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Professor Mark West publishes book on Forgotten Disney

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Forgotten Disney: Essays on the Lesser-Known Productions, co-edited by Professor Mark West, an expert in Children’s Literature, has been published by McFarland Press. This is Dr. West’s 21st book. In covering some of Disney’s “unfinished projects, unmet expectations, and box-office misses,” chapter authors from around the world provide “a more complex portrayal of the history […]

Angelina Brooks’ Poetry Chapbook Just Published

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Creative Writing Instructor Angelina Brooks’ Poetry Chapbook Heavy Bloom has been published by Bottlecap Press. To learn more about the book and its author, please visit the Bottlecap Press website. Below is a poem from the book. Clemency The wind smooths dunes, sea oats, and sundew: a hand straightening a duvet. I wade, ankle-deep, and […]

Kathleen Merritt (English B.A., 1983) Receives Award

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The UNC Charlotte Alumni Association honored former English Major Kathleen Merritt (B.A. 1983) with the 2023 Distinguished Alumna Award. Merritt currently serves as senior vice president for radio, journalism and CSG services at the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, where she is responsible for leading efforts to distribute more than $300 million annually in community service […]

Professor Allison Hutchcraft’s poem wins award

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Allison Hutchcraft’s poem “Though from Here I Can’t Smell the Smoke” was awarded the third place prize in the highly competitive 2023 Treehouse Climate Action Poem Competition. These prizes “honor exceptional poems that help readers recognize the gravity of the vulnerable state of our environment” according to the Academy of American Poets who sponsors these […]

Professor Mark West Publishes 20th Book

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Professor West’s Theodore Roosevelt on Books and Reading brings together for the first time Roosevelt’s writings about his experiences as a reader, his scholarly essays about literature and literary history, and his exuberant reviews of some of the books that he especially liked. A sister volume to Mark I. West’s Theodore Roosevelt and His Library […]

Professor JuliAnna Ávila’s 2021 book wins publication award

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Congratulations to Dr. JuliAnna Ávila on receiving the 2023 Divergent Publication Award for Excellence in Literacy in a Digital Age Research for her book Critical Digital Literacies: Boundary-Crossing Practices, which was published by Routledge in 2021. This award was established in 2018 by the Initiative for 21st Century Literacies Research to recognize the most outstanding […]

Paula Martinac receives two grants

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Creative Writing instructor Paula Martinac was recently awarded the 2023 William F. Deeck-Malice Domestic Grant for an unpublished traditional mystery novel. This grant comes with a cash prize that will fund her attendance at the Malice Domestic conference in Bethesda, MD, April 28-30. Malice Domestic is an organization that supports the writing and reading of […]

CharlOz 2024!

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Please read this April 2023 article in Exchange on CharlOz. CharlOz’s three-day interdisciplinary festival (September 27-29, 2024) explores how L. Frank Baum’s fairy tale timelessly reflects American values with its vast array of characters. Even as the Oz theme inspires new interpretations, it remains relevant, celebrating all representations of non-traditional characters. As Oz magic continues […]

Professor Janaka Lewis publishes new book on Black girlhood and liberation

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Dr. Janaka Lewis’ most recent book, Light and Legacies: Stories of Black Girlhood and Liberation, is forthcoming from The University of South Carolina Press. The publisher describes the book as follows: Lewis “examines Black girlhood in American literature from the mid-twentieth century to the present. The representation of Black girlhood in contemporary literature has long […]

New book by Professor Clayton Tarr

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Dr. Clayton Tarr’s new book, Personation Plots, is the first full-length study of identity fraud in Victorian sensation fiction, such as in the works of Wilkie Collins, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, and Charles Dickens. The book “demonstrates a comprehensive grounding in nineteenth-century conceptions of identity, the self, and subjectivity, to say nothing of the requisite historical […]