English department announces 2016 student awards and scholarships

The following students have won department awards and scholarships for 2015-2016 and will be honored at an awards ceremony on Study Day, May 4.

Graduating Senior Awards

  • William T. Beauchamp Literature Award: Jeremy Jackson
  • Patricia Conrad Lindsay Memorial Award: Sean Fischer
  • Calvin Israel Award in the Humanities: Britina Cheng and Harrison Hartsough
  • Joseph M. O’Brien Memorial Award: Mary Auld and Christy Leigh Agrawal
  • Outstanding Speech Buddy: Lauren Sarrantonio

Scholarships

  • Natalie Selser Freed Memorial Scholarship: John Panus
  • Rita K. Gollin Senior Year Scholarship for Excellence in American Literature: Zach Muhlbauer
  • Rita K. Gollin Junior Year Scholarship for Excellence in American Literature: Amanda Wentworth
  • Hans Gottschalk Award: Brendan Mahoney
  • Joseph M. O’Brien Transfer Scholarship: Jeffrey Curtin
  • Don Watt Memorial Scholarship: Jason Guisao
  • Bonnie C Henzel Memorial Scholarship: Gabriella Garcia, Chloe Forsell, Kiaya Rose Dilsner-Lopez, and Thomas McCarthy
  • Jesse M Rodgers Memorial Scholarship: Erik Mebust and Evan Goldstein

Writing Awards

Creative Non-Fiction

  • First place: Jeremy A. Jackson, “To Dr. C., Ph.D.”
  • Second place: Leandra Griffith, “Birthday for That Generic Someone in Your Life”
  • Third place: Lauren Sarrantonio, “The Amorphous Children”

John H. Parry Award for a Critical Essay

  • First place: Carrie Anne Potter, “Ahead of Their Time: Temporality and Spatiality in Two Keats Odes”
  • Second place: Joshua DeJoy, “The Objective, the Subjective, and the Ugly: E. P. Thompson’s The Making of the English Working Class at Fifty-Two”
  • Third place: Zachary Muhlbauer, “Nietzschean Dualism in Heart of Darkness: A Structuralist Analysis”

Jérome de Romanet de Beaune Award for an Essay in Diversity Studies

  • First place: Ariana DiPreta, “Subversion of Bourgeois Masculinity in Ulysses
  • Second place: Veronica Taglia, “Construction of Black Masculine Identity in African American Drama, 1959–1969”
  • Third place (tied): Emily Ercolano, “Toulouse-Lautrec and the Female Form”
  • Third place (tied): Joshua DeJoy, “The Dialectics of Slavery: Hegel and the Contradictions in Slavery”

Agnes Rigney Award in Drama

  • Emily Warnken, “Vampires”

Irene E. Smith Award in First-Year Critical Writing: INTD 105

  • First place: Isabel Owen, “Searching for Answers in Silence: The Issue of Memory in State Violence”
  • Second place: George Goga, “The Dictionary, the Gummy Worms, and the Grotesque”

Lucy Harmon Award in Literary Fiction

  • First place: Katie Soares, “We Buy Gold”
  • Second place: Leandra Griffith, “Mary”
  • Third place: Margaret Thon, “The Ballad of Summer ’72”

Mary Thomas Award in Poetry

  • First place: Savannah Skinner, “A Guide To Recognizing Your Ghost”
  • Second place: Cassandra Schweizer, “What I Wrote For You”
  • Third place: Kallie Swyer, “Hundreds of Birds”

Research Paper

  • First place: Erik Mebust, “Shakespeare’s Rising Stars”
  • Second place: Jessica Heppler, “Civil Disobedience and the Rawlsian Non-Citizen: An Appeal to Political or Natural Rights?”
  • Third place: Veronica Taglia, “Subversion of the American Dream: An Analysis of Arthur Miller’s Leading Protagonists.”

Africana/Black Studies

  • Best Analytical Essay: Azaria Davis, “Colorblind? That Ain’t Right!”
  • Best Research Paper: Kathleen O’Brien, “Would There Be Slave Resistance without Women?: The Crucial Role Women Play”
  • Best Creative Work: Chloe Forsell, “Mother Tongue”

2015 English department writing awards

Congratulations to the SUNY Geneseo students who took first, second, and third place this year in the categories of critical essay, diversity studies, first-year critical writing, research, creative non-fiction, literary fiction, and poetry. Congratulations as well to the students who won in each of three categories for work in Africana/Black studies.

John H. Parry Award: Critical Essay

  1. Sean Neill, “Towards a Theory of Auto Horror”
  2. Sarah Simon, “Erupt/Endure”
  3. Liam Cody, “Repurposing Bodies in ‘The Grauballe Man'” and Zachary Muhlbauer, “Tom Wolfe’s Never-Never Land (What?)”

Jérome de Rômanet de Beaune Award: Diversity Studies

  1. Meghan Kearns, “No Magic Here: Archival Violence and the Body”
  2. Kyle Parnell, “Disability as Metaphor in Curricular Literature: A Case Study on Of Mice and Men
  3. Emily Ercolano, “Kramer vs. Kramer: The Subversion and Affirmation of Masculine Hegemony in the Male Mother”

Irene E. Smith Award: First-Year Critical Writing

  1. Noah Chichester, “We Shall Overcome: Ferguson and the History of Black Protest in America”
  2. Sophie Boka, “Destabilizing Definitions”
  3. Halee Finn, “Optimism Can Influence Perspective”

Research Paper Award

  1. Harrison Hartsough, “Constitutional Rights as an Unfunded Mandate: The Problems with the Implementation of Gideon v. Wainwright in New York State”
  2. Connor Valvo, “The Place of Theory of Mind in The Catcher in the Rye
  3. Sean Fischer and Benjamin Wach, “United We Stand: An Ethical Framework for Literary Criticism, A Case Study Analysis”

Creative Non-Fiction Award

  1. Erin Koehler, “The Phototroph”
  2. Kathryn Waring, “Open Diary”
  3. Lara Elmayan, “Scavengers”

Lucy Harmon Award: Literary Fiction

  1. Katie Soares, “Kill the Carrier”
  2. Sophie Boka, “To Know One”
  3. Marissa Canarelli, “The Magpie”

Mary Thomas Award: Poetry

  1. Chrissy Montelli, “Aftermath of: Twin Mental Health Evaluations”
  2. Lara Elmayan, “Last Prayer to Mack Wolford”
  3. Codie Hazen, “[Unspecified Endocrine Disorder]”

Africana/Black Studies Award

  • Best Critical/Analytical Essay: Sean Neill
  • Best Research Paper: Cassandra Nicol
  • Best Creative Writing: Devon Poniatowski

Graff and Birkenstein to talk on “Demystifying the Academic Game” March 19

On Monday, March 19,  Gerald Graff and Cathy Birkenstein will be on campus to talk about “Demystifying the Academic Game.” Their talk will take place at 10 a.m. in the College Union Ballroom.

Gerald Graff is Professor of English and Education at the University of Illinois at Chicago. A former president of the Modern Language Association of America (2008), he is one of his generation’s most influential commentators on education. His widely cited 1987 book, Professing Literature: An Institutional History, was recently reprinted in a Twentieth Anniversary Edition by the University of Chicago Press. In addition, Prof. Graff is the author of Beyond the Culture Wars: How Teaching the Conflicts Can Revitalize American Education (1992), the book that introduced the phrase “teach the conflicts” to describe a pedagogical approach that treats internecine critical dispute as an opportunity show students how theoretical disagreements help to constitute academic disciplines; Clueless in Academe: How Schooling Obscures the Life of the Mind (2003), which called on academic professionals to demystify academic culture; and, with Cathy Birkenstein, “They Say/I Say”: The Moves That Matter in Academic Writing (2006), a handbook for teaching writing as a species of “conversation” that has set records for sales in colleges and high schools.

Cathy Birkenstein is Lecturer in English at the University of Illinois at Chicago and co-director of the Writing in the Disciplines program. In addition to co-authoring “They Say/I Say,” she has published essays on writing in College English, The Chronicle of Higher Education, Academe, and College Composition and Communication.

The talk is open to the general public.

Dr. Beth McCoy Discusses the Challenges & Magic of Writing

Dr. Beth A. McCoy

On January 25th Dr. Beth A. McCoy gave a lecture entitled “The Writing on the Wall: Reading FEMA Signs in Post-Katrina New Orleans” as part of Sigma Tau Delta’s 2011-2012 lecture series. In the time since this lecture, Dr. McCoy has been “rewriting and rewriting” her work as she prepares to complete her article for publication. This past Monday I had the joy of sitting down with Dr. McCoy to discuss her writing process.

Dr. McCoy opened with a reassuring admission that our professors aren’t immune to writer’s block, second-guessing, and other writing pitfalls. “At first I found myself doing the very things that I advise my writing students against such as agonizing over the intro rather than moving forward,” she exclaimed. And, when asked how she got through this, she smiled while recounting how she would think of an idea in the shower and then rush to write it down before she forgot. Overall, Dr. McCoy finds her current project to be a humbling reminder that, although ultimately rewarding, writing is first and foremost hard; it can often be a frustrating and lonely process.

Laughing about how it would be awful to give students advice that she does not follow, Dr. McCoy ultimately did what she tells her first-year writing seminar students to do: Work in short intervals, divide up the work into sections, keep at it, and reward yourself for completing a task. For instance, after Dr. McCoy completes 10-30 minutes of solid work she rewards herself with a quick game of Angry Birds or something equally fun and lighthearted. With this method, she finds it possible to complete a major project during the semesters instead of waiting until summer to do all of her writing. English majors who hope to complete their own large-scale work during the hectic semester should find this advice useful. As Dr. McCoy tells her INTD students, it is hard to find a spare two-hour block in your day, but 10-15 minute blocks are almost always there. Use them.

Being involved in largely uncharted interdisciplinary work and cultural studies, Dr. McCoy is often questioned about what her work has to do with literature. She replies: “I am most at home with literature. I learned how to interpret all texts—whether it is a historical text or visual text—by working with literature.  I especially learned how to read texts for what is both spoken and unspoken.” Moreover, Dr. McCoy finds that returning to literature as she embarks on relatively non-literary research helps guide and ground her ideas. For instance, she finds that Toni Morrison’s novels provide her with useful language and concepts to express her thoughts.

When I asked Dr. McCoy why she chose to study the uncanny resemblance between FEMA signs and vodoun vévé symbols and what this means in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, she responded: “The topic kept haunting me. And haunting is definitely a recurring theme in literature. Every time I taught Hurricane Stories I was reminded of this work that I had to do.” Dr. McCoy then paralleled this personal haunting with the way that American society at large is haunted by unexplored stories. According to Dr. McCoy it is easy and tempting to run away from what haunts the edges of our individual or collective minds. But, as returning to Toni Morrison’s A Mercy helped remind her, it is important to work through these complicated and challenging stories.

Dr. McCoy closed our conversation with a sentiment on what lies behind the magic of writing. While it seems like magic when a work is finally finished—when you can step back from a piece and admire the coherent thoughts that have emerged from the chaos, sometimes even forgetting the work that got you there—it is often agony to reach that point. The most important advice from Dr. McCoy is to just start writing. As Dr. McCoy points out, “you often have to write an essay to write an essay,” and that’s okay. Don’t run away from the work that you feel called to do.