpoint, it's the kind of external validation that balances the, it seems, inevitable insecurities that can surround your own work as a writer--all that time you spend alone, writing, creating, doubting, battling your own fears, hoping your work is doing what you intend for it to do,” he said.

Kaukonen is currently completing his first novel, The Martyrdom of Katie Deeds.

 

 

Contact Us

Dr. Bill Bridges, Chair
bridges@shsu.edu
Trina Strange, Secretary
Trina@shsu.edu
Evans Complex 458
(936) 294-1404
(936) 294-1408

P.O. Box 2146
1901 University Ave.
Huntsville, TX 77341