U. English Dept. News


Tuesday, March 20, 2007
Women's Research, Scholarship, & Creative Activities Conference
From Assistant Professor Amanda Emerson (edited for the blog):


University of South Dakota faculty, graduate, and undergraduate students will be presenting work Saturday at the Women's Research, Scholarship, & Creative Activities Conference, "Choices Women Make." As you can see from the list below, the English Department is well-represented. In addition to presentations by our own, the conference also features scholarship in Political Science, Social Welfare, Media Studies, Psychology, and Cultural Studies. Presenters will be arriving from England, New York, Georgia, and Oklahoma to take part.

Please feel free to join us for the reception, Friday evening, 5:30 to 7:00 at the W.H. Over Museum. There will be food, drink, and live jazz. Plus, the reception is free. For more info on the conference and the schedule: http://www.usd.edu/wmst/Conference.cfm


8:30 - 9:45 Panels

Malene Little, "Short Stories, Long Legacy: The Social Effects of Charlotte Perkins Gilman's Short Fiction." Graduate Student, English, University of South Dakota

Brian Twenter, "Elements of Survival in the Writing of Elizabeth Cook-Lynn." Ph.D. Student, English, University of South Dakota



1:00 - 2:15 Panels

Rebecca Flynn, "Isolde's Choice: The Maternal Bond and the Religious Vows of a Medieval Anchoress." Adjunct Faculty, Sioux Falls University/University of South Dakota

Sayaka Kanade, "Suspended Between Sign and Symbol: Feminine Subjectivity in Anne Bradstreet and Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz." Graduate Student, English, University of South Dakota

Meg Mordhorst, "Body Image and Gender Roles in Bonnie Jo Campbell's 'The Sudden Development of Debra Dupuis.'" Undergraduate Student, English, University of South Dakota

Carrie Gonsor, "The Growth and Decline of Job's Daughters International." English, Undergraduate Student, University of South Dakota, SD

Jeremy Christensen, "Secular Religion at the End of Time: Food, The Word, and Sacrifice in the Works of Fannie Flagg" Instructor, English, Dakota Wesleyan University, Mitchell, SD

Nathan Hitchcock, "Women and the Wildman: Feminist Response to the Mythopoetic Men's Movement" Graduate Student, Liberal Studies, University of South Dakota, SD



4:15 - 5:30 Panels

Marcella Remund, Instructor, English, University of South Dakota

Lee Roripaugh, Associate Professor, English, University of South Dakota

Melanie Wood, Instructor, English, University of South Dakota

Delia Druley, "The Colonization of the Female Spirit: Worker and Management Ideology in the Maquilas of Mexico and Nicaragua." Undergraduate Student, Political Science & Spanish, University of South Dakota

Courtney Huse-Wika, "M/Other: Fractured 'I's' and Decentered Maternal Bodies in Confessionalist Poetry." Graduate Student, English, University of South Dakota

Staci Thota, "Performing Identity: Motherhood in Mary Rowlandson's A True History of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson." Graduate Student, English, University of South Dakota

Janet Davison Nordgren, "Some Day You'll be Sorry." Ph.D. Student, English, University of South Dakota

Jan Fischer, "Susanna Rowson's Slaves in Algiers: Playing Politics." Graduate Student, English, University of South Dakota

Annie Christain, "Everyone Is." [poetry reading] Ph.D. student, English, University of South Dakota

Marcia Kear, "Dinah, Dinah." [short-fiction reading] Graduate Student, English, University of South Dakota

Lynda Letona, [poetry reading] Graduate Student, English, University of South Dakota



Friday, February 16, 2007
VLP Poetry Festival Feb. 22nd
Join us Thursday, February 22nd, 2007, at the U. for the Vermillion Literary Project's Seventh Annual Poetry Festival, featuring Iowa performance poet Deb Marquart and Nebraska poet Neil Harrison, as well as our own Sarah Den Boer (English Dept. PhD student in creative writing).

Most events are free, with a small fee for the workshops. See http://www.usd.edu/orgs/projlit/poetryfestival for details.



Sunday, January 21, 2007
English majors, apply for a Sanger!
English and English Education majors at the University of South Dakota are invited to apply for the Sanger Scholarship. We have several to give away to deserving students. There is a February 12 deadline. Please see details at http://www.usd.edu/engl/ug/sanger.cfm.



Sunday, November 12, 2006
English Department Open House Nov. 20
Monday, November 20, 2006
3:00p-5:00p


Mark your calendars: on Monday, November 20, from 3:00 to 5:00 p.m., there will be an open house for English students and faculty to celebrate the opening of our shiny new conference room in Dakota Hall 304.

Please stop by to visit with your fellow English students and English faculty and admire the many deluxe features of the conference room. Lounge indolently in a semi-matching easy chair! Gaze in wonder from its many windows at the roof of Noteboom hall! Luxuriate in wall-to-wall carpeting which is a slightly different shade of blue than elsewhere! Hang your coat/shawl/serape in its cavernous Cloak-a-torium! Ponder the uncanny mystery of the "door that nobody has a key for"!

Seriously, this is an opportunity to discuss your major and future plans, to chat informally with our English community about language, literature, and life. We will be serving homemade cookies, pizza, coffee, and cold beverages.

We hope to see you there.



Wednesday, November 08, 2006
Call for Papers: Women's Studies Conference at the U.

Call for Papers

University of South Dakota Women's Studies Conference:
Research,
Scholarship, & Creative Activity, 2007
"Choices Women Make"
(01/15/07; March 23-24, 2007)


The University of South Dakota announces the return of its Women's Research Conference, formerly held from 1984 to 1996. In hosting the USD Women's Research, Scholarship, and Creative Activity Conference, 2007, we recognize the continued engagement of scholars and artists in areas of crucial importance to women's well-being, advancement, and survival, and we seek to affirm the inextricability of women's decisions from the diverse communities of family, work, and play in which such decisions get made.

The 2007 Conference, "Choices Women Make," welcomes papers, presentations, and creative readings and performances from all disciplines. We seek projects that investigate the medical, economic, psychological, political, ecological, legal, expressive, and artistic opportunities of women and the factors that inform their responses. "Choices Women Make" hopes to initiate dialogue about the many opportunities and limitations that women encounter and create.

Featured Panel: the Conference is excited and honored to host a featured panel discussion among invited women leaders and activists from the Native American communities of South Dakota

Banquet and Keynote Address: the Conference proudly features Keynote Speaker, Lori Jo Marso, Associate Professor of Political Science and Director of Women's and Gender Studies at Union College, NY. Marso is author of Feminist Thinkers and the Demands of Femininity: The Lives and Work of Intellectual Women (2006).

Investigations, critical papers and performative readings on topics that address the diversity and variability of choice among women of color and American Indian women are strongly encouraged.

We anticipate projects that address questions in the following topic areas but will gladly consider other approaches:
  • women and work
  • women and finances
  • women and politics
  • women and activism
  • women and sexuality
  • women and popular culture
  • women and gender
  • women and the arts
  • women and crime
  • women and farming
  • women and the digital age
  • women and science
  • women and medicine
  • women and health & wellness
  • women and religion
  • women and globalism
  • women and the military
  • women and ecology

Please email 250-word abstracts to aemerson@usd.edu or to the following address by
January 15, 2007.

Mailing Address:

Women's Studies
University of South Dakota
414 E. Clark Street
Vermillion, SD 57069



Tuesday, September 26, 2006
New Writers' Group
New Writers' Group for Freshmen and Sophomores at the U.

Beginning this Wednesday (9/27), and each following Wednesday, from 3:00 to 4:00 p.m., the Writing Center and the Vermillion Literary Project are offering a creative writers' group for freshmen and sophomores at the U. This will be a regular group roundtable-type workshopping opportunity, led during the first part of the semester by Lindy Obach, in which up to five student writers can meet in the Writing Center to discuss their work. Writers should sign up by calling 677-5626. On Wednesday, they’ll meet with Lindy in the Writing Center to read and workshop their poems, plays, short fiction, or parts of longer works.

NOTE: For those who are juniors, seniors, graduate students, or not students at all--the Vermillion Literary Project will be starting up the VLP Community Writers' Group again quite soon. More on that later.



Monday, May 01, 2006
Spring Semester Highlights
by Emily Haddad

We are delighted to announce a new scholarship, the Dorothy Mortimer Dunlap Scholarship. The scholarship is designated for a female English major entering her junior year, and may be renewed for one year. Mary Dunlap Calvin and Janet Dunlap Rathbun established this scholarship in memory of their mother, who taught high school English after she graduated from USD in 1929. Mrs. Dunlap died in 2003.

USD's Student Government Association named English the Academic Department of the Year for 2005-06. We will happily show off our plaque--just ask.

On April 13, fifteen members were inducted into USD's new chapter of Sigma Tau Delta, the International English Honor Society. Our chapter was started last year at the initiative of Theo Bohn, a doctoral student in the English Department, and is one of more than 600 active chapters. Simon Ferrell, Donald Myers, Janet Davison Nordgren, Virginia Adair Owen, and Joseph Raiche became graduate student members. New undergraduate members are: Jamie Barnett, Ian Blake, Rebecca Bonnichsen, Christopher Bordewyk, Carrie Gonsor, Sara Kniffen, Bobbi Olson, Amber Skoglund, Bridget Welch, and Stephanie Zornes. The chapter has since been nominated for a South Dakota Board of Regents award for student organizations.

Visitors to the department included poets Jim Reese and Julie Sheehan, who gave readings of their work. Marina van Zuylen also delivered a lecture entitled "Against Leisure: The Uses and Misuses of Time in George Eliot's Novel Middlemarch"; her visit was the latest installment in the English Department's Speaker Series and was supported in part by a grant from USD's Office of Research.



Student Achievements
by Emily Haddad

English majors and literary topics were very well represented at IdeaFest, USD's annual showcase of undergraduate student research. Presenters included: Jamie Barnett, ("Native American Students and the Writing Center"), Mandy Ellefson ("Location and Maturation: Bronte's Jane Eyre"), Crystal Gorden ("Elfriede Jelinek's Women as Lovers: Love, Marriage, and the Role of Women under Capitalism"), Bobbi Olson ("Seulement Moi: Narcissism in Don DeLillo's Cosmopolis"), Adriane Raba ("The Importance of Phonological Awareness and Foreign Language Acquisition in Writing Centers"), and Anne Rosenbaum ("Janie's Self-Discovery through Travel and Relationships"). Megan Determan displayed a poster called "Effectiveness of Women's Whetting in Terms of Masculinity in Laxdaela saga" and Marcus Merritt participated in a roundtable on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

We had a similarly excellent showing at the USD Graduate Student Forum for Research and Creative Work, with the following students presenting: Ryan Allen, Theo Bohn, Annie Christain, Sarah Den Boer, Simon Ferrell, Toni Hoffmeier, Mary Honerman, Melissa Houghton, Courtney Huse-Wika, Sean Johnston, Dan Jones, Malene Little, Jennifer Moskowitz, Joseph Raiche, Kimberly Raaphorst, Brian Twenter, and Ashley Zellmer. [Please forgive my not listing all of the titles. Trust me --they were terrific.]

Jamie Barnett has accepted a position as research associate with a technology research firm in Cambridge, MA.

Brittany Neiles, who is studying on exchange at Warwick University in the UK this semester, spent spring break visiting Dublin, Paris, Italy, and Belgium, where she saw "lots of good sights, culture, and history and fit in some good shopping on the side."

MA students Simon Ferrell and Toni Hoffmeier presented their work as a panel at the Red River Conference in Fargo, ND in February. Simon's papers were called "Slapstick Shakespeare: The Comedy of Errors and its Movement beyond Farce" and "Authority through Virginity in The Life of Christina of Markyate: A Twelfth Century Recluse."

Toni also presented two papers: "The Powerful Prowess: Politicizing the Patriarchal Female" and "The Art of Feminine Control: Margaret Paston's Authority." In addition, Simon presented "Erec's Quest of Self-Promotion" at the Northern Plains Conference on Earlier British Literature in Brookings, SD.

Patricia DiMond and Courtney Huse-Wika, both doctoral students, gave papers at the Southwest/Texas Popular Culture Association/American Culture Association Conference in Albuquerque in February. Patti spoke about "The Owl's Song: Genre Reconsideration as Hale Breaks New Ground." Courtney's paper was " 'Ready-made Happy Endings to Misfit All Stories: Distortions of Love in the Pygmalion Myth." Melissa Houghton, an MA student, and Annie Christain, a PhD student, read their poetry at the conference as well. Annie also read at the National Popular Culture Association/American Culture Association Conference in Atlanta, GA, and at "Spankin' the Muse," a graduate student conference at Truman State University (Annie's alma mater) in Kirksville, MO.

Doctoral students Theo Bohn and Ryan Allen represented USD's new chapter of Sigma Tau Delta at the society's national meeting in Portland, OR. Ryan presented a paper entitled "A Book and a Performance: The Representation of Nature in American Literature" and read his poetry. Theo received an award for the poems he read.

PhD student Dan Jones presented a paper called " 'There is an Idea of a Patrick Bateman': Identity and Agency in Bret Easton Ellis's American Psycho" at the Twentieth-Century Literature Conference in Louisville, KY in February. Along with Sean Johnston and Annie Christain, Dan was nominated to be included in this year's "Who's Who among American College Students."

Doctoral student Jennifer Moskowitz was selected as an alternate for an American Association of University Women dissertation fellowship.

Brian Twenter, a PhD student, plans to present a paper at the Annual Dakota Conference in Sioux Falls.



Faculty Accomplishments
by Emily Haddad

Ed Allen attended the Association of Writers and Writing Programs Annual Conference in Austin, TX, where he gave a reading from his newly published sonnet collection, 67 Mixed Messages.

Jim Balakier was invited by the National Endowment for the Humanities to evaluate proposals for NEH grants.

South Dakota Review, the literary magazine edited by Brian Bedard, was the subject of a full-page feature in the February issue of The Writer.

Amanda Emerson joined the biennial meeting of the American Women Writers Reading Group, which was held at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, March 28-29. The group met to discuss nineteenth-century life narratives and other writings in relation to historian Heather Williams's recent scholarship on slave literacy and education in the U.S.

The International Writing Centers Association has selected Chris Ervin as Web Editor for the organization and appointed him to the executive board ex officio.

"Martian Girl's Moon Garden," a poem by Michelle Rogge Gannon, won third place in the High Plains Writers Juried Poetry Competition.

"Digging to India: Modernity, Imperialism, and the Suez Canal," an article by Emily Haddad which appeared in Victorian Studies (47.3), was runner-up for the Interdisciplinary Nineteenth-Century Studies Essay Prize for 2005. Emily gave a paper on William Wordsworth, Leigh Hunt, and Thomas Moore at the College English Association Conference in San Antonio, TX, in April.

In February, Marcella Remund did a reading of her short fiction at Northern State University in Aberdeen, SD. She was a guest of NSU faculty member and USD alumna Penni Pearson (PhD).

Lee Ann Roripaugh traveled to Atlanta in March to receive the Association of Asian American Studies Book Award in Poetry/Prose for 2004 for her second book of poems, Year of the Snake. In April, she gave readings at Minnesota State University in Mankato and in Utah at Westminster College and Utah Valley State College. She has poems currently appearing in the most recent issue of North American Review, as well as the anthology Digerati, just released from Three Candles Press. An essay, co-authored with Susan J. Wolfe, appears in Reading the L Word: Outing Contemporary Television, published by I.B. Tauris.

At the Twentieth-Century Literature Conference in Louisville, KY in February, Skip Willman presented "Specters of Marx in Thomas Pynchon's Vineland."



Alumni Activities


by Emily Haddad

Renee Della Fave (MA) will start law school at the University of Montana this fall.

Tom Klett (MA) is a supervisor at Platinum Directories, a company in Belmont, IA. He says he has been learning to use fun software.

John Nelson (PhD) delivered a paper at the Red River Conference in Fargo, ND in February.

Kristi Rastede (MA) is the extension coordinator for the University of Nebraska-Lincoln's Northeast Research and Extension Center as well as an adjunct instructor in English at Northeast Community College in Norfolk, NE, where she teaches Introduction to College Writing.




Vermillion Literary Project
Festival; Readings; 2006 VLP Magazine

The Vermillion Literary Project's annual poetry festival, held February 23, featured writers Penni Pearson (PhD alumna) and Jim Coppoc, with workshops, a noon reading by Pearson and Coppoc, and a fascinating talk by Coppoc on "Stage, Page, and Beyond: the Bardic Tradition in the 21st Century." In the evening, Coppoc, as the VLP slam master, performed a condensed version of Ginsberg's "Howl," which Annie Christain described in the VLP weblog as "a fierce, rhythmic, OBE-inducing chant/rant that left the audience tugging on their silver elastic soul cords like duel plane diddley bows." The winners of this slam were Lynda Letona in first place, followed by Tony LaPointe in second place and Laurie Johns in third.

In March, the VLP held a "Women's Choices" reading in honor of Women's History Month, with Lee Ann Roripaugh, Michelle Rogge Gannon, Annie Christain, Emily Haddad, and Sean Johnston reading selections by women writers and scholars. This was followed by an open-mic and our usual poetry slam, which was won by USD alumnus Barry Wolf (MA), also known as "Bear."

The VLP 2006 magazine was unveiled at the April 27th reception and authors' reading at the Coffee Shop Gallery. The magazine includes writings and artwork by Sean Johnston (first-place winner of the VLP Short Story Contest), Barb Baker, John Banasiak, Phillip Block, Ken Carstens, Philip DePaula, Patricia DiMond, Amanda Gebhart, Vanessa Gorden, Jami Guthrie, Nathan Hitchcock, Steven D. Howe (2nd-place winner of the Holidays on Ice Contest), Sandra Kern (2nd-place winner of the VLP Short Story Contest), VerLynn Kneifl, D. T. Kofoed, Paula Kostel, Lynda Letona, Rosemary Moeller, John Mullin, Joe Night, Joseph Raiche, Marcella Remund, S. K. Robertson, Amanda Sides, and Suzanne Sunshower.

Winners of that evening's poetry slam were Melissa Houghton in first place, followed by Lynda Letona in second and Tony LaPointe in third. One of the prizes Melissa won was a signed copy of poet Julie Sheehan's new book, Orient Point.



Dakota Writing Project
DWP at SDCTE; A Visit to Washington, D.C.

by Emily Haddad, Chair

Nancy Zuercher and Michelle Rogge Gannon participated in the South Dakota Council of Teachers of English Spring Conference on March 24 and 25 in Chamberlain. Nancy, who is the post-secondary liaison on the SDCTE Executive Board, led discussions on literature-based writing and on post-secondary teachers' concerns. Michelle presented a session entitled "Collaborative Writing Online That Meets Standards and Engages Your Students." USD English alumnus Justin Blessinger (PhD), a Dakota State University faculty member, participated, as did Nancy Kampfe, an alumna and teacher at Bennett County High School. The DWP Board of Directors also met Saturday morning, with Nancy leading the meeting. In the afternoon, fourteen DWP teachers participated in the spring reunion, with the focus on sharing successful teaching moments and writing.

Michelle and Patricia Konechne, a middle school teacher from Kimball, attended the National Writing Project's annual spring meeting in Washington, D.C. April 6-7. While there, they spoke about the Writing Project and South Dakota writing issues with Senators John Thune and Tim Johnson, as well as with one of Representative Stephanie Herseth's assistants.