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    English Matters: from UTC English

    This is the podcast of the English Department of the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. Each episode features a short discussion with a faculty member or student about the unique and interesting work they do to show us how English Matters.
    enDevori Kimbro17 Episodes

    Episodes (17)

    Dr. Karen Babine, Wild Hungers, and Editing Non-Fiction

    Dr. Karen Babine, Wild Hungers, and Editing Non-Fiction
    We’re joined this time by Dr. Karen Babine, Assistant Professor of Creative Writing. In a wide-ranging conversation, Dr. Babine shares intimate stories about the inspiration for her award-winning memoir, All the Wild Hungers (2019 Milkweed Editions). She tells us about her exciting course offerings in food writing and true crime at UTC, and also about her experiences managing UTC’s literary journal, The Sequoyah Review and her work with Assay: A Journal of Nonfiction Studies.

    You can find out more about Assay at https://www.assayjournal.com/

    Dr. Marcia Noe and Three Midwestern Playwrights

    Dr. Marcia Noe and Three Midwestern Playwrights
    We’re joined this time by Marcia Noe, Professor of English and Women’s and Gender Studies at UTC, as she tells us about her new project, Three Midwestern Playwrights: How Floyd Dell, George Cram Cook, and Susan Glaspell Transformed American Theater, now out from Indiana University Press (link below). Dr. Noe tells us about her decades-long research process for this text, as well as the significance of the artistic community that grew from the collaboration of these three unique and influential creators.

    Pick up Dr. Noe's book at Indiana University Press.


    For more information about English at UTC, visit https://www.utc.edu/arts-and-sciences/english

    Theme music, “Storybook,” generously provided by Scott Holmes (scottholmesmusic.com)

    Catherine Meeks and UTC's New Environmental Studies Minor

    Catherine Meeks and UTC's New Environmental Studies Minor
    This episode, we’re pleased to talk to Associate Lecturer Catherine Meeks Quinlan about her work developing and implementing our exciting new interdisciplinary Environmental Studies minor. For more information about the minor and how to enroll in these fascinating classes, please head to https://www.utc.edu/arts-and-sciences/departments/environmental-studies or reach out to Catherine at Catherine-Meeks at utc dot edu.

    Russell Helms, French Realism and the Importance of Sympathy

    Russell Helms, French Realism and the Importance of Sympathy
    We're joined this time by senior lecturer Russell Helms as he talks with us about his love of French Realism and its significance to his own creative process. Russell also talks to us about his new novella, Sympathy, and how he came to the unique idea at its core.

    You can find Helms' Sympathy at Solstice Publishing: https://solsticeempire.com/products.aspx?categoryid=521

    For more information about English at UTC, visit https://www.utc.edu/arts-and-sciences/english

    Theme music, “Storybook,” generously provided by Scott Holmes (scottholmesmusic.com)

    Japanese Literature in the Classroom - Andrew Najberg Returns!

    Japanese Literature in the Classroom - Andrew Najberg Returns!
    Andrew Najberg is back on English Matters to discuss his interest in Japanese literature, how it has inflected his teaching and his own writing, and his upcoming course offerings in the subject.

    Be sure to keep an eye out for Andrew's newest work, Gollitok, coming soon from Cactus Moon Press!

    Check out more about the English Department at UTC at https://www.utc.edu/arts-and-sciences/english

    UTC English Alum Jessica York and the Masters to Publishing Journey

    UTC English Alum Jessica York and the Masters to Publishing Journey
    Join us on English Matters this time as we talk to UTC English MA program alumna Jessica York about her journey from grad student to published author. Since this recording, Jessica has signed with literary agent Elizabeth Copps, founding agent of Copps Literary Services. Jessica was also recently invited to speak about her writing at DragonCon in Atlanta. For more information about Jessica and her work, please visit jessicaannyork.com!

    For more information about English at UTC, visit https://www.utc.edu/arts-and-sciences/english

    Theme music, “Storybook,” generously provided by Scott Holmes (scottholmesmusic.com).

    Dr. Hannah Wakefield, Podcast as Pedagogy, and Race and Protest

    Dr. Hannah Wakefield, Podcast as Pedagogy, and Race and Protest
    For this episode, English Matters talks with Dr. Hannah Wakefield about her recent Race and Protest course and using podcasting as pedagogy. We also get to hear student work from the class. (Credits below!)

    Segment #1 courtesy of Hunter Burnheimer, Jacey Spann, Malachi Knight-Smith, Trip Carruthers

    Segment #2 courtesy of Aja Washington, Dillon Simpson, Kobe Clark, Mollee Sneed, Tyler Mullins

    Segment #3 courtesy of Cassidy Yarborough, Hiba Arkawazi, Kimbra Dunning, Obi Obidiebube


    For more information about English at UTC, visit https://www.utc.edu/arts-and-sciences/english

    Theme music, “Storybook,” generously provided by Scott Holmes (scottholmesmusic.com).

    Dr. Jenn Stewart and Diversity in the English Composition Classroom

    Dr. Jenn Stewart and Diversity in the English Composition Classroom
    This episode, we're chatting with Dr. Jenn Stewart, Director of Composition at UTC, about UTC's Read 2 Achieve Program, and how inclusion and diversity foster a fertile environment in the composition classroom.

    Theme music, “Storybook,” generously provided by Scott Holmes (scottholmesmusic.com).

    Pedagogy, Naming, and Transgender and Non-Binary Students with Jo Kibble

    Pedagogy, Naming, and Transgender and Non-Binary Students with Jo Kibble
    On this episode of English Matters, we talk with Jo Kibble, a graduating senior in English, about the importance of proper naming, pronoun usage, and its significance to the transgender/non-binary community at large. Jo shares their experiences with the audience, and helps define an inclusive vision for UTC going forward.

    Tiffany Mitchell and David Pleins on Anti-Racist Pedagogy

    Tiffany Mitchell and David Pleins on Anti-Racist Pedagogy
    This week, we’re talking to English lecturer Tiffany Mitchell and David Pleins from the Walker Center about their recent pedagogy book club and the experience of reading bell hooks’ Teaching Critical Thinking: Practical Wisdom. Tiffany and David discuss the challenges of making sure that BIPOC voices are centered in pedagogy discussions, as well as the difference between active and passive allyship. Perhaps most importantly, we discuss the way that these ideas might make their way into college classrooms and help dismantle systemic racism in the university and beyond. (see the prior episode of English Matters with Beth Pearce and Tiffany

    *Please note that this interview was recorded in October 2020, prior to the last presidential election. Check in with the Walker Center’s website periodically for information about future book clubs and opportunities.

    Theme music, “Storybook,” generously provided by Scott Holmes (scottholmesmusic.com).

    Andrew Najberg on Creative Writing and The Goats Have Taken Over the Barracks

    Andrew Najberg on Creative Writing and The Goats Have Taken Over the Barracks
    On this episode, we hear from author and UTC English Lecturer Andrew Najberg. Andrew talks to us about how he became a creative writing professor and how the teaching of creative writing differs from and mirrors other types of writing. Andrew also tells us about his own personal writing and publication process, and his inspiration for his forthcoming collection of poems, The Goats Have Taken Over the Barracks, available for pre-sale beginning November 23. You can see selected readings from the chapbook on Andrew’s Facebook page – and pre-order your copy from www.finishinglinepress.com

    Theme music, “Storybook,” generously provided by Scott Holmes (scottholmesmusic.com).

    Teaching Suffrage in the Composition Classroom with Oren Whightsel

    Teaching Suffrage in the Composition Classroom with Oren Whightsel
    This time on the podcast, we’re talking with Dr. Oren Whightsel about how the rhetoric surrounding the debate over women’s suffrage proved to be a helpful tool in composition courses. We discuss the value of historicizing the teaching of rhetoric and composition for our new students, and how it helps them in places other than the university. Additionally, Devori and Oren talk about the experience teaching the rhetoric of voter suppression is especially interesting in an election year. We also talk about how English departments and first-year composition courses are uniquely able to speak to broader social issues that students often don’t contact elsewhere in their university education.

    Theme music, “Storybook,” generously provided by Scott Holmes (scottholmesmusic.com).

    Internships with UTC English Major Anna Brewer

    Internships with UTC English Major Anna Brewer
    On this episode, we talk to UTC English major Anna Brewer about her experience with the department’s internship placement program. Through the program, Ms. Brewer was able to secure an internship with The Borgen Project (borgenproject.org), a non-profit that works to fight global poverty. She tells us about how she was able to secure her internship, the types of work she did, and how she plans to use her experiences to push her forward on a career path after she graduates.

    For more information on UTC’s internship program, visit www.utc.edu/english/internships.

    Theme music, “Storybook,” generously provided by Scott Holmes (scottholmesmusic.com).

    Tiffany Mitchell and Beth Pearce and Teaching Intersectionality

    Tiffany Mitchell and Beth Pearce and Teaching Intersectionality
    In this episode, English department faculty Tiffany Mitchell and Beth Pearce discuss their process of teaching intersectional adolescent and YA literature in the UHON program, and how they hope to port those skillsets and questions into coursework in the English department. We talk about the value of adolescent literature when it comes to discussing tricky topics and ideas, as well as how a course like this can challenge instructors’ perceptions of the literature they teach. Additionally, Beth and Tiffany talk about the benefits of a team-teaching environment.

    Theme music, “Storybook,” generously provided by Scott Holmes (scottholmesmusic.com).

    Jessica Miller (J. Kasper Kramer) and the Road to Publication

    Jessica Miller (J. Kasper Kramer) and the Road to Publication
    On this episode, UTC English instructor and alumna Jessica Miller (J. Kasper Kramer) talks about how UTC’s creative writing MA program poised her for success with her first novel, The Story that Cannot Be Told. Jessica tells us about the road from idea to publication, discusses why she was drawn to young adult fiction as a genre and how it’s more nuanced than some might think, and gives us a look forward to her next project, The List of Unspeakable Fears and why we like scary stuff.

    Theme music, “Storybook,” generously provided by Scott Holmes (scottholmesmusic.com).