The English Department in Print

If you're looking for versatility and creativity all in one place, the English department is a good starting point. A list of faculty members' most recent publications indicates the diversity of their interests and talents.

Jonathan Alexander, ed.

Bisexuality and Transgenderism: InterSEXions of the Others.

Harrington Park Press.

Stanley Corkin,

Cowboys as Cold Warriors: The Western and U.S. History.

Temple University Press. (Corkin was also recently quoted in the

Cleveland Plain Dealer

for his opinion regarding a Sixth Circuit Sexual Harassment case. The defense argued that terms like “bitch” could be defined denotatively, and Corkin addressed the intent of such words and maintained that they would create a hostile work environment.)

James Cummins,

Then and Now.

Swallow Press/ Ohio University Press.

Thomas LeClair,

Passing On.

Greekworks Press.

Al Pionke,

Plots of Opportunity: Representing Conspiracy in Victorian England.

Ohio State University Press.

Gary Weissman,

Fantasies of Witness: Postwar Efforts to Experience the Holocaust.

Cornell University Press.

Don Bogen, whose third book of poetry,

Luster

, was published by Wesleyan University Press late in 2003, notes that the department has another impressive publications record-that of “the number of books of fiction and poetry our graduate students have been publishing lately-more than half a dozen in the last few years.”

Among the most notable of these is

The Bear Bryant Funeral Train

, a collection of short stories by Brad Vice, a recent PhD graduate who is assistant professor of English at Mississippi. Vice's work was awarded the Flannery O'Connor Prize and will be published next year by the University of Georgia Press.

Related Stories

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Inside the wild ways many creatures make milk

May 14, 2024

UC biologist Joshua Benoit tells Smithsonian that it's not just cows and other mammals that make milk for their newborns. Even some insects like beetle-mimic cockroaches and tsetse flies produce a protein rich "milk" for their babies.

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UC grad turns humanities degree into entrepreneurial success

May 14, 2024

Growing up on Ludlow Ave. in the Cincinnati neighborhood of Clifton, Harrison Fowler had planned to enroll in the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) at the University of Cincinnati. UC was close to home, and ROTC seemed like the right choice. But life had other plans. At the last minute, Fowler withdrew from ROTC and enrolled to earn his bachelor’s in Spanish, which meant he needed a study-abroad experience to complete his degree. He was apprehensive, but completed his requirement in Madrid, in a move that would change the direction of his life. Says Fowler of his foreign-language major, and his experience abroad: “Speaking another language opens up a whole other world and relationships for you.”

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