Georgia College

The DoER

The Department of English & Rhetoric Newsletter

1.1 February 2009

Blazer, Alex E. "Glamorama, Fight Club, and the Terror of Narcissistic Abjection." American Fiction of the 1990s: Reflections of History and Culture. Ed. Jay Prosser. London: Routledge, 2008. 177-89.

 

Friman, Alice. "Ace," "Modigliani’s Girls," "Because You Were Mine," "Depression Glass," "Learning Language." [Poems.] Prairie Schooner 82.3 (2008): 64-70.

 

---. "Autobiography: The Short Version," "Diapers for My Father," "Silent Movie," "Snow," "Vinculum." [Poems.] When She Named Fire: An Anthology of Contemporary Poetry by American Women. Ed. Andrea Hollander Budy. Pittsburgh: Autumn, 2009. 122-25.

 

---. "Coming Down." [Poem.] Shenandoah 58.2 (2008): 106-7.

 

---. "Leonardo’s Roses." [Poem.] Alhambra Poetry Calendar 2009. Bertem, Belgium: Alhambra, 2008. Poem for 26 July.

 

---. "More Clearly This Time Around." Rev. of Hazard and Prospect: New and Selected Poems by Kelly Cherry. New Letters 74.3 (2008): 151-55.

 

---. "On Deck." [Poem.] The Georgia Review 62 (2008): 373-74.

 

---. "The Refusal," "The Arranged Marriage." [Poems.] Boulevard 24.1 (2008): 101-3.

 

---. "Siren Song for Late September," "Borne Again." [Poems.] The Southern Review 43 (2008): 389-91.

 

Gentry, Marshall Bruce. "A Closer Look: Cheers! Interviews Review Editor Marshall Bruce Gentry." With Avis Hewitt. Cheers!: The Flannery O’Connor Society Newsletter 15.2 (2008): 1, 4-5.

 

---. "On Getting Published (in the Flannery O’Connor Review): Notes from Bruce Gentry." Cheers!: The Flannery O’Connor Society Newsletter 15.2 (2008): 5.

 

---. Rev. of Philip Roth: New Perspectives on an American Author, ed. Derek Parker Royal. Modern Fiction Studies 54 (2008): 892-95.

 

Magoulick, Mary. "A Cosmology of Women." [Poem.] Folklore Muse: Poetry, Fiction, and Other Reflections by Folklorists. Ed. Frank de Caro. Logan: Utah State UP, 2008. 141-42.

 

---. "Women and Popular Culture" in Encyclopedia of Women's Folklore and Folklife. Eds. Liz Locke, Theresa A. Vaughan, and Pauline Greenhill. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 2009. 469-75.

 

---. "Women and Water in Senegal." Folklore Muse: Poetry, Fiction, and Other Reflections by Folklorists. Ed. Frank de Caro. Logan: Utah State UP, 2008. 32-38.

 

McElmurray, Karen. The Motel of the Stars: A Novel. Louisville, KY: Sarabande, 2008.

 

---. ""What We Remember and What We Forget." To Tell the Truth: Practice and Craft in Narrative Nonfiction. by Connie D. Griffin. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Longman-Pearson Education, 2008. 152. [Excerpt from Surrendered Child]

 

Palmer, Eustace.  "Character and Society in Achebe's Things Fall Apart." Things Fall Apart. Ed. Francis Abiola Irele. New York: Norton, 2008. 410-22.


Messner, Beth A., and Mark T. Vail. "A 'City at War': Commemorating Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr." Communication Studies 60 (2009): 17-31.

Blazer, Alex E. "'the dolls are real, but not that real': Chuck Palahniuk’s Haunted and Postmodern Horror.” Mid-Atlantic Popular/American Culture Assoc. Niagara Falls, ON, Can. 1 Nov. 2008.

 

Daniel, Scott. "Rayber Squared: Negotiating Self-Representation in The Violent Bear It Away." American Literature Assoc. Symposium on American Fiction. Savannah, GA. 4 Oct. 2008. [Spring 2008 MA Graduate]

 

---. "Jesus in Fairyland: The Religion/Ecology of the South in Flannery O’Connor’s 'A View of the Woods.'" South Central MLA, San Antonio, TX. 7 Nov. 2008.

 

Dillard, Scott, perf. [The Father] Eurydice. by Sarah Rule. Dir. Amy Pinney. Russell Auditorium, Georgia College & State University, Milledgeville. 1-5 Oct. 2008. [The performance was adjudicated by the National Review Board of the Performance Studies Division of the National Communication Association.]

 

Friman, Alice. "So You Want to Be a Poet..." [Poetry Reading and Talk.] Crossroads Writers Conference. Macon, GA. 4 Oct. 2008.

 

---. Poetry Reading. Southern Festival of Books. Nashville, TN. 11 Oct. 2008.

 

Gentry, Marshall Bruce. Panel Member. "Publishing Forum: How to Publish Scholarly Work." Rocky Mountain MLA, Reno, NV. 9 Oct. 2008.

 

---. Session Chair. "Flannery O'Connor's Fiction: Social Issues and Human Struggles." American Literature Assoc. Symposium on American Fiction. Savannah, GA. 3 Oct. 2008. [Gentry introduced papers by John D. Cox and by three participants in the 2007 NEH Summer Institute hosted by GCSU.]

 

Magoulick, Mary. "Images and Imagined Lives of Women from Prehistory to Today." American Folklore Society Annual Meeting. Louisville, KY. 25 Oct. 2008.

 

---. "A Cosmology of Women." [Poem.] Panel for The Folklore Muse. American Folklore Society Annual Meeting. Louisville, KY. 23 Oct. 2008.

 

McElmurray, Karen. Interview with Kentucky Public Radio. Louisville, KY. 20 Jan. 2009.

 

---. Reading. Carmichael's Bookstore, Louisville, KY. 23 Jan. 2009.

 

---. Reading & Special Event. Board of Directors of Sarabande Books, Louisville, KY. 24 Jan. 2009.

 

Muschell, David. Can't You See What I'm Saying? Dir. Sheila Cage. Blue Springs City Theatre, Kansas City, MO. 18 Oct. 2008.

 

Palmer, Eustace. Executive Council Member. Annual Meeting of the African Studies Association and Executive Council meetings of the African Literature Association. Chicago. 13-16 Nov. 2008.

 

---. Together with Drs. Charles Ubah of Government and Sociology and Funke Fontenot, Associate Dean of Arts & Sciences, he took a group of students from GCSU to the Twelfth Annual Southeast Model of the African Union Conference at Kennesaw State University, 6-8 Nov. 2008.


Presley, Susan. "Enoch Emery: The Boy with Wise Blood." American Literature Assoc. Symposium on American Fiction. Savannah, GA. 4 Oct. 2008. [Spring 2008 MA Graduate]                  

 

Sirmans, John. Two Readings. Humanities Department, Rheinhardt College. Waleska, GA. 17-18 Nov. 2008.

Katie Aiello, Beauty Bragg, Zach Burkhart, Tracie Burns, Amy Burt, Janet Clark, Joanna Grisham, Andrew Howard, Harmony Neal, John Sirmans, John Teschner, Elaine Whitaker, and Eddie Zipperer were named by one or more first-time freshmen students in response to the following question that was asked in the fall 2008 MAP-Works Check-Up Survey: "What instructor has had the greatest impact on you this semester?"

 

Freshman Rhetoric major Joshua Braswell has been selected to participate in the Office of Academic Engagement's Leadership Certificate Program.

 

Spring 2008 MA graduate Scott Daniel was chosen Warner Robins High School Star Teacher for 2009.

 

Alice Friman's book, The Book of the Rotten Daughter, was reviewed by Marilyn Kallet in Prairie Schooner 82.2 (2008): 171-73.

 

Alice Friman's poem "Siren Song for Late September," published in The Southern Review, was featured in the online publication Verse Daily on 28 Aug. 2008.

 

Alice Friman's poem “Machu Picchu” won the Erika Mumford Prize for 2008 from the New England Poetry Club.

 

Senior Rhetoric major Amy Gilbert has been selected as one of six student advisors for the Career Center's new student-led Career Peer Advisor program.

 

Marshall Bruce Gentry was awarded a Georgia Humanities Council grant of $9,910.26 for Trailfest 09, a project of the Southern Literary Trail, with Craig Amason of Andalusia Foundation.

 

Karen McElmurray's novel, The Motel of the Stars: A Novel, has been selected for Novel of the Year by LitLife and nominated for the Weatherford Prize in Fiction.

 

David Muschell's play, Can't You See What I'm Saying?, won the Blue Springs City Threatre Playwriting Contest (Kansas City, MO).

David Muschell's play, Brotherly Love, is a semi-finalist for the Hidden River Playwriting Award (Philadelphia, PA).

Marie Elliott worked in the accounting department of the Sony Entertainment/Columbia Pictures film Zombieland, starring Woody Harrelson, and filming in Atlanta in January 2009.

 

Rhetoric major Alex Jones spent the summer as an intern in the governor's office where he was a speech writer for Governor Purdue.

 

Karen McElmurray was visiting faculty at Murray State University's low-residency program in January, where she did a reading and craft lecture, "When Memoir Meets Fiction: Crossing Genres."


David Muschell was on the faculty of the Chattahoochee Valley Writers' Conference, 26-28 Sept. 2008 in Columbus, GA, where he taught a workshop entitled "Coming to an End: The Hardest Part of Writing."

 

Spring 2008 MA graduate Susan Presley is an adjunct instructor of English at Savannah Technical College, where she is currently teaching two classes of Introduction to Humanities, one class of English 1101, and one class of English 1102.

Dr. Amy Burt and Dr. Scott Dillard will be doing a show, Scott and Amy's Introduction to Hootenanny Studies, at the Patti Pace Performance Festival at Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, 7 Feb. 2009.

 

Karen McElmurray has events scheduled for her book, The Motel of the Stars: A Novel, at the Hollins Festival of the Book, the Southern Kentucky Book Festival, the Virginia Festival of the Book, Lynchburg College, West Georgia College, and Mercer University, among others.

 

The Southeastern Bridges in English Studies Conference [graduate student conference]

25 April 2009, Valdosta State University, Valdosta, GA
Proposals/Abstracts due 28 Feb. 2009 to Conference Coordinator, Shane Wilson, shawilson@valdosta.edu

Complete Information: http://www.valdosta.edu/english/SBESconferenceINFO

 

Trailfest 09 and the Southern Literary Trail Events at GCSU in March 2009
Author foundations and house museums in towns across Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi are coordinating efforts to promote tourism across the region. Trailfest 09 is a series of events in March 2009 designed to draw attention to the establishment of the ongoing tourism effort called the Southern Literary Trail. The Flannery O’Connor Review and the Flannery O’Connor - Andalusia Foundation, Inc., are sponsors for events on the GCSU campus, and we have received grant support from the Georgia Humanities Council, the Knight Foundation, the Arts Unlimited committee at GCSU, and the GCSU Office of Institutional Equity and Diversity. 

 

On Sunday, 8 March, Andrea Hollander Budy, Alice Friman, Laura Newbern, and Leah Norton will read poems from a new book edited by Budy, When She Named Fire: An Anthology of Contemporary Poetry by American Women. This event will be in the dining room at Andalusia at 3 p.m.

On Monday, 9 March, Evelyn C. White, the official biographer of Alice Walker, will introduce a film screening and visit two classes. During the day, White will visit Introduction to Women’s Studies (taught by Bragg and Lopez) as well as American Literature Since 1920 (taught by Gentry). Also on Monday, 9 March, White will appear at Peabody Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. to introduce a film (Visions of the Spirit: A Portrait of Alice Walker, by Elena Featherston) with remarks entitled “‘I Know What Money Is For’: Alice Walker and the Aftermath of The Color Purple."

 

On Tuesday, 10 March, at 7:30 p.m., poet Andrea Hollander Budy (Lyon College) will read her poetry and give a talk on Flannery O’Connor. The reading/talk, entitled “Keeping Our Mouths Shut: A Poet Under the Influence,” will be held in Peabody Auditorium.

 

On Tuesday, 17 March, fiction writer Pete Dexter (National Book Award winner for the novel Paris Trout) and scholar Douglas Robillard, Jr. (Arkansas-Pine Bluff) will introduce a screening of the film Paris Trout at 2:30 p.m. in A&S Auditorium. Then, at 7 p.m., again in A&S Auditorium, Dexter (a Milledgeville native who is writing a book about growing up here) and Robillard will discuss connections between Dexter’s works and the fiction of Flannery O’Connor in a joint lecture entitled “Rashomon in Milledgeville: Flannery O’Connor and Pete Dexter on the Stembridge Murders.” Dexter and Robillard will also visit Gentry’s American Literature Since 1920 class.

 

About the Southern Literary Trail and Trailfest 09:
Author foundations and house museums in towns across Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi are coordinating efforts to promote tourism across the region. Trailfest 09 is a series of events in March 2009 designed to draw attention to the establishment of the ongoing tourism effort called the Southern Literary Trail. The Flannery O’Connor Review and the Flannery O’Connor - Andalusia Foundation, Inc., are sponsors for events on the GCSU campus, and we have received grant support from the Georgia Humanities Council, the Knight Foundation, the Arts Unlimited committee at GCSU, and the GCSU Office of Institutional Equity and Diversity. 

 

Info/questions: Bruce Gentry, 478-445-6928 / bruce.gentry@gcsu.edu 

See the Southern Literary Trail website at www.southernliterarytrail.org