English major alum Anne Bartlett delivers annual Phi Beta Kappa lecture

SUNY Geneseo’s annual Phi Beta Kappa lecture was delivered this year by Geneseo grad and former English major Anne Clark Bartlett, currently on leave as professor and chair of the English department at DePaul University while she serves as a 2011-12 American Council on Education Fellow at Portland State University.

Professor Bartlett’s lecture, delivered February 15, was titled “Thirty Years of ‘Hard Times’: A Sometimes-Dickensian Journey from University Student to Administrator and Back Again.”

Professor Bartlett earned her bachelor’s degree in English from Geneseo in 1987 and her doctorate at the University of Iowa in 1993.  She is the author of Male Authors, Female Readers: Representation and Subjectivity in Middle English Devotional Literature and the editor of Vox Mystica: Essays in Honor of Prof. Valerie Lagorio and Cultures of Piety: Middle English Devotional Literature in Translation. She has Anne Clark Barlett filled leadership roles in organizations such as the Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship, the Medieval Academy of America and the MLA’s Association of Departments of English.

Professor Bartlett’s presentation was sponsored by the SUNY Geneseo Phi Beta Kappa chapter and the Office of the President of the College. Founded in 1776, Phi Beta Kappa is the nation’s oldest undergraduate honors society. Geneseo is the only undergraduate college in the SUNY system to be granted a chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. The Alpha Delta of New York chapter was installed in January 2004.

Oxford publishes third edition of Herzman-Cook text

cover of herzman and cook textOxford University Press has just published the third edition of Ron Herzman and Bill Cook‘s The Medieval World View: An Introduction.

From the Oxford University Press website:

The Medieval World View, Third Edition, presents the presuppositions of medieval society in a systematic fashion by integrating brief, self-contained selections from primary texts and carefully captioned photographs into a narrative of the medieval world and its foundations.

The text is divided into five parts. Treating both the classical and biblical antecedents of the Middle Ages and ending in Late Antiquity, Part One includes a thorough discussion of the monumental figure of St. Augustine. Part Two deals with the Mediterranean World, including Byzantium and Islam, and ending with the disintegration of the Roman Empire in the West. Part Three deals with the early Middle Ages, extending the narrative from the end of the Western Empire through the renaissance associated with the reign of Charlemagne. Part Four examines the High Middle Ages, following developments in the Church, in politics, in philosophy and theology, and in the arts from the twelfth century until the fourteenth. Part Five, an epilogue, traces the transition from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance, focusing primarily on the fourteenth century but also looking forward to the fifteenth century and beyond.

The third edition features two entirely new chapters, Chapter 5 on Byzantium and Chapter 6 on Islam. Handling sophisticated issues with great clarity and ease, The Medieval World View is ideal for courses in Medieval history, literature, or art history.

Dr. Woidat Offers a Different Perspective on Thanksgiving

Yesterday afternoon in the Fireside Lounge, dozens of students gathered to hear Associate Professor of English Caroline Woidat speak about Thanksgiving. This was the second mini-lecture in the series Celebrate Literature, presented by Sigma Tau Delta (the English Honor Society). The first was Professor Tom Greenfield’s mini-lecture on Oscar Wilde.

With the holiday break in sight, many students were eager to hear the truth about the holiday beyond the traditions. Dr. Woidat’s expertise on Native American literature was evident in her keen understanding of the history and (lack of) literature of Thanksgiving. Many learned surprising new facts, for example, that there are only two paragraphs of literature from the time that even hint at the traditions we accept as Thanksgiving customs.

Dr. Woidat expertly translated the complicated histories into a mini-lecture that was both informative and enjoyable. The next mini-lecture in the series will be “Occupy Christmas: Dickens and His Carol, Then and Now” by Professor Paul Schacht, Thursday, December 1, 2:30 p.m. in the Fireside Lounge in the Union.

Second Annual Sigma Tau Delta Book Exchange

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Another year, another chance to exchange books for what else but – more books! Sigma Tau Delta (the English Honor Society) was so impressed with the turnout and enthusiasm for last year’s Book Exchange that they conducted another one this year, complete with performances, snacks, and, of ,.

The Starbucks on campus donated coffee and passion-tea lemonades again this year so Sigma Tau Delta could sell the drinks at a discount for She’s the First, a charity that sends girls in Third World countries to school. Sigma Tau Delta matched every dollar that was made between the first and second Book Exchange, enabling two girls to school.

The success of this event has prompted Sigma Tau Delta to make the Book Exchange an annual tradition at Geneseo. The Honor Society hopes to continue the trend of great entertainment, good food for a good cause – and, of course, books!

It’s Story Time!

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Last night, members of Sigma Tau Delta (The English Honor Society) conducted story and craft time for a group of local children at Wadsworth Library. The group read The Rainbow Fish and Elmer the Elephant. After each story was read aloud, the children were able to create their own Elmer with paint and sponges and their own Rainbow Fish with tissue paper and tinfoil for the shiny scales.

Both the students and the children had a blast! Sigma Tau Delta enjoyed the opportunity to give back to the community and to volunteer to help local families. They plan to volunteer again at the library in the Spring and hope more students would like to join them!

Dr. Greenfield goes (Oscar) Wilde

Professor of English Tom Greenfield kicked off the mini-lecture series presented by Sigma Tau Delta (the English Honor Society) today, giving an exciting and entertaining look into dandyism and the witticisms of Oscar Wilde. The mini-lecture series, Celebrate Literature, connects a mini-lecture from a Geneseo English faculty member with the theme of the month (Oscar Wilde’s birthday is in October).

Dr. Greenfield got the lecture off on the right note with a song. Readings from Wilde’s work interspersed with the history of his life and career were educational but not without hilarity. After hearing excerpts from Wilde’s plays including An Ideal Husband and A Woman of No Importance, Dr. Greenfield asked the students to script their own small scene of witticisms. The crowd was burstling with enthusiasm as the students paired into small groups and created their own scene. Two groups were asked to briefly act out their scene, and their witty performances were greeted with applause and laughter.

The lecture was a great success and set the tone for the rest of the series. The next lecture in the series is Dr. Caroline Woidat’s “Native American Thanksgiving: Food for Thought,” Thursday, November 17th at 4:30 p.m. in the Fireside Lounge in the Union.

Martha Nell Smith to deliver 2011 Walter Harding Lecture

This year’s Walter Harding Lecture will be delivered by Professor Martha Nell Smith.

The lecture, titled Digital Forensics: Texting Emily Dickinson, will be held on Thursday, September 29 at 4 p.m. in the SUNY Geneseo College Union Ballroom.

Martha Nell Smith is Professor of English and Founding Director of the Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities (MITH) at the University of Maryland. Her numerous print publications include five singly and coauthored books, three of them award-winning – Emily Dickinson, A User’s Guide (2012); Companion to Emily Dickinson (2008); Open Me Carefully: Emily Dickinson’s Intimate Letters to Susan Dickinson (1998); Comic Power in Emily Dickinson (1993); Rowing in Eden: Rereading Emily Dickinson (1992) – and scores of articles and essays in journals and collections such as American Literature, Studies in the Literary Imagination, South Atlantic Quarterly, Women’s Studies Quarterly, Profils Americains, San Jose Studies, The Emily Dickinson Journal, ESQ, and A Companion to Digital Humanities. The recipient of numerous awards from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH), the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS), the Mellon Foundation, and the Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education (FIPSE) for her work on Dickinson, American literary history, and in new media, Smith is also Coordinator and Executive Editor of the Dickinson Electronic Archives projects at the Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities (IATH) at the University of Virginia. Smith co-edited Emily Dickinson’s Correspondence: A Born-Digital Textual Inquiry (2008) published by Rotunda New Digital Scholarship, University of Virginia Press, and has worked on two interrelated Mellon-sponsored data mining and visualization initiatives, NORA and MONK (Metadata Offer New Knowledge). A founding board member of the Emily Dickinson International Society (EDIS), Smith also serves on the editorial board and steering committee of NINES (Networked Infrastructure for Nineteenth-Century Electronic Scholarship); serves in an advisory capacity for C19: The Society of Nineteenth-Century Americanists, and is on numerous advisory boards of digital literary projects such as The Poetess Archive, Digital Dickens, and the Melville Electronic Library (MEL). A leader in innovations in academic publishing, Smith served on the Executive Council of the Association for Computers in the Humanities (2001-2004), co-chaired the Modern Language Association’s Committee on Scholarly Editions (CSE, 2004-2008), and chairs the University of Maryland’s Library Council (2008-2011). For outstanding scholarly achievement and innovative leadership in which diversity inheres in any definition of excellence, Livingston College at Rutgers University awarded Smith its Distinguished Alumni Award in 2009, the highest honor that the college bestows upon its former students. In 2010, Smith was named a Distinguished Scholar-Teacher at the University of Maryland, and in 2011 she was appointed ADVANCE Professor in the College of Arts and Humanities as part of a NSF-funded project to cultivate inclusive excellence. In May 2011, Smith was vote Chair-Elect of the University of Maryland Senate.

Cori Winrock Joins English Department as Visiting Assistant Professor

Poet Cori Winrock has joined the SUNY Geneseo English department this year as Visiting Assistant Professor.

Winrock holds an MFA in Poetry from Cornell University (2007) and BA degrees in Creative Writing and Psychology from Oberlin College (2004). Her poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in a wide range of journals, including Colorado Review, Indiana Review, Denver Quarterly, Blackbird, Mid-American Review, Shenandoah, Pool, The American Poetry Journal, The National Poetry Review, and Crab Orchard Review.

Winrock has been a finalist for several noteworthy honors, including the Academy of American Poets’ Walt Whitman Award and the National Poetry Review’s Annie Finch Prize.

In the fall 2011 semester, Winrock is teaching Engl 201 (Creative Writing), Engl 142 (Literary Forms: Portrait of the Artist – Autobiographical Comics, and Intd 105 (Writing Seminar: Literature and the Laboratory).

Walden Photo Set

 

 

 

 

 

 

humanitiesatwalden:

A few days ago I walked to the Concord Art Association Museum and Gallery. The admission to the museum was free and it is within walking distance from the Inn, making it easily accessible. There were many beautiful exhibits including images of people made out of bronze covered tree branches. The exhibit that struck me as the most interesting took up the entire second floor of the gallery.

Once upstairs the walls were covered in large paintings of a tree house. The paintings were spread across the room completing a 360 view of the tree house and the surrounding forest. The painter, Nick Miller, first discovered the tree house at the Albers Foundation in Connecticut. Miller recalls his first sight of the tree house: “It was like a fairytale that first evening, climbing up, I fell asleep up here, then woke to the evening forest: and a kind of epiphany; that this was the place I needed to be.” He spent approximately seven weeks on the platform painting a panoramic view of nature.

Miller’s retreat into nature reminded me very much of Thoreau’s stay at Walden Pond. While Thoreau retreated to the Pond he wrote Walden and Civil Disobedience. While Miller retreated to nature he painted beautiful portraits of his forest. Both artists were working on some of their greatest pieces during their time in nature. Thoreau and Miller, for the majority of the time, stayed in nature while completing their works. Thoreau stayed in his cabin while Miller often slept on the platform of his tree house. Both of these artists also showed great respect and adoration for the bodies of water they had settled upon. Miller spent a lot of time at the nearby man-made “Anni’s Lake.” He states, “I’d go for a walk in the evening by the lake, and absorb its beauty.” In The Ponds chapter Thoreau writes, “A lake is the landscape’s most beautiful and expressive feature. It is Earth’s eye; looking into which the beholder measures the depth of his own nature.”

It is very interesting to see the artwork of a modern day Thoreau figure. Miller’s 2009 painting is just another expression of Thoreau’s 19th Century ideals.

Katie

Source: humanitiesatwalden

2011 Peace Poetry Contest Winners Read Their Poems

The winners of the 2011 Genesee Valley Peace Poetry Contest shared their poems at SUNY Geneseo’s Alice Austin Theater on May 12. This year’s winning poems were selected from about 900 poems submitted by children in public and private schools of the Genesee valley in grades kindergarten through 8.

Go here to watch the video.