Friday, April 13, 2012

2012 EGSA Graduate Student Conference


The Texas A&M English Department and English Graduate Student Association would like to invite you to a series of events and panels at our 2012 Graduate Student Conference. Please contact Liz Grumbach at egrumbac@tamu.edu if you have any questions.


“Retrofitting English Studies: When Diversity Becomes an Afterthought”
April 14-15 2012
EGSA Graduate Conference Schedule

SATURDAY

10:00-10:40 Poetics, Community, and Embodiment (Blocker 202)
Sarah Hart- "Elegiac Rhetorics in Communities of Mourning"
Katy Harclerode (LeTourneau University)- “Freeing the Perhaps: Decoupling Language
and Embodiment in Student Poetics”

10:50-11:45 Challenging Authority: Literature, Genre, and Rhetorical Warfare (Blocker 202)
Shawna McDermott- “Girls on Fire: Gender, Authority and the Female Child-Warrior”
Melissa Elston- "Can the Old West be Digitally Retrofitted? The Troublesome Topoi of
Red Dead Redemption"
Ayde Enriquez-Loya “Rhetorical Warfare of Silence and Recovery: Enacting Rhetorics
of Survivance in 18th Century Literature”

11:45-12:50 Lunch served in (Blocker 203)

1:00-2:10 Digital Humanities Roundtable (Blocker 202)
Liz Grumbach
Tess Habbestad
Shawn Moore
Dr. Amy Earhart

2:20-3:15 Crossing Borders and Disciplinary Divides, or What Food Can Teach Us About
Making Meaning (Blocker 202)
Marcos del Hierro: "Hungry Hungry Hip Hop: Embodied Rhetorical Practices in Game
Theory and Gangsta Hippos"
Casie Cobos: "Kneading Maza: The Food Our Bodies Crave, the Chican@ Rhetorics We
Make"
Victor del Hierro: "Reproducing the Product: Ordinary Food with Extraordinary Love"

3:30-5:00 KEYNOTE (Blocker 457)
Jay Domage "Steep Steps, Retrofit and Universal Design: Spaces, Economies, and
Pedagogies of Disability in Higher Education."

SUNDAY


10-11am Breakfast and Creating Accessible Pedagogies Workshop with Jay Dolmage
(Blocker 203)

11:10-12:20 Stories from Beyond the Creative Divide (Blocker 202)
Ryan Neighbors- “Easy Rider”
Laura Morris- “The Dance”
Amber Foster- Traveler Lost
Catalina Bartlett- In the Shadow of the Red Rock

12:20-1:20 Lunch (on your own)

1:30-2:40 Theory and Practice: Challenging the Rhetorics of Exclusion (Blocker 202)
Garrett Nichols- “The Quiet Country Closet: Reconstructing a Discourse for Closeted
Rural Experiences”
Alma Villanueva- "Embodied Rhetorics: Exploring A Non-Objective, Non-Normative
Approach"
Stephanie Wheeler- "Rejecting Standardization: Toward a Disability Model of English
Studies"
Bryan Tarpley- “Something Rather Than Nothing: Toward the Reparative Dimension of
Post-Colonial Studies”

2:50-4:00 Time, Dance, and Invasive Species: Challenging the Scope of Rhetorical Inquiry
(University of Michigan, presenting via Skype). (Blocker 202)
Donnie Johnson Sackey: "Building a Cultural Rhetorical History of Invasive Species"
Gabriela Raquel Ríos: "Dancing With Your Breath, or How Rarámuri Dance Traditions
Challenge Ableism in Embodied Rhetorics"
Jennifer Sano-Franchini: "Time, Technology, and The Mediated Body: Rhetorics of East
Asian Blepharoplasty in Online Video


Thursday, April 5, 2012

Patrick Henry is speaking at Texas A&M

On Tuesday April 10th at 3 PM, Richard Schumann will be enacting Patrick Henry's views on Church and State.

Here is the press release:



April 10
3:00 pm
Whitley Suite,  Evans Library 

Speaker:  Richard Schumann, Historical Interpreter, Actor, Lecturer; Colonial Williamsburg Foundation

Title:  "Give Me Liberty: 'Enthusiastic Oratory and Political Dissent in British America  1740-1776"

Co-sponsored by the departments of English, Communication, and History, the Academy of Visual and Performing Arts, with additional support from the Discourse Studies Working Group

Resume and Press Release:

Richard Schumann graduated from Rutgers University, double-majoring in Political Science and English, with a secondary specialization in Pre-Law. He undertook further study in Theatre in New York City at the Herbert Berghoff Studio, where he studied with Uta Hagen, Aaron Frankel, Hal Holden, and Sandy Dennis.  Along with the first generation of historical interpreters trained at Yorktown and Williamsburg, he began his apprenticeship in Living History in Yorktown, Virginia in 1981. 

Schumann has devoted the last 25 years to the thorough performance-based understanding of 18th-century Virginia.  He joined the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation in 1993, first as a Theatrical Interpreter, and then "became" Patrick Henry, the Voice of the Revolution, in 1995.  Continually striving to master the oratorical genius of the "forest born Demosthenes" before hundreds of thousands of visitors each year, Schumann combines two of his great loves:  acting, and history.  Mr. Schumann firmly believes that if it weren’t for Patrick Henry, we'd all be speaking English today.

Program Synopsis:

Richard Schumann’s depiction of Patrick Henry has impressed audiences again and again as a rare and stunning reconstruction of what ex tempore political oratory was like in a period that taught oratory through practice as much as through precept.  Schumann’s performance highlights how much Henry had learned from the religious orators of his time, particularly Samuel Davies, a Presbyterian “New Light” in Virginia during the 1750s. Henry later melded the “enthusiastic” style he had learned from Davies with his own experiences in the courthouse and tavern culture of Hanover, Virginia, and the House of Burgesses. Schumann’s interpretation and performance of the Henry character, and the “Give Me Liberty”: speech of March 23, 1775, will be followed by ample time for questions and answers. Mr. Schumann will then provide us with insights into how he has gone about reconstructing Henry and preparing his interpretation.  The presentation will be of special interest to our students and scholars in Rhetoric, American Literature and History, Communication, Religious Studies, and Performance Arts. 

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

An Extremely Tardy Post: Audience and the Rhet/Comp Classroom



As an instructor of Composition and Rhetoric at TAMU, I’ve recently been questioning the freshman comp definition of “audience.” In the packets, lesson plans, and writing prompts given to first semester/year instructors in the English department, our students are informed to write to an “academic audience,” and I’m not convinced that audience still exists (or is still relevant to the composition classroom). I’m especially not convinced that students need to write to the “academy” when increasingly surrounded by a globalized, digital, and information-hungry society (and job market). Having the fall back of “academic audience” is, for an instructor, the easy way out. As graduate students and professors, we write our own prose to academic, scholarly audiences – usually increasingly specialized audiences. While “academic audience” is easy to define, easy to communicate, and an easy way to make students write responsibly and ethically (the “academy” is watching you), following this restrictive definition limits the amount of knowledge instructors communicate in the classroom.

Isn’t media literacy, and the media/digital audience, just as (more) important in our culture as (than) the “academy?”

I would argue: yes. But I know many disagree. However: we are slowly increasing online instruction and distance learning at this university; we offer hybrid classes; we promote the use of blogs, wikis, and multi-media presentations. Have we changed our conception of audience when we assign these tasks – or are we still asking our students to write to the “academy” even while creating a blog, using a digital tool to present an idea, or collaborating with other students through browser-based software? In addition, with the increasing attention being paid to how “audiences” are treated in the digital world (as cogs in the online advertising campaign strategy; as streams of data generated by the cookies resting in your browser), does the digital world redefine or reconstruct a definition of “audience” or “reader” that our students should be aware of?

When I talked through this current research/pedagogical idea in a graduate rhetoric course last week, I was given a few research recommendations. My classmates were incredibly accommodating, and I found Walter Ong’s “The Writer’s Audience Is Always a Fiction” (read it online here) immediately helpful to thinking about my pedagogical concerns. Any other recommendations, friends?

Also: as a sidebar, I’ll be attending a Digital Humanities “unconference” called THATcamp this coming weekend. I’m going to introduce these questions into the DH-Pedagogy sessions, and I’ll report back with any updates!

Monday, March 5, 2012

Visual Communication in Images and Text


For my own personal interest / potential future research, I recently read an article by Diana George that appeared in CCC in 2002, “From Analysis to Design: Visual Communication in the Teaching of Writing.” George provides a very good, in-depth overview of the history of visual communication in composition classrooms. I’ve been interested in visual rhetoric, visual literacy, visual argumentation (or whatever other “visual + word-based modifier” you can think to combine) for several years now, but only recently have I become aware of the narrow scope of the available research in this field. The narrow scope is highlighted by the combination of the word “visual” with a modifier that comes directly from our word-based communication culture (or perhaps, a communication culture that we perceive to be primarily word-based).

In order to move away from this word-based interpretation of visual communication, though, it is important to know the variety of ways visual communications have been interpreted historically. It is necessary to understand the ways word-based modifiers and, more specifically, the print-based textual culture has been imposed on / applied to standard forms of visual communication over the years. George’s article is a good place to begin building this understanding as it does include a very well presented broad history of the visual in, specifically, college composition classrooms.  

A more narrowed focus of my rhetorical research is centered on the difference between providing a visual and using descriptive language to encourage the conjuring of an image in one’s mind; the first presents the audience with a specific image while the second allows audience members to individually imagine an image, and both require different possibilities for analytical interpretations. With this specific, but not well-understood as of now, research interest in mind while reading George’s article, a very particular moment in the history of visual communication in composition classrooms stood out for me.

At one point in her article, George is presenting the history of a college textbook, Writing with a Purpose, and the introduction of a visual assignment in later editions. In one edition, this visual assignment focused on prints by artist William Hogarth. George says of this assignment, “the Beer Street and Gin Lane prints were meant to teach students the art of observation and develop the skill of creating vivid word images” (20). Of the textbook and its inclusion of pictures, George says, “Though these early texts commonly used pictures … as prompts for students compositions, the aim of each exercise was to bring students to a more vivid or accurate use of written language. Often, the authors made an elaborate case for the advantage or superiority of words over pictures” (21).

I find the inclusion of images and pictures in college composition textbooks for the purpose of teaching better vivid language an interesting one. While this type of assignment ignores and undermine the worth and meaning of the art and the artist, I must admit to being interested in the language and descriptions students might use to textually represent the art. Is it possible for a description to create in a reader’s mind an exact, or close to exact, replica of the print? Is this even the purpose of practicing this sort of vivid language assignment? And why might a writer want to use description instead of providing the visual of the print? What is lost in the description? In choosing descriptive, vivid words, is the author of the description intentionally or unintentionally framing interpretation of meaning?

George’s article is certainly leading me further down the visual rabbit-hole, but as I continue researching, I will keep in mind “the skill of creating vivid word images”.

Works Cited
George, Diana. “From Analysis to Design: Visual Communication in the Teaching of Writing”. College Composition and Communication 54.1 (2002): 11 – 39. Print.

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Symbolic Violence Conference Schedule


 CONFERENCE CALENDAR
 (All plenary sessions will be held at the Cotton Exchange; all contributed paper panels will be held either at the Cotton Exchange or at the La Salle Hotel)
THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 2012
4:00-7:00 pm
REGISTRATION, COTTON EXCHANGE
7:00-8:30 pm
Keynote Address/Annual Kurt Ritter lecture:
David Zarefsky, Northwestern University, “When, If Ever, Is Symbolic Violence Justified?”
Karlyn Kohrs Campbell, University of Minnesota, respondent
Martin J. Medhurst, Baylor University, Chair
WELCOME RECEPTION, COTTON EXCHANGE
FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 2012
8:30-9:00
MORNING COFFEE, COTTON EXCHANGE

9:00-10:15
Randall Bytwerk, Calvin College, “Symbolic Violence in Nazi Anti-Semitic Propaganda”
Trish Roberts-Miller, University of Texas, Austin, respondent
Jennifer Jones Barbour, Texas A&M University, Chair


10:30-11:45
Christian Lundberg, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, “Evangelical Publics”
Respondent:  Ryan Stark, Corban College
Chair:  Dustin Wood, Texas A&M University


11:45-1:15
LUNCH, ON YOUR OWN (see list of restaurants within walking distance in your conference folder)


1:15-2:30
Robert L. Ivie, Indiana University, “Political Antagonism and Rhetorical Complementarity”
Respondent: John Murphy, University of Illinois
Chair:   Kurt Ritter


2:30-3:00
COFFEE BREAK, COTTON EXCHANGE
3:00-4:30
CONTRIBUTED PAPER PANELS
Panel 1:
(COTTON EXCHANGE)
Chair:  Jennifer Mease, Texas A&M University
Theorizing Violence and Culture
Jeff Kurtz, Denison University, “Civility American Style”
Pat Gehrke, University of South Carolina, “Propaedeutic to a Rhetoric of Violence”
Isaac Clark Holyoak, Texas A&M University, “The Mormon Reformation and Collective Violence, Rene Girard and the Scapegoat
Mark Ward, Sr., University of Houston-Victoria, “The Violent Organization:  Toward a Theory that Accounts for Violence as an Organizational Value
Panel 2:
(LA SALLE HOTEL)
Chair:  Leandra Hernandez, Texas A&M University
Mediated Violence
Kristen Hoerl, Butler University, “Remembering the Rage and Regret of the Weather Underground in Televised Crime Drama”
Kathryn Olson, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, “The Epideictic Function of Symbolic Violence in Disney’s ‘Beauty and the Beast’”
Glen Williams, Southeast Missouri State, “Primed for Mayhem and Glory”
Cheryl Lozano-Whitten, Texas A&M University, “Arguing Moral Panics and Symbolic Violence: Healthcare Reform Protests and the Media”

4:45-6:00
Dana Cloud, University of Texas, Austin, “The Violence of Civility”
Respondent:  J. Michael Hogan, Penn State University
Chair:  James Arnt Aune, Texas A&M University

6:00-7:00
COCKTAIL HOUR, Enjoy Art Walk in Downtown Bryan

7:00-9:00
BBQ DINNER, Catered by J. Cody’s
SATURDAY, MARCH 3, 2012
8:30-9:00
MORNING COFFEE, COTTON EXCHANGE

9:00-10:15
CONTRIBUTED PAPER PANELS
Panel 1 (Cotton Exchange):
Chair:  Cheryl Lozano-Whitten, Texas A&M University
Violence and Public Address
Tiara Foster, Syracuse University, “Sights on Palin:  the Revealing of an American Enemy by Means of Enemyship and Metaphorical Analysis”
Bryan McCann, Wayne State University,  “’Chrysler Pulled the Trigger’:  Black Rage, Objective Violence, and the Saga of James Johnson, Jr.”
Adam J. Gaffey, “The ‘Flaming Sword’:  Violence, Speech and Henry A. Wallace’s 1948 Southern Tour”
Jay Childers, University of Kansas, “Inciting Violence through Rhetoric in the Weak-Minded Foreigners:  The Narrative Explanation of Leon Czolgosz’s Assassination of President William McKinley”
Panel 2 (LaSalle Hotel)
Chair:  Catherine L. Langford, Texas Tech University
The Law and Symbolic Violence
Suzanne Condray, Denison University, “Symbolic Violence and Symbolic Speech:  Virginia v. Black
Brad Serber, Texas A&M University, “How Speech Laws Might Hurt Rather Than Help:  A Response to Mari Matsuda”
Jeremiah Hickey, St. John’s University, “Death by Adjective: The Supreme Court’s Attack on Legislative Regulations of Violence, or, How Chief Justice John G. Roberts and Justice Antonin Scalia Stopped Worrying about Symbolic Violence by Employing Aesthetic Claims to Limit Legislative Restrictions on Violence”
David Richardson, Texas A&M University, “Victimage Discourses and Snyder v. Phelps


10:30-11:45
Theresa Beiner, University of Arkansas, Little Rock College of the Law, "Incivility in the Supreme Court Nomination Process Resulting from Support for Minority Group Members"
Respondent:  Eileen Scallen, William Mitchell College of the Law
Chair:  David Richardson, Texas A&M University


11:45-1:15
LUNCH, ON YOUR OWN (see list of restaurants within walking distance in your conference folder)


1:15-2:30
Adria Battaglia,  San Angelo State University,” Free Speech, Affect, and the Performative cases of the Homicidal Lesbian Terrorist and “Rape Lists

Respondent:  Jeremiah Hickey, St. John’s University

Chair:   Kristan Poirot, Texas A&M University


2:30-3:00
COFFEE BREAK, COTTON EXCHANGE
3:00-4:30
CONTRIBUTED PAPER PANELS
Panel 3:
(COTTON EXCHANGE)
Chair:  Luke Lockhart, Texas A&M University
Symbolic Nonviolence?
Scott Stroud, University of Texas, Austin, “The Severity of Symbolic Non-Violence:  A Jain View on Argument and Intellectual Ahimsa”
Meredith Neville, University of Kansas, “Rejecting Violence in Democracy:  An Analysis of Norman Morrison’s Self-Immolation”
Catherine L. Langford, “The Displacement of Violence and the Violence of Displacement:  Discourse Not to Stop a Beating Heart”


Panel 4:

(LA SALLE HOTEL)
Chair:  Adam J. Gaffey, Texas A&M University
Case Studies
Rosa Eberly, Penn State University, “’MamaDio! Austin, Austin, Austin:  Dallas and Dallastown;  Or, Getting from Point A to Point B”
Kate Lockwood Harris, University of Colorado, Boulder, “Leaks and Tweets:  Rape Allegations, Intersections of Violence, and Julian Assange”
Jeremy Rogerson, Texas A&M University, “Torture:  America’s Newest Form of Symbolic Violence”
Heather A. Hayes, University of Minnesota, “Living to Die:  The Relationship between Discourse, Violence, and Unruly Arab Bodies”

4:45-6:30
Kevin de Luca, University of Utah, “ Beyond the Violence of Civil Disobedience: Practicing Activism with Rhetorical Force in a World of Infinite Violence”
 Respondent:  Rosa Eberly, Penn State University
Chair:  Sara Rowe, Texas A&M University

6:30-7:30
RECEPTION, COTTON EXCHANGE
SUNDAY, MARCH 4, 2012
8:30-9:00
MORNING COFFEE, COTTON EXCHANGE
9:00-10:30
Erin Rand, Syracuse University, “’Gay Boys Kill Themselves’:  Engendering Violence in the Figure of the Suicidal Queer Teen”
Respondent:  Dan Brouwer, Arizona State University
Chair:  Isaac Clark Holyoak, Texas A&M University


10:45-12:00
Chair:  Jennifer Mercieca, Texas A&M University
Joshua Gunn, University of Texas, Austin, “MARANATHA”
Respondent:   Claire Sisco King, Vanderbilt University



12:00-12:15
Concluding Remarks