Department Faculty

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In memoriam Ray Schoen joined the English Department at UW-L in 1978, teaching courses in Milton, Renaissance and Seventeenth Century literature, and Shakespeare. From 1999 until his retirement in 2005, Ray served with his typical humor and aplomb as Chair of the English department. Ray passed away on Thursday, August 2, 2007.
But now my task is smoothly done, Vale! amicus, auctor, magister. “Nos patriam fugimus” -- Vergil, Eclogue IV
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Photos of professors' involvement in the English Club.
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Diana Johnson (left) Academic Dept. Associate email: johnson.dia2@uwlax.edu office: 433B Wimberly Hall phone: 785-8295 Sue Hengel (right) University Service Associate in English email: hengel.susa@uwlax.edu office: 433 Wimberly Hall phone: 785-8295 |
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Dr. William Barillas |
Academic Background: Ph.D. in English-
American Studies, Michigan State University Research Specialties: Literature of the Americas, Cultural Geography, Latino/a Literature, Regional Literatures of the United States, Midwest Literature, Romanticism and Literature of Nature, Popular Culture, Poetry Classes Taught: Advanced Study of
Major Authors Other interests: Piano and guitar, searching for classic soul on vinyl, hiking, bicycling, gardening, travel |
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Dr. Bradley
Butterfield
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Academic Background: B.A. in Philosophy
and Literature, Johnston Center at the University of
Redlands Publications: "Reply
to Leonard Wilcox," Postmodern Culture, Vol. 14,
Issue 1 (November, 2003) Research Specialties: Critical Theory
after Nietzsche Courses Taught: Western Literature
II: Enlightenment to Present Current Research:
I have two articles forthcoming, one called "Adorno,
Nietzsche, and Metaphysics" for a new collection on
the Frankfurt School, the other called "Discussing
Disgrace" for a new collection on J.M.
Coetzee's novel Disgrace. I am also
currently seeking publication for my
autobiographical novel Idiot Boys and have
begun work on its sequel, The Johnston Chronicles.
Other interests: Politics, film, hip hop, jazz, Grateful Dead, comic books |
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Elizabeth Bell Canon
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Academic Background:
Ph.D.,
Linguistics, The University of Georgia Recent Publications: “Is Social Circle Puttin’ On /®/’s? The Life and Hard Times of One Consonant in a North Georgia Town.” PLUM (2007) “Robert Kilwardby.” Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics, 2nd Ed. Elsevier Publishers, Oxford, England, November 2005. “Robert Holcot.” Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics, 2nd Ed. Elsevier Publishers, Oxford, England, November 2005. “Boethius of Dacia.” Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics, 2nd Ed. Elsevier Publishers, Oxford, England, November 2005. Conference Papers: “Indo-European Elements in Anglo-Saxon Literature.” South Atlantic Modern Language Association, Louisville, KY, November 2008. “The Case of William Tyndale and the 1533 English Enchiridion Militis Christiani.” Suspected Shakespeares Conference on Attribution, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, March 2008. “Ælfric and the History of God in English.” Medieval-Renaissance Conference, University of Virginia at Wise, September 2007. “William Tyndale and the Politics of Biblical Translation in the Early English Reformation.” ‘evolutions’ conference, University of Edinburgh, Scotland, September 2006. “Vernacular Bibles and the History of English.” 2nd Madison Graduate Student Conference in Language and Literature, University of Wisconsin, Madison, April 2006. “Is Social Circle Puttin’ on /®/’s?: The Life and Hard Times of One Consonant in a North Georgia Town.” 15th Annual Postgraduate Conference in Linguistics at the University of Manchester, United Kingdom, March 2006. Research Interests: Primary: The history of the English language spanning from Proto-Indo-European to the present day, with particular attention to the contributions of pre-modern biblical translators. Secondary: (1) The study of Southern American English with special emphasis on dialect ideology and prejudice. (2) The representation of Southern Americans in films and books and how their language is used to characterize them. Interests: Gator football; Bulldog football (except when they are playing the Gators); Elvis Tribute Artists; Cooking and eating Southern food. |
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Prof. Matt Cashion
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Academic Background: B.A. in English from
University of North Carolina - Charlotte Publications: A novel, How the
Sun Shines on Noise (Livingston Press). Research Specialties: Creative Writing Pedagogy, Contemporary Fiction and Poetry, Literature of the American South, Working Class Literature. Courses Taught: Creative Writing Other interests: Running, biking, kayaking, jazz-drumming, blues-harmonica blowing, photography |
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Dr. Virgina Crank
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Academic Background: Ph.D. in English
with a Concentration in Composition and Rhetoric and
Minors in Victorian Literature and Modern American
Fiction, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale,
Illinois (August 1995) Publications: “’Doing Disney’ Fosters Media Literacy in Freshmen.” Academic Exchange Quarterly 9.3 (Fall 2005). “Asynchronous Electronic Peer Response in a Hybrid Basic Writing Classroom.” Teaching Developmental Writing: Background Readings, 2nd Ed. Ed. Susan Naomi Bernstein. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2004. “Asynchronous Electronic Peer Response in a Hybrid Basic Writing Classroom.” Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 30.2 (December 2002): 145-155. Multiple Entries. The Bedford Bibliography for Teachers of Basic Writing. Eds. Linda Adler-Kassner and Greg Glau. Boston: Bedford St. Martin’s, 2002. “Chasing Objectivity: How Grading Rubrics Can Provide Consistency and Context.” Journal of Teaching Writing 17.1-2 (Winter 1999): 56-73. “The Best of Both Worlds: Asynchronous Learning as a Bridge to Online Education.” Instructional Telecommunications Council Newsletter, Sept. 2000. (Co-authored with Erin Fisher and Ann Carter) Research Specialties: Composition theory and pedagogy; developmental writing pedagogy; preparation of secondary English teachers. Courses Taught:
Introduction to College Writing (Eng 050)
Other interests: Contemporary fiction, food writing, cooking, vegetable gardening, yoga, travel |
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Dr. Susan
Crutchfield
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Academic Background: Ph.D. in English
Language and Literature, University of Michigan - Ann
Arbor (1997) Publications: Touching Scenes and
Finishing Touches: Blindness in the Slasher Film" (in
Christopher Sharrett's Mythologies of Violence in
Postmodern Media, Wayne State University Press, 1999) Research Specialties: Film Studies, Disability Studies, Popular Culture, Western Drama, Feminist Theory Classes Taught: College Writing I Other interests: Flower-gardening, movie-watching, knitting, running, child-rearing |
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"There are none happy in the world but beings who enjoy freely a vast horizon." Krishna
Dr. Mary Davidson
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Academic Background: Ph.D. in English
specializing in American Studies, University of Colorado Research Specialties: Women Writers from the British Romantic Period, Early Female Travel and Nature Writers, Contemporary Fiction, Contemporary American Poetry, Creative Nonfiction Works, Autobiographical Writings by 19th Century Women of Color, Philosophy of Teaching, Pedagogical Methods Classes Taught: 19th and 20th
Century British Literature Biographical tidbits: four children, grandchildren |
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Dr. Natalie K. Eschenbaum
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Academic
Background:
Ph.D. in English, Emory University (2006) Recent Publications: Review of Loving in Verse, by Stephen Guy-Bray. University of Toronto Quarterly (Winter 2007/2008) “Ghostly Metaphysicality: A Manuscript Variant of Robert Herrick’s ‘The Apparition,’” Notes & Queries (June 2005) Recent Conference Presentations: “‘Outrageous Grossness’: A Taste of Robert Herrick,” Group for Early Modern Cultural Studies Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (November 2008) “Donne, Herrick, and the Early Modern Fetish,” Group for Early Modern Cultural Studies Annual Meeting, Chicago, Illinois (February 2007) “Selections and Collections: Piecing Together Herrick's Hesperides,” Modern Language Association Annual Convention, San Diego, California (December 2003) “Appropriating Authority and Navigating Narrative in Thomas Nashe’s Traveling Text,” Group for Early Modern Cultural Studies Annual Meeting, Newport Beach, California (October 2003) “Surfacing Robert Herrick’s Hesperides,” Renaissance Society of America National Meeting, Toronto, Canada (March 2003)
“Liquid Subjectivities: Love of Self and Other in Baz Luhrmann’s Water-logged Romeo and Juliet,” Southwest Popular Culture Association Meeting, Albuquerque, New Mexico (March 2001) Research Specialties:
16th and 17th Century English
Literature Courses Taught:
ENG 110: College Writing I Other Interests: Yoga, world travel, hiking, camping, movie-watching, baking, Native American literature, English football (soccer) |
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Dr. Ryan Friesen
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Academic Background: Ph.D. in English,
University of Leeds Publications: Working on an article involving the supernatural in Early Modern English Drama. Research Specialty: Representations of the supernatural in the culture of Early Modern England. Classes Taught: Shakespeare I |
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"...looking back, all th' Eastern side beheld Of Paradise, so late thir happie seat," PL.XII.641-2. Dr. Richard Gappa
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Academic Background: Ph.D. in English,
St. Louis University Research Specialties: International Folklore, English Recusant Writers, Historical Children's Writers Classes Taught: Milton Other interests: Golf, backpacking, baseball, all things physical |
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Dr. Carla Graham
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Academic Background: Ph.D. in Victorian
Poetry, University of Southern Illinois - Carbondale Courses Taught: ENG 303: College
Writing II Other interests: UWL's environmental studies program, writing, reading, playing piano |
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Dr. James Gray
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Mr. Bruce Handtke
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Dr. David Hart
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Academic Background: Ph.D. in English,
Cultural Studies, University of Florida Publications: “Louise Bennett,” “Linton Kwesi Johnson,” “Mervyn Morris,” “Mutabaruka,” “Mikey Smith,” and “West Indies Federation” in Africa and the Americas (2008) “On Behalf of Harry/Harriet: Teaching Michelle Cliff’s No Telephone to Heaven,” Radical Teacher 80 (2008) “Caribbean Chronotopes: From Exile to Agency,” Anthurium: A Caribbean Studies Journal 2.2 (2004) "Erosion, Noise and Hurricanes: A Review of Kamau Brathwaite's A History of the Voice: The Development of Anglophone Caribbean Poetry" Revista Mexicana del Caribe 6.12 (2001) Research Specialties: Postcolonial Studies, Anglophone Caribbean Literature and Culture, Globalization Studies, Folklore, Exilic Narratives Courses Taught: ENG 110: College
Writing Other interests: Creative Writing, American and British Literature, guitar, biking, and walking the dog |
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Mr. Paul Heckman
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Academic Background: M.E.P.D. Secondary
Education, UWL, 1992 Publications: Letters Home:
Experience as Short Story in Europe Courses Taught: ENG050 Other interests and biographical tidbits: writing short stories and polemics, humanities, environment, classic fiction, current nonfiction, married, two children, one grandchild |
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Dr. Sharon Jessee
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Academic Background: 1986 PhD in English,
University of Tulsa, Tulsa, Oklahoma Research Specialties: American Literature after 1945, especially postmodern, African American, and Chicano/a literature. Recent research focuses on Toni Morrison. Courses Taught: Literature and Human
Experience Course: Mythologies of Modern Memory |
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Heather Jett |
Academic
Background:
B.A., English,
Memphis State University Courses Taught:
College Writing |
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"Show business is my life." Dr. Gary Konas
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Academic Background: Ph. D. in English,
University of California - Davis Publications: Neil Simon: A Casebook Research Specialties: American Literature, Drama, Musical Theatre, Computer Technology, Film History Courses Taught: American Literature:
1865 to Present Other interests: Professional theatre organist, wine collector, longtime Mac guy, English department webmaster |
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Dr. Bryan Kopp
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Academic Background: Ph.D. in English
specializing in Rhetoric and Composition and Cultural
Studies, Research Specialties: Lesson Research, Plagiarism, Rhetorical Situations, Postmodernism, Globalism Courses Taught: ENG 110: College
Writing |
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Dr. Haixia Lan
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Academic Background: Ph.D. in English specializing in Rhetoric and Composition and Literary Theory, Purdue University (1993) Research Specialties: Rhetorical Invention, Comparative and Contrastive Rhetoric Courses Taught: ENG 110: College
Writing Director of the Writing Center |
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Dr. Lalita Pandit
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Dr. Thomas Pribek
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Academic Background: Ph.D. in American
Literature and History, University of Wisconsin -
Madison (1987) Research Specialties: Pre-1900 American Literature, Wisconsin/Midwest Literature, Journalism and Mass Communication Courses Taught: ENG 110: College
Writing I |
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Ms. Sharon Scholze
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Research Specialties: Treaty Rights Dispute in Northern Wyoming, Science Fiction, Literature and Drama, Shakespeare Courses Taught: ENG 110: College
Writing I Other interests: Shakespeare in the summer at American Players Theatre in Spring Green, Science Fiction--especially Star Trek, reading, poetry, music, working with Church Libraries, spending time on the family farm, long walks in the country, spending time with friends, gardening and baking. |
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Dr. Karen Stuart
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Academic Background: Ph.D. in Literature, University of California, San Diego M.A. in German Literature, University of California, San Diego B.A. in Literature and Writing, University of California, San Diego Research Specialties: World and Diasporic Literatures, Essayism and Utopian Forms of Writing, Modernism, German Literature and the work of Robert Musil, Post-colonial Theory, Fairytales and Storytelling Courses Taught:
College Writing I
(ENG110) Other interests: Creative writing, cooking, knitting, hiking, biking, skiing, and walking the cat and dog |
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Like him was I,
these sloping shoulders, this gracelessness. My
childhood bends beside me. Dr. Richard Sullivan
In the bright light, lightened and cooled in limb, he eyed carefully his black trousers: the ends, the knees, the houghs of the knees. What time is the funeral? --Ulysses 4.541-43 |
Academic Background: Ph.D. in Modern
Letters, University of Tulsa Research
Specialties: Courses Taught: Other interests: Rides a motorcycle chasing after James Dicky, down Cherry Log Road, and John Gardner, on Nickle Mountain. Quote: "I have recently been researching those things which English department chair-people spend their time ferreting out. In my life prior to this one I have been a professor of modern British literature, with a specialization in James Joyce, Modernist literature, and Irish literature, so I suppose I can say that Joyce and Beckett provided the wrong kinds of training for being an administrator -- the ghosts of their language still occupy too much space in my brain, so that even now I find myself, like Beckett's Molloy, unsure of how I came to be in this room where I seem to be blackening pages with signs I can't understand, knowing only that they pay me for it and that occasionally someone comes to take the pages away."
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Dr. Darci Thoune
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Academic
Background: Ph.D. in Rhetoric and Composition,
University of Louisville (2006) Publications: With
Connie Kendall and Deborah Kirkman, “An
Assessment Narrative—The
University of Kentucky.” The NCTE-WPA White
Paper on Writing Assessment in
Colleges and Universities.
http://www.wpacouncil.org/UK “Coming to Terms: Discovering our Rhetorical Values
through Writing Program Assessment,” Conference on
College Composition and Communication, San Francisco, CA
(March 2009). Research Interests: Instructor identity, personal writing, literacy
practices, composition history, composition pedagogy,
performance theory, assessment, writing program
administration,
feminist theory, creative non-fiction,
mother-daughter fiction, memoir, food writing, and life
writing. Courses Taught: English 110
Other interests: All things gastronomical, cultivating domesticity, travel, junk shops, and exploring my new midwestern environs. |
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Dr. Daniel Voiku
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Academic Background: Ph.D., University of
California, Riverside Publications: A Primer on the Language Theory of St. Augustine: The Literal Level Research Specialties: Medieval Literature with a Focus in Alliterative Poetry, Christian Culture, Liberal Arts Theory, Patristics with an Emphasis on the Writings of Augustine of Hippo. Courses Taught: Chaucer, Old and
Middle English Literature Other interests: fishing and tending his half-acre, runs a low-budget smuggling operation that traffics illegal contraband (mostly uncut gemstones). |
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Dr. Joseph
Young
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Academic Background: Ph.D. in English,
University of Nebraska (1984) Research
Specialties: Other interests: His 1986 Lincoln City Library Foundation Oscar Micheaux Lecture was funded by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities and sponsored in part by The Nebraska Literary Heritage Association. |





























