College of Architecture, Arts and Construction

Faculty News Recap in the College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities – October 1-31, 2017

HISTORY – The Marine Corps History Division of Marine Corps University has just published Rod Andrew’s monograph “Hill Fights: The First Battle of Khe Sanh, 1967.” This is the Marine Corps’ first official history of this important but lesser-known phase of the fighting in Vietnam. Andrew recently retired from the Marine Corps Reserve, where his last billet was Officer-in-Charge of the Field History Branch.

PERFORMING ARTS – Anthony Bernarducci’s choral composition titled “I Softly Sing” was premiered by the University of Arizona Symphonic Choir Oct. 28. The piece utilizes the poem “The Gift to Sing” by James Weldon Johnson. In addition, Anthony was asked to be the guest conductor for the Oconee County Choral Festival this October leading both middle and high school students in rehearsal and performance.

HISTORY – On Oct. 19, Vernon Burton received the South Carolina Governor’s Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Humanities presented by the South Carolina Humanities Board. Dixie Goswami, professor emerita of English, also was honored with the award. At 5 p.m. Nov. 3, Burton will be part of a panel discussion on Benjamin E. Mays as part of the Fine Arts and Lecture Series (FALS) at Lander University in Greenwood, South Carolina. The next day, a statue of Mays will be unveiled at the Mays Historic Site in Greenwood, where Burton, a member of the site’s board, will participate in the weekend celebration of the longtime president of Morehouse College.

ENGLISH – Lucian Ghita’s article “The Specters of the Jacobethan Avant-Garde in Romanian Experimental Theatre” has been published in the essay collection “Shakespeare in Romanian, Shakespeare in the World” (Romanian Literature Museum Publishing House, 2017), edited by George Volceanov and Ioan Cristescu.

CAAH – Rick Goodstein led a roundtable discussion, “Interdisciplinary Core Curriculum Within the Production Studies in Performing Arts Major at Clemson University,” at the 54th Annual Conference of the International Council of Fine Arts Deans in Halifax, Nova Scotia on Oct. 19.

HISTORY – H. Roger Grant has been awarded the William D. Middleton Fellowship for his forthcoming book project on the history of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad. This award is given annually by the Railway & Locomotive Historical Society based in College Station, Texas.

PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION – Steven Grosby’s chapter, “Nationalism,” was published in the two-volume Sage Handbook of Political Sociology (November), pp. 587-603.

LANGUAGES – Daniel Holcombe published a book chapter, “Marco Berger: Homoaffective Edging and Cinematic Queered Continuums,” in Intimate Relationships in Cinema, Literature, and Visual Culture, edited by Gilad Padva and Nurit Buchweitz for Palgrave Macmillan. In the chapter, Holcombe combines queer theory with Jacques Lacan’s psychoanalytical theory l’objet petit a to analyze the spectator gaze and cinematic techniques in two films by Argentinian director Marco Berger.

LANGUAGES – Jason Hurdich, who teaches American Sign Language, was named the Marie Griffin Interpreter of the Year. The award, given by the Southeast Regional Institute on Deafness, recognizes his outstanding service to the deaf, hard of hearing and deaf-blind communities of Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, Tennessee and the Carolinas. Hurdich was featured recently in a front-page article in the Greenville Journal.

HISTORIC PRESERVATION – Amalia Leifeste and Brittany Lavelle Tulla, (a Charleston preservationist and historic preservation alumna), presented a paper at the Southeast Chapter of the Society of Architectural Historians at their meeting in Lynchburg, Virginia in late October. The paper, developed with Carter Hudgins, illustrates the fine line that architect Joseph Croxton navigated between national guidelines and local regionalism in his designs for the CivilIan Conservation Corps-era buildings constructed at Kings Mountain National Military Park and Kings Mountain State Park.  Also, over fall break Hudgins and Leifeste did fieldwork at Hard Bargain Farm in Maryland with five historic preservation graduate students. The field drawings, notes and photographs will be translated into measured drawings of the buildings over the remainder of the semester. These drawings will be included in the conference guide for the Vernacular Architecture Forum’s annual meeting in Alexandria, Virginia in 2018.

ARCHITECTURE – Andreea Mihalache presented the paper “Speculations on Robert Venturi’s Less Is a Bore” at the annual conference of the Southeast Chapter of the Society of Architectural Historians (Lynchburg, Virginia, Oct. 11-14). She also explored the topic in a Planning, Design and the Built Environment Colloquium Oct. 20 at Clemson.

HISTORY – Edwin Moise presented a paper “Reading Enemy Communications and Still Not Knowing: Tonkin Gulf 1964” Oct. 20 at the Symposium on Cryptologic History, hosted by the National Security Agency’s Center for Cryptologic History, in Laurel, Maryland.

LANGUAGES – Kelly Peebles published the article “The Head, the Heart, and Hysteria in Jeanne Flore’s ‘Tales and Trials of Love’ (c. 1542)” in the Journal of Medical Humanities. She presented the paper “Mothering in the Shadow of the Crown: Royal cousins, religious refugees, and the nurturing influence of Renée de France” at the Royal Studies Network’s Kings & Queens 6 conference, which was held in Madrid, Spain, Sept. 12-15.

CITY PLANNING AND REAL ESTATE DEVELOPMENT – Elora Raymond’s solo-authored paper “The Impact of Income Sorting on Housing Wealth Inequality: A Comparison between Urban Regions in the United States” was accepted for publication in the Community and Economic Development Discussion Paper Series at the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. Her article “Wholesale Funding and the Increase in Construction Bank-Owned Real Estate in the U.S. Financial Crisis” appears in the current issue of Urban Geography. In addition, her article “Uneven Recovery and Persistent Negative Equity in the Southeast” is forthcoming in the Journal of Urban Affairs and was the recipient of the 2017 Best Conference Paper Award from the Urban Affairs Association.

ARCHITECTURE – On Oct. 11, Kate Schwennsen provided the keynote presentation, “We have done more than stir: We have persisted,”at “LEVEL: A Symposium on equity in the design of the built environment,” sponsored by the North Dakota Humanities Council in Fargo, North Dakota.

LANGUAGES – Eric Touya gave the lecture “Make Civil Rights and the Humanities Happen at Your Library” on Oct. 12 at the 2017 South Carolina Library Association Conference in Columbia. He also read the paper “Humanizing Economics: Pedagogical Approaches to Transforming the Homo Economicus” at the 32nd Annual Interdisciplinary Conference in the Humanities held Oct. 27 at the University of West Georgia in Carrollton.

PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION – Benjamin L. White’s article “The Traditional and Ecclesiastical Paul of 1 Corinthians” appeared in October in the Catholic Biblical Quarterly 79 (2017): pp. 651-669.

Faculty News Recap in the College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities – July 1-Aug. 31, 2017

ART – Todd Anderson and Ian van Coller’s book of original art, “Mount Kilimanjaro – The Last Glacier,” was acquired by Stanford University Ute and Bill Bowes Art and Architecture Library Special Collections.

HISTORY – On July 13 Vernon Burton presented a lecture and workshop to the  NEH Summer Institute on Reconstruction at Penn Center, St. Helena Island, and on 14 July he spoke to the Summer Institute on the history of Voting and Voting Rights in the United States at the University of South Carolina Beaufort.  During the month of July, he was featured as Clemson University’s “Meet a Tiger.” 

PERFORMING ARTS – Anthony Bernarducci had a new piece of music published by Hinshaw Music. The piece is titled “They Remain” for Men’s choir, piano and oboe. It uses portions of the poem “For the Fallen” by Robert Laurence Binyon.

ENGLISH – From David Blakesley: Asao Inoue’s book, “Antiracist Writing Assessment Ecologies: Teaching and Assessing Writing for a Socially Just Future” won the Council of Writing Program Administrators’ Best Book Award in July. Inoue’s book was co-published by the WAC Clearinghouse and Parlor Press in 2015.

LANGUAGES – Adrienne Fama received a scholarship from the American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (ACTFL) to study in Salamanca, Spain. She spent two weeks in July at Colegio Delibes taking a methodology course for instructors of Spanish as a foreign language.

LANGUAGES – Stephen Fitzmaurice published an article “Unregulated autonomy: Uncredentialed educational interpreters in rural schools” in the American Annals of the Deaf. This research employed ethnographic methodologies to explore how interpreters without national certification were enacting their role in a rural high school. He also provided a workshop for the South Carolina Department of Education: Research to Practice Institute focusing on educational interpreters and how to convey key vocabulary in their interpreting work.

ENGLISH – Jonathan Beecher Field published Statue Mania in The Boston Review.

PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION – In July Steven Grosby was invited to join the editorial advisory board of the book series “Polycentricity: Studies in Institutional Diversity and Voluntary Governance.” The series is published by Lexington Books. In August the Chinese translation of Grosby’s “Nationalism: A Very Short Introduction” (Nanjing: Yilin Press, 2017) appeared in print. He also participated in a manuscript workshop, Aug. 16-19,  sponsored  by the Institute for Humane Studies, George Mason University, on the draft of  the book “Honor Management: The Unsocial Passions and the Making of the Modern World.”

PERFORMING ARTS – Lillian “Mickey” Harder, Brooks Center Artistic Liaison, recently served as a judge to select artists to perform at Carnegie Hall in January as part of the Young Performers Career Advancement Program sponsored by the Association of Performing Arts Presenters.

LANGUAGES – In August William Daniel Holcombe published a peer-reviewed article in Mexican Studies / Estudios Mexicanos, a journal co-published by the University of California at Santa Barbara and the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. In the article, Holcombe examines how Mexican chronicler Carlos Monsiváis (Mexico City 1938-2010) utilized the concept of slumming and the term “queer” in his later works that focused on sexuality studies. Holcombe, William Daniel. “Lo queer de Carlos Monsiváis: slumming en el ambiente.” Mexican Studies/Estudios mexicanos 33.2 (Summer 2017): 272-95.

LANGUAGES – Joseph Mai gave a paper titled “Democratic practices and the Human Affair” at the Bophana Center in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, where he was conducting research on the work of filmmaker Rithy Panh. The Bophana center, named to preserve the memory of just one of the Khmer Rouge’s many victims, was founded by Rithy Panh to provide audio-visual resources and production training and support to young generations of Cambodians.

PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION – Bill Maker presented “Charles Mingus’ ‘Remember Rockefeller at Attica’ and Theodor Adorno on Modern Music” at the 34th Annual Meeting of the American Society for Aesthetics, held in Santa Fe New Mexico in July.

ARCHITECTURE – Andreea Mihalache published “The Act and Art of Architectural Critique: A Drawing, a House and a Sign” in The Plan Journal this summer. She presented the paper “In the World but not of it: Quaker Influences on Robert Venturi’s Chapel for the Episcopal Academy” at the V Congreso Internacional de Arquitectura Religiosa Contemporanea (Santiago de Chile, Aug. 23-27).

PERFORMING ARTS – Shannon Robert designed scenery for “The Hunchback of Notre Dame” for Theatrical Outfit and Aurora in Atlanta and “Gnadiges Fraulein” for The Tennessee Williams Festival in Provincetown produced by Texas Tech. She taught for WildWind Performance Lab at Texas Tech, Hollins University MFA Program in Playwriting (for design) and the UNCG Theatre MFA summer program. Robert is currently designing “Clybourne Park” for Warehouse Theatre.

PERFORMING ARTS – Mark Spede has won the 2017 Leadership Award from Be The Match, operated by the National Marrow Donor Program. The award recognizes individuals and groups who have demonstrated exceptional achievement in educating and engaging target audiences about the organization’s mission

LANGUAGES – Gabriela Stoicea participated in the Annual Meeting of the American Comparative Literature Association in Utrecht, the Netherlands in July. There she organized a three-day seminar entitled “Liberalism in Crisis: A Perspective from the Humanities.”

ENGLISH – Lindsay Turner and Walt Hunter have co-translated a book of philosophy, “Atopias: Manifesto for a Radical Existentialism,” by the French philosopher Frédéric Neyrat. The book is appearing in a series, Lit Z, at Fordham University Press, co-edited by Brian McGrath and Sara Guyer.

ENGLISH – Candace Wiley is one of five poet-recipients of this year’s Fine Arts Work Center writing fellowship. From October through April, she will be living and writing in FAWC’s artist colony in Provincetown, Massachusetts. While there, Wiley will be finishing an Afro-futurist poetry collection about Afro-Atlantic Mermaids, Klingons and haints (ghosts), as well as continuing work with her poetry nonprofit The Watering Hole. While Wiley writes to her heart’s content, FAWC will provide housing and a modest stipend. The fellowship is extremely competitive with applicants from all over the world. Past fellowship recipients include Denis Johnson, Yusef Komunyakaa, Jhumpa Lahiri, and this year’s Pulitzer Prizewinner in poetry, Tyehimba Jess.

PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION – Benjamin White presented a paper entitled “Computing the Apostle: The Promise and Limitation of Forensic Stylometry for Discerning Paul’s Linguistic Fingerprint” at the Humboldt University in Berlin, Germany for the International Meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature on Aug. 8.

ARCHITECTURE – Anjali Joseph and Deborah Wingler presented a research paper at the International Academy for Design and Health, 12th Design & Health World Congress & Exhibition in Vienna, Austria. Sara Bayramzadeh and Deborah Wingler presented two papers at the 8th International Conference on Applied Human Factors and Ergonomics in Los Angeles, California. Deborah Wingler will also present two CHFDT research papers at the 48th Annual Conference of the Association of Canadian Ergonomists & 12th International Symposium on Human Factors in Organizational Design and Management in Banff, Canada at the beginning of August.

ART – Valerie Zimany recently traveled to the United Kingdom for the bi-annual International Ceramic Art Education and Exchange symposium at the University for the Creative Arts Farnham, England. She presented her paper “Digital Translations: From Hand to Code” about her recent work in 3D printing and clay, work which is facilitated by Clemson’s School of Architecture Digital Design Shop and a CAAH Research Grant for an artist-in-residency at Medalta’s Shaw Center for Contemporary Ceramics.  She was joined by current Clemson University MFA graduate students Lacy Miller (17’) and Conor Alwood (18’), who made a co-presentation about their respective artwork entitled “Reflective Surfaces.” All three displayed their artwork in the International Society for Art Education and Exchange exhibition, held in the James Hockey and Foyer Galleries at UCA Farnham in July. The articles and artwork are published in accompanying journal and catalogue of the symposium.  In addition to the symposium, Zimany, Miller and Alwood visited art institutions such as the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Tate Modern, and the British Museum in London, and traveled to the historic sites of the Spode Factory, Middleport Pottery, and Wedgewood Factory in Stoke-on-Trent with ceramics faculty of Staffordshire University.

Faculty News Recap in the College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities – June 1-30, 2017

ARCHITECTURE – Anjali Joseph participated in an Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) review panel in Washington, D.C. June 22-23. The group met to review grant proposals related to healthcare safety and quality improvement research. A conference paper authored by researchers at the Center for Health Facilities Design and Testing, “An Ergonomic Evaluation of Preoperative and Postoperative Workspaces in Ambulatory Surgery Centers” was published as part of the Proceedings of the AHFE 2017 International Conferences on Human Factors and Ergonomics in Healthcare and Medical Devices. Herminia Machry, doctoral student, and Dr. Joseph led a workshop at the EDRA 48 conference in Madison, Wisconsin. The team also presented three papers related to the center’s research projects. David Allison presented a poster based on RIPCHD.OR project work at the European Healthcare Design Conference in London. The RIPCHD.OR project was selected as one of three projects to represent Clemson University at the ACCelerate Creativity and Innovation Festival 2017 to be held at the National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C. in October.

ENGLISH – Clemson History and English students, Glenn Bartram, Melissa Knapp, Hannah Meller and Mary Kate Tilley, along with Susanna Ashton, participated in “Transforming Public History – From Charleston to the Atlantic World,” an interdisciplinary conference in Charleston, South Carolina June 14-17. In spring 2016 the students were part of an English Department Creative Inquiry project group led by Dr. Ashton. In the class they researched and helped design an upcoming exhibit for the Lowcountry Digital History Initiative on the life and world of Samuel Williams, a man who survived enslavement in Charleston and went on to write a little-known memoir of his life.

LANGUAGES – The Summer issue 94.1 of the journal of Italian studies Italica contains an article by Luca Barattoni on the representation of work in post-WWII Italian Cinema. The article is entitled “Diritto negato, pratica alienante, collisione corpo/macchina: l’identità ferita nella rappresentazione cinematografica del lavoro” and looks at film as the privileged medium for a symbolic negotiation of work in Italian society.

PERFORMING ARTS – Anthony Bernarducci had two of his new choral works premiered. The first movement “Kyrie” from his “Missa Brevis San Francesco d’ Assisi” was premiered by the Grammy-Nominated Westminster Choir College Williamson Voices. His three-movement work titled “To Althea” was premiered by the University of Arizona Symphonic Choir.

ENGLISH – Cameron Bushnell presented a paper on “Graduate Writing Associates” for the Consortium on Graduate Communications at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey, California, June 7-10.

HISTORY – On May 11 Vernon Burton was interviewed by NPR’s “Here and Now” on the removal of Confederate monuments from New Orleans. He published his keynote address, “Reconstructing South Carolina’s History Through the South Caroliniana Library,” 80th Annual Meeting Address by Dr. Orville Vernon Burton, The University South Caroliniana Society 81st Annual Meeting, 22 April 2017, pp. 2-32. He has two essays, “From Clarendon County to the Supreme Court,” pp. 84-88 and “Eating with Harvey Gantt and Mathew Perry:  Myth and Realities of ‘Integration with Dignity,’” pp.139-40, accompanying Cecil Williams’ photographs of South Carolina’s Civil Rights Movement in Cecil Williams’ “Unforgettable, Life Hope Bravery, 1950-1970: Celebrating a Time of Bravery” (Orangeburg:  Cecil J. Williams Photography/Publishing, 2017). On May 4, Burton spoke to Greenville area theologians on the “Theology of Dr. Benjamin E. Mays.” On May 8 and 9, he met with former Charleston Mayor Joe Riley as part of the advisory and planning committee for the proposed International African American Museum (IAAM) in Charleston, S.C. On May 10 he met with the College of Charleston Advisory Board for the Carolina Lowcountry and Atlantic World (CLAW) program, where he serves as executive director, to plan for upcoming conferences on public history and on Reconstruction. On May 25 Peter Eisenstadt and Burton spoke at the Benjamin E. Mays site in Greenwood, S.C. about  their proposed comparative biography of Howard Thurman and Benjamin E. Mays.

ART – David Detrich and Denise Woodward-Detrich recently traveled to Paris and Venice to research historical and contemporary artwork. They were joined by former Clemson University MFA graduate students Elizabeth Snipes-Rochester (07’) and Fleming Markel (98’). The trip was facilitated by Elizabeth Snipes-Rochester, who is professor of art at Lander University, and colleague Sandy Singletary. Twenty-two Lander art students joined the group. In Paris, they visited the major art centers of The Louvre, Musee d’Orsay, l’Orangerie, the Pompidou Center (which hosted a photographic exhibit by Walker Evans) and the Grand Palais (which had a major exhibit of Auguste Rodin’s work marking the centennial of his passing). In Venice, they spent five days exploring the 57th Venice Biennale International Art Exhibition, which features 86 National Participations in the historic pavilions at the Giardini, the Arsenale and the City of Venice. The Peggy Guggenheim Collection on the Grand Canal offered a great survey of artwork that is housed in her former residence in Venice.

HISTORY – Caroline Dunn presented “Having It All in Medieval England? The Careers of Ladies-in-Waiting” at the Berkshire conference of women historians, held at Hofstra University in early June.

ENGLISH – Jonathan Beecher Field organized and hosted The Seventeenth Century Atlantic and Americas Salon in Barnard, Vermont, on June 17. He served as guest editor of the spring 2017 issue of Commonplace.

CAAH – Rick Goodstein was invited to conduct at a recent reunion of the All-American College Orchestra at Walt Disney World in Orlando. Dr. Goodstein served as a conductor and musical director of the prestigious Disney All-American College Program from 1987-1998. The program is nationally recognized for launching the professional careers of hundreds of student musicians.

HISTORY – Roger Grant was twice quoted in the June 2017 issue of the Monocle, a London-based international magazine, in the article “Higher-Speed Rail/Express Delivery – USA.” Grant’s book-review essay, “Illinois Railroads,” appears in the summer 2017 issue of the Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.

RELIGIOUS STUDIES – Steven Grosby delivered the lecture “Nationality: Its Persistence and Significance” as a participant in the Engelsberg Seminar 2017, June 8-10, held at the Engelsberg Ironworks, Sweden. The seminar was sponsored by the Axson Johnson Foundation.

LANGUAGES – Tiffany Creegan Miller organized a panel session on Central American cultural and literary production at the Latin American Studies Association Congress in Lima, Perú. As a presenter in the panel, Miller discussed her recent work with Kaqchikel Maya children’s songs as a form of socio-political activism in terms of language revitalization efforts for this Guatemalan indigenous language. In early June, Miller also attended the DHSI (Digital Humanities Summer Institute) at University of Victoria.

HISTORY – At the International Meeting on Law and Society in Mexico City in June, Maribel Morey presented her work-in-progress as part of a panel on “Examining Class and Inequality in Different Contexts.”

ENGLISH – Lee Morrissey presented “Imagine an island … facing massive debts and emigration” at the 2017 Inish Festival, Inish Bofin, Co. Galway, Ireland.

LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE – Mary G. Padua, along with two Master of Landscape Architecture alumni, Zaid Al Shabibi (’07) and Feifei Huang (’07), presented long-term strategies to the Surfside Beach Town Council at a June 26 community workshop. Their work considered coastal resilience, a living shoreline, habitat restoration, integrated mobility and system of open spaces, as part of re-branding the town’s family-friendly identity. At the joint conference of the Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture and Chinese Educators in Landscape Architecture held in Beijing, People’s Republic of China, May 26-29, Ph.D. PDBE Students Pai Lu and Lei Hua presented their peer-reviewed work. Pai Lu presented “How Design Influences Older Adults’ Outdoor Space Usage and Satisfaction: A Case Study of Outdoor Environments in Chinese Facilities for the Older Adults.” Lei Hua, with Dr. Padua as second author, presented “Exploring the concept of health in urban China: case study of an activity-friendly neighborhood in Beijing.” Also at CELA/CLAEC Beijing, Dr. Padua, along with co-author, Jiachun Yao of Xiamen University, Fujian Province, PRC, presented their peer-reviewed work entitled, “Serve your community – integrate community participation into landscape architecture education in China.” As part of the special lectures series at Victoria University’s Faculty of Architecture and Design, Wellington, New Zealand, Dr. Padua delivered the lecture entitled: “Nature-based Designed Environments: Land Stewardship and Social Equity” on May 31.

LANGUAGES – In June Johannes Schmidt visited the OTH Regensburg in Germany, a new partner university, and gave two workshops: “German Culture and Economy in the US” (in German) and “Holocaust Education in the US” (in English). In addition, he promoted Clemson as a study-abroad destination for Regensburg students. He also took the opportunity to visit the first three Clemson students studying at Regensburg and got a tour of the large semiconductor manufacturer Infineon where one of the students is currently interning.

ARCHITECTURE – Robert Seel’s “Pendleton Spring” is a photographic monograph, following the successful publication of “Pendleton Winter” a few months ago. Rob’s photographs offer an artist-architect’s view from casual strolls through Pendleton, South Carolina, capturing the sense of place that so many people have come to love: street scenes, vignettes, and seasonal treasures.

ENGLISH – Jillian Weise interviewed three disability rights activists during the Denver jail vigil on June 29. Weise’s captioned video circulates on social media. Her poem “Some Rights” was selected for Poem-a-Day, the Academy of American Poets digital series which reaches 450,000 readers.

ART – Valerie Zimany gave an artist talk, “Digital Translations: From Hand to Code” as the Antinori Distinguished Fellow at Hambidge Center for the Creative Arts and Sciences in Rabun Gap, GA on June 10.

Faculty News Recap in the College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities, April 22-May 31, 2017

ARCHITECTURE – Researchers at the Center for Health Facilities Design and Testing study the relationship between the physical healthcare environment and clinical outcomes; population health outcomes; patient, family and staff satisfaction; operational efficiency; and the ability to accommodate change. Researchers at CHFDT recently published Joseph, A., Bayramzadeh, S., Zamani, Z., & Rostenberg, B. (2017, April 24). Safety, performance, and satisfaction outcomes in the operating room: A literature review. Health Environments Research & Design Journal.

Upcoming Center presentations include:

  • Joseph, A., Bayramzadeh, S., Wingler, D., & Machry, H. (2017, May 31-June 3). Developing Methods to Observe and Analyze Behaviors in Operating Room Environments. Environmental Design Research Association (EDRA) 48 Conference. Madison, Wisconsin.
  • Joseph, A., Wingler, D., & Joshi, R. (2017, May 31 – June 3). Designing preoperative and postoperative workspaces to support communication between patients, staff and care partners in ambulatory surgery centers: An ergonomic evaluation. Paper presented at the Environmental Design Research Association (EDRA) 48 conference, Madison, Wis.
  • Machry, H., Joseph, A., Wingler, D., & Matthews, R. (2017, May 31-June 3). Spatial Implications of Essential Surgical Flows in Ambulatory Surgery Centers. Environmental Design Research Association (EDRA) 48 Conference. Madison, Wis.

ART – Todd Anderson’s newest artwork will be on view at the “Resonance” exhibition at the Kai Lin Art Gallery in Atlanta.

HISTORY – On May 20, Rod Andrew was the invited guest speaker at the ribbon-cutting ceremony marking the restoration of the front porch of the Hopewell House on Clemson’s campus. Hopewell is the former home of Revolutionary War general Andrew Pickens and the site of the first federal treaty signed between the United States and the Native American tribes south of the Ohio River. The ceremony was sponsored by the Department of Historic Properties. Following the ceremony, Andrew signed copies of his new book “The Life and Times of General Andrew Pickens: Revolutionary War Hero, American Founder.”

ENGLISH – Professor Emeritus Wayne K. Chapman published an illustrated essay in International Yeats Studies vol. 1, no. 2 (spring 2017) 1-17, entitled “Easter, 1916 Redux,” on the centenary of the first private printing of Yeats’s poem, in 1917, by British, pro-Irish editor/publisher Clement Shorter. Chapman’s essay rounds out IYS’s commemoration of the poem and the 100th anniversary of the 1916 rebellion. The journal is located on the Clemson University Press website.

LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE – Hyejung Chang presented a peer-reviewed paper, “Craftspersonship and Ordinary Landscape: Crafting Normality, Cultivating Morality” at the 9th annual international symposium on Architecture, Culture and Spirituality Forum (ACSF), May14-18. The conference was held at the Haystack Mountain School of Crafts, designed by Edward Larrabee Barnes, located on Deer Isle, Maine with its focus on the theme, “Practice, Craft, Materials, and Making.” Her work was one of the 21 papers and the 13 projects selected for presentation.

HISTORY – Roger Grant’s 33rd academic book, “Rails to the Front: The Role of Railways in Wartime” (with Augustus J. Veenendaal) has just been published by Karwansaray Publishers in Rotterdam.

ENGLISH – Cynthia Haynes, professor of English and director of first-year composition at Clemson, has won the Rhetoric Society of America’s annual book prize for the best new work in rhetorical study. “The Homesick Phone Book: Addressing Rhetorics in the Age of Perpetual Conflict” was published by Southern Illinois University Press in 2016. The book explores a subject close to Haynes — college composition instruction — by examining the rhetoric of present-day and historical acts of terrorism.

ARCHITECTURE – Ray Huff served on the jury for Cooper Hewitt’s 2017 National Design Awards.

ENGLISH – Walt Hunter published an article in The Atlantic on May 8th about college campus protests and free speech debates.

ENGLISH – In May, Steve Katz completed another successful year of extra co-teaching of a Creative Inquiry course, Biology 4940 Popular Science Journalism, with Lesly Temesvari. As a Fellow of Rutland Institute for Ethics, Steve also was one of three judges for the campus wide J.T. Barton Jr. Ethics Essay Scholarship Competition at Clemson. This summer, Steve and Lesly will be planning the resumption in the fall of their Writing in the Disciplines (WID) Initiative. In collaboration with Sez Atamturktur, on whose multi-million dollar NSF-NRT grant Steve is a co-PI, they will be incorporating workshops in communicating science with the public for students and faculty participating in a new graduate program in “Model and Data Enabled Resilient Infrastructure,” which commences in fall 2017.

ARCHITECTURE – Professor Emeritus Yuji Kishimoto has been awarded a national medal of distinction, the Order of the Sacred Treasure, Gold Rays Medal by His Majesty, the Emperor of Japan in the ceremony at the Royal Palace in Tokyo. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe recognized his longtime efforts to promote academic, cultural and economic relations between the U.S. and Japan.

LANGUAGES – Joseph Mai’s book “Robert Guédiguian” was released in March by Manchester University Press. The book argues that the links between friendship, philosophy, history and political commitment in the career of the Marseilles-based filmmaker, Robert Guédiguian, make him one of the most discretely original and coherent French filmmakers of the last 30 years. Mai also gave an invited presentation titled “Cadrer l’affaire humaine: la philosophie de Luc Dardenne” [“Framing the Human Affair: Luc Dardenne’s philosophical writings”] to the Film Studies faculty and graduate students in the ARIMES series at the Université of Lyon II, France.

HISTORY – Maribel Morey has been invited to present at the opening panel of the 5th annual Stockholm Philanthropy Symposium, which is taking place on May 31st. She also has been invited to speak  in the public seminar inaugurating the guest scholar program in philanthropy studies at Ersta Sköndal Bräcke University College. Also in Stockholm, this seminar will gather a day before the symposium.

ENGLISH – In May, the Carolinas chapter of the European American Chamber of Commerce — launched in Greenville last year — hosted three diplomats from Europe for a wide-ranging discussion on international trade. The chamber’s special guests at the Commerce Club in downtown Greenville were Detlev Ruenger, consul general for Germany; Louis De Corail, consul general for France; and Shane Stephens, consul general for Ireland. About 30 Upstate business, manufacturing and academic leaders were invited to attend, including Lee Morrissey, director of Clemson University’s Humanities Hub.

LANGUAGES – On May 3rd, Salvador Oropesa read his paper “Nacionalismos invisibles en ‘La trilogía del Baztán de Dolores Redondo’” at the XIII Congreso de novela y cine negro: clásicos y contemporáneos, Universidad de Salamanca, Spain.

PERFORMING ARTS – On May 18, Rick St. Peter’s production of “Spațiul Privat” (“Private Spaces”) opened at the Romanian National Theatre “Marin Sorescu” in Craiova. The production was the culmination of the Plurality of Privacy Project, organized by the Goethe Institut of Washington D.C. The production featured eight one-act plays by leading European and American playwrights and included plays from the United States, United Kingdom, Spain, Slovenia, Belgium, Hungary, Sweden and Romania. All the plays were performed in Romanian and featured resident actors from the National Theatre company. The production is scheduled to remain in the theatre’s repertory throughout 2018.

PERFORMING ARTS – Bruce Whisler was the recording engineer and producer for the new CD “Abstractions – Music for Trumpet and Piano.” The performers are Randall Sorensen, trumpet, and Valentin Bogdan, piano. Sorensen And Bogdan are music faculty at Lousiana Tech University.

ENGLISH – Barton Palmer has been reappointed to a second three-year term as editor of the South Atlantic Review.

RELIGIOUS STUDIES – Ben White had a paper proposal accepted for the International Meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature in Berlin in August and was invited to deliver a paper at the regular meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature in Boston in November.

Faculty News Recap in the College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities, Feb. 28 – April 21, 2017

HISTORY – Rod Andrew’s book, “The Life and Times of General Andrew Pickens: Revolutionary War Hero, American Founder,” was published by the University of North Carolina Press this month. Andrew Pickens was a central figure in the early history of the South Carolina upcountry, and his Hopewell Plantation is part of the Clemson University campus.

ENGLISH – Susanna Ashton’s opinion piece, “Congress should support cultural outreach,” appeared in April in the Charleston Post and Courier. In other news, Ashton presented her research project “Fugitives in the Margin: The Canadian Census of 1851 and the hidden lives of self-emancipated slaves” at the Southern American Studies Association (SASA) which held its annual conference in Williamsburg, Virgina, hosted by the College of William and Mary on March 4th.

PERFORMING ARTS – Anthony Bernarducci had a feature article published in the American Choral Directors Association Choral Journal. The article was titled “Missa Brevis: An Ancient Genre Revitalized.” The research described modern composers’ treatment of form, text, harmony and rhythm of the ancient Missa Brevis genre.

ENGLISH – David Blakesley’s Parlor Press book, “Antiracist Writing Assessment Ecologies: Teaching and Assessing Writing for a Socially Just Future” by Asao Inoue, won the CCCC/NCTE Outstanding Book Award. CCCC is the largest organization in the field of rhetoric and composition. Another Parlor Press book (“Go On” by Ethel Rackin) was named a finalist for the National Jewish Book Award in poetry in January.

HISTORY – On Feb. 28, Vernon Burton presented “Lincoln’s Words” at the Chautauqua in the Greenville Hughes Main Library. Perspectives on History: The Newsmagazine of the American Historical Association 55:2 (February, 2017): 9-10, carried an article, “Historians as Expert Witnesses: Can Scholars Help Save the Voting Rights Act?” The piece focused and followed up on the American Association’s 2017 annual meeting session, “Historians as Expert Witnesses,” organized by the National History Center in which Vernon Burton was one of three panelists. Bernice Bennett interviewed Burton about a number of his books and his ongoing research on race and the Supreme Court on her show, “Research at the National Archives and Beyond,” for Blog Talk Radio.  On March 11, Burton keynoted the annual meeting of the South Carolina History Association at Bob Jones University and spoke on “Reconstructing South Carolina’s Reconstruction.” On March 18, Burton spoke at the dedication of the National Park Service’s first national Monument to Reconstruction at the Penn Center on St. Helena Island. At the annual meeting of the Organization of American Historians (OAH) in New Orleans, April 5-9, Burton spoke at the memorial session for former OAH president James O. Horton. During March (last aired March 27), C-Span broadcast an interview with Burton on “Historians as expert witnesses on Civil Rights.” On April 3, he was featured in “The Inevitable Evolution of Fort Frederick” on SC ETV. This documentary has been fed to PBS affiliates by the National Educational Television Association.

PERFORMING ARTS – Paul Buyer’s new book, “The Art of Vibraphone Playing: An Essential Method for Study and Performance,” with co-author Josh Gottry, was released in April by Meredith Music Publications.

HISTORY – At the Classical Association of the Midwest and South meeting in Kitchener, Ontario, Elizabeth Carney organized the “Featured Opening Evening Panel” (co-sponsored with the Women’s Classical Caucus): “Grace Harriet Macurdy (1866-1946) and her Impact on the Study of Women’s History,” and gave a paper as part of the panel, “Grace Harriet Macurdy and ‘Woman Power’ in Argead Macedonia: Eurydice, Mother of Philip II.”

ENGLISH –Professor Emeritus Wayne K. Chapman published a substantial assessment of the state of W. B. Yeats studies in “Yeats, Philosophy, and the Occult,” ed. Matthew Gibson and Neil Mann (Clemson University Press, Dec. 2016). Entitled “‘Something Intended, Complete’: Major Work on Yeats Past, Present, and Yet to Come” (11-56) and based on a lecture presented at the Yeats International Summer School in Sligo, Ireland, it is supported by an appendix, “Annotations in the Writings of Walter Savage Landor in the Yeatses’ Library” (289-303), highlighting in both essay and appendix the two ongoing book projects that Wayne expects to complete in coming months. “Yeats, Philosophy, and the Occult” was the best-selling book published or distributed by Liverpool University Press in North America in the first quarter of this year.

ART – Dave Detrich was included as one of “10 South Carolina Artists You Need to Know” this spring by Amuse magazine.

ART – In March Andrea Feeser traveled to Berlin to interview internationally-renowned artist Jimmie Durham, the subject of her next book. She worked with two recent art department graduates, MFA Haley Floyd and Kevin Pohle, to document in photos and video Durham’s use of materials and processes. This unique research opportunity is funded in part by the College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities and the art department.

LANGUAGES – From March 31-April 2, Stephen Fitzmaurice served as an invited moderator for two sessions at the second international Symposium on Signed Language Interpretation and Translation Research held at Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C. The symposium promoted the exchange of scholarship on signed language interpretation and translation as well as provided a platform for interdisciplinary research across various disciplines including linguistics, communication, sociology, psychology, anthropology and education.

CAAH AND PERFORMING ARTS – An article by Rick Goodstein, Eric Lapin and Ron McCurdy, “The Future of Arts Performance in Higher Education,” was published in March by the journal College Music Symposium.

PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION – During this period, Steven Grosby:

  • published an essay on the “Why freedom is a legal concept;” http://www.libertylawsite.org/liberty-forum/why-freedom-is-a-legal-concept/
  • published a review of Lotte Jensen (ed.), “The Roots of Nationalism: National Identity Formation in Early Modern Europe, 1600-1815″ (Amsterdam University Press, 2016) in Renaissance Quarterly 70/2;
  • had accepted for publication “Jewish Wars and European Culture,” in A. Leoussi and B. Heuser (eds.), “Great Battles and Their Myths” (London: Pen and Sword), in press;
  • gave a plenary lecture “Religion and Nationality” at the Conference of the Association for the Study of Ethnicity and Nationalism, London School of Economics, March 28;
  • gave a lecture “Freedom and Vincent Ostrom: Anthropology of Understanding and Action” at the annual conference of the Public Choice Society, New Orleans, March 4; and
  • was elected as a member of The Philadelphia Society.

PERFORMING ARTS – Lillian Utsey Harder, director of the Brooks Center for the Performing Arts, was made an honorary member of the Clemson University Alumni Association at the annual Department of Performing Arts POPS concert held at Patrick Square on April 9.

ENGLISH – Jan Holmevik was interviewed by John Sloop, associate provost at Vanderbilt University, for the podcast series Leading Lines.

ENGLISH – Tharon Howard has been selected for the Society for Technical Communication’s highest award for research – the Ken Rainey Award for Excellence in Research. In notifying Howard, the STC cited his “focused, original, and significant research program in usability and user experience that has had a highly significant impact on industry practice.”

ENGLISH – Walt Hunter has an interview with the French philosopher Frédéric Neyrat for his forthcoming co-translation (with Lindsay Turner) of Neyrat’s “Atopias: Manifesto for a Radical Existentialism” (Fordham UP, 2017). He and Turner were recently invited to Davidson College to speak to a class on translation studies and to lead a workshop. In April Hunter received the CAAH Faculty Member of the Year Award for Excellence in Teaching.

ENGLISH – Steve Katz, Pearce Professor of Professional Communication, published three works combining creative and scholarly writing. “Pentadic Leaves,” a poem in five parts Steve wrote and delivered for the Kenneth Burke Conference in St. Louis in 2014, was selected by special issue editor Jodie Nicotra, and published with the video of the reading in the KB Journal (12:2, Spring 2017). “Poetry Editor’s Note: A Missive to Our Selves,” consists of prose and dialogue composed for Survive and Thrive: A Journal of the Medical Humanities and Narrative as Medicine (Vol 3, pp.1-26). This introduction reviews contemporary (even posthuman) notions of “writing as healing” and “self,” and sets up the republication of his 1994 article, “The Rhetoric of Confessional Poetry (Revisited): Ethos, Myth, Therapy, and the Narrative Configuration of Self” (Vol 3, pp.91-114). Steve co-authored two other articles in press: “A Predestination for Posthumanism” with Professor Nathaniel Rivers of St. Louis University, in “Kenneth Burke + the Posthuman” (Penn State UP); and “Lines and Fields of Ethical Force in Scientific Authorship: The Legitimacy and Power of the Office of Research Integrity” with MAPC graduate C. Claiborne Linvill, in “Scientific Communication: Practices, Theories, and Pedagogies,” edited by Han Yu and Kathryn Northcut (Routledge).

HISTORY – Tom Kuehn participated in a panel on Renaissance commentaries at the annual meeting of the Renaissance Society of America in Chicago March 31. Kuehn’s book, “Family and Gender in Renaissance Italy, 1300-1600” was just published by Cambridge University Press.

CITY AND REGIONAL PLANNING – Mickey Lauria has been reappointed chair of the advisory committee for the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning’s Planning Accreditation Board.

ENGLISH – Michael LeMahieu received the Frederic D. Weinstein Memorial Fellowship from Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas-Austin. The fellowship provides a stipend and a month in residence at the Ransom Center. In April, LeMahieu presented a paper titled “Ordinary Logic” at a conference on Logic and Literary Form at the University of California-Berkeley.

ART – Joey Manson installed a new sculpture as part of the Arts Around Roswell, Georgia initiative.

HISTORY – Steven Marks received the Senior Scholar Award of the Southern Conference of Slavic Studies at organization’s annual meeting in Alexandria, Virginia in April.

ENGLISH – Dominic Mastroianni’s chapter “Revolutionary Time and Democracy’s Causes in Melville’s ‘Pierre’” was reprinted in the Norton Critical Edition of Herman Melville’s novel “Pierre; or, The Ambiguities,” edited by Robert S. Levine (University of Maryland) and Cindy Weinstein (California Institute of Technology). The chapter originally appeared in Mastroianni’s book “Politics and Skepticism in Antebellum American Literature” (Cambridge 2014).

LANGUAGES – Tiffany Creegan Miller was invited to Elon University in North Carolina on April 6th to give a talk on Kaqchikel Maya children’s songs in relation to contemporary Pan-Maya activism in Guatemala and participate in a panel discussion of the film, “Ixcanul” (2015). Both of these events were part of a series focusing on indigenous rights in Guatemala in the 21st century. Miller also was invited to be a guest lecturer for a medical Spanish class at Brown University on March 13th to discuss health care initiatives focusing on diabetes and child malnutrition in Guatemalan Maya communities.

ENGLISH – John Morgenstern published the first volume of “The T. S. Eliot Studies Annual.” (He is general editor.) The annual strives to be the leading venue for the critical reassessment of Eliot’s life and work in light of the ongoing publication of his letters, critical volumes of his complete prose, the new edition of his complete poems and the forthcoming critical edition of his plays.

HISTORY – The spring 2017 issue of Humanity includes a dossier on Swedish economist Gunnar Myrdal (1898-1987) for which Maribel Morey co-authored the introduction and authored an article. In January 2016, she was invited to attend a Gunnar Myrdal workshop at Harvard Law School, and this Humanity dossier is the result of the conversations that started in that meeting. Morey is invited to speak at two events in May — the 2017 meeting of the Stockholm Philanthropy Symposium and the public seminar inaugurating the new guest scholar program in philanthropy studies at Ersta Sköndal Bräcke University College, also in Stockholm.

ENGLISH – At the 48th annual meeting of the American Society for Eighteenth Century Studies, Lee Morrissey spoke about “Behn’s Oroonoko and the Emergence of ‘Slavery’ as a Metaphor,” on a panel, “Race – now you see it, now you don’t” – co-chaired by Pamela Cheek (University of New Mexico) and Margaret Waller (Pomona). He learned there that Professor Waller’s father is Dean Robert Waller, the last dean of the College of Liberal Arts at Clemson.

ENGLISH – Mike Pulley  has two poems, “Out of Place” and “How the World Was Made,” coming out in the Summer 2017 issue of The Carolina Quarterly, the literary journal of University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Pulley is also serving for the second semester as facilitator of the Clemson University Writers’ Group, a program of Clemson’s Office of Teaching Effectiveness and Innovation.

ENGLISH – On April 7 at the annual Shakespeare Association of America Meeting in Atlanta, Elizabeth Rivlin presented a paper titled “Shakespeare and Contemporary Middlebrow Fiction: Elizabeth Nunez’s ‘Prospero’s Daughter’ and Terry McMillan’s ‘How Stella Got her Groove Back’” in the seminar “Shakespeare and Black America,” led by Patricia Cahill (Emory University) and Kim F. Hall (Barnard College).

LANGUAGES – Johannes Schmidt’s book chapter “Herder’s Religious Anthropology in His Later Writings” was published in “Herder: Philosophy and Anthropology”  in the United Kingdom by Oxford University Press in March. It will be published in North America and elsewhere in May. From the publisher’s description: “J. G. Herder is enjoying a renaissance in philosophy and related disciplines and yet there are, as yet, few books on him. This unprecedented collection fills a large gap in the secondary literature, highlighting the genuinely innovative and distinctive nature of Herder’s philosophy.  […] The second part then examines further aspects of this understanding of human nature and what emerges from it: the human-animal distinction; how human life evolves over space and time on the basis of a natural order; the fundamentally hermeneutic dimension to human existence; and the interrelatedness of language, history, religion and culture.”

ART – Greg Shelnutt’s sculpture, “Samovar,” was accepted for exhibit in the show, “Steeped: The Art of Tea,” at 108 Contemporary in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Curated by Anh Thuy Nguyen and Janet Hasegawa, the show runs through May 21.

ENGLISH – Rhondda Robinson Thomas was the featured panelist for “Innovative Approaches to Commemoration, Race, and Place: A Conversation with Rhondda Robinson Thomas” at the Southern States Communication Association Conference on April 7. She discussed how her project “Call My Name: African Americans in Early Clemson University History” reflects ways that archival research and digital technologies can excavate histories and places that have been hidden, lost or covered over; the identification of efficient and effective processes in using the archive to better understand how commemoration and cultural heritage sites and historical texts preserve national and cultural identities, especially in terms of gender, race and class relations; and innovations in scholarship through partnerships between scholars in the humanities and in architecture and design. Carole Blair (UNC-Chapel Hill), Jason Black (UNC-Charlotte), and Cynthia King (Furman) provided responses that included the methodological, critical and theoretical insights they have developed from their own work. Thomas also accepted an invitation to participate in the “Universities and Slavery: Bound by History” pre-conference workshop sponsored by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University on March 2, where scholars discussed issues related to the legacy of slavery at their institutions and compared best practices.

LANGUAGES – Graciela Tissera presented her research on literature, film and culture, “The Fiction of Borges and Cortázar in Film: Exploring the Realm of Metaphysical Imagery,” and chaired a panel on adapting philosophers to film at the Southwest Popular/American Culture Association 38th Annual Conference in Albuquerque, New Mexico (February 17). Tissera’s students, Elouise Cram and Rebecca McConnell, participated in the panel to discuss their Creative Inquiry projects related to the Hispanic world through film, literature and media. Elouise Cram discussed the film adaptation of Gabriel García Márquez’s short story “The Saint” and Rebecca McConnell the cinematic interpretation of the novel “Aura” by Carlos Fuentes.

LANGUAGES – Eric Touya read a paper entitled “Remembering the Great War: Apollinaire, Proust, Claudel, Valéry” at France and the Memory of the Great War: An Interdisciplinary Conference at the University of South Alabama, Mobile, Alabama. He also read a paper entitled “Sens, Interprétations, et signifiances musicales chez Valéry, Barthes, et Bonnefoy” at “Le Sens et les sens/Sense and the Senses,” the 2017 International Colloquium on 20th and 21st French and Francophone Studies at the University of Indiana in Bloomington.

ENGLISH – Jillian Weise’s poems were published online at Boston Review for National Poetry Month. One of the poems, “The Early American Hour,” was inspired by Jonathan Beecher Field’s work. Weise was the keynote speaker at the annual conference of the Association for Theopoetics. She gave a talk titled “Permission and Provocation” at Davidson College. And, most recently, she presented at the Disability as Spectacle Conference at UCLA.

PERFOMING ARTS – Bruce Whisler served as mastering engineer for a newly-released CD entitled “Trumpets of Brazil.” The CD is a compilation of recordings from many of the most prominent trumpet players in Brazilian orchestras and universities. It is being released by the International Trumpet Guild.

RELIGIOUS STUDIES – Benjamin White had an article, entitled “Justin between Paul and the Heretics: The Salvation of Christian Judaizers in Dialogue with Trypho 47” accepted for the Journal of Early Christian Studies. He was also invited to contribute a chapter entitled “Paul and his Diverse Champions” for the Cambridge History of Ancient Christianity.

ART – Valerie Zimany has received the The Antinori Fellowship for Ceramic Artists for a two-week residency at The Hambidge Center in Georgia from June 6-18.

Faculty news recap in the College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities, Nov. 26, 2016 – Jan. 20, 2017

ENGLISH – Susanna Ashton traveled to Charleston, S.C. in January to be interviewed for a four-part documentary series on migration being produced by Nutopia, a British television company. This series will feature one episode devoted to her work on those who suffered the consequences of forced migration or kidnapping from Africa during the era of the global slave trade. In particular, the documentary will feature Ashton’s original research on John Andrew Jackson, a man who escaped bondage on a plantation labor camp in South Carolina to become an author, abolitionist and agitator. This film series is anticipated to air on the History Channel in early summer 2017.

LANGUAGES – Luca Barattoni gave a lecture at the Department of Cinema and Television Studies at Kadir Has University in Istanbul on Dec. 7. His topic was “The Relevance of the Neorealist Debate to Contemporary World Cinema.”

HISTORY – Stephanie Barczewski was invited to Paris-Sorbonne University to present her work at the conference “Mythology and “Nation Building: N.F.S. Grundtvig and His Contemporaries,” which took place on Jan. 24 and 25.  The conference focused on the role played by pre-Christian mythologies in the formation of national identities in the nineteenth century. Barczewski’s paper was entitled “The Arthurian Legend and the Construction of an Imperial Vision for the Late Victorian British Nation.”

PERFORMING ARTS – Anthony Bernarducci was invited to guest-conduct the Southeastern United States Choral Festival hosted by Troy University. The honor choir consisted of 130 high school students. A public concert was presented on Jan. 14th.

ENGLISH – David Blakesley published two hypertext articles at the Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative hosted by the University of Michigan. He was interviewed by Brian Gaines (RCID) for “The Wrench in the Gears: How Independent Academic Presses Can Disrupt the Publishing Model.” 28 Nov. 2016. The second, “The Future of Digital Publishing, Circa 2003” (2 Dec. 2016), reflects on the emergence of digital books and the making of one of the first digital books ever cataloged in the MLA International Bibliography in 2003. Parlor Press, the scholarly publishing company founded and edited by  Blakesley, announced on Jan. 11 that one of its recent publications in poetry, Go On by Ethel Rackin, was named a finalist for the 2016 National Jewish Book Award by the National Jewish Council.

HISTORY – Vernon Burton had two essays, “Age of Lincoln: Then and Now,” pp. 11-26 and “Edgefield Reconstruction Political Black Leaders, pp. 161-172, published in Michael Bonner and Fritz Hamer (eds.) South Carolina in the Civil War and Reconstruction Eras: Essays from the Proceedings of the South Carolina Historical Association, (University of South Carolina Press, 2016). On Dec. 5, in Washington, D.C., he served on a National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) panel to evaluate applications to the NEH Humanities Connections, a new grant program. In Denver, at the annual meeting of the American Historical Association (AHA) he presented a paper, “On Historians as Expert Witnesses.” He was also interviewed at the AHA for C-SPAN TV to be broadcast later this year. As a member of the Clemson University MLK, Jr. committee, he helped organize and lead a discussion on Dr. King’s book, Why We Can’t Wait. On Jan. 12, he spoke on voting rights and discrimination at a luncheon meeting of the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice. Burton has appeared on SCETV and other public stations in three different programs during December and January.

COLLEGE AND PERFORMING ARTS – On Jan. 7, 2017, Richard Goodstein, Eric Lapin (performing arts) and Ron McCurdy (University of Southern California) presented “The Artist Entrepreneur: Unlocking and Nurturing the Creative Process” at the Jazz Education Network conference in New Orleans.

ENGLISH – Jan Holmevik’s article, “Where creativity meets academics, Using digital media to enhance core curricula,” appeared in the Adobe Education Exchange.

ENGLISH – Walt Hunter’s article on finance and the history of the ode, “Planetary Dejection: An Ode to the Commons,” appears in the current issue of the journal symplokē.

ENGLISH – Steve Katz, Pearce Professor of Professional Communication, had three poems about rhetoric/science/technology published in Elohi Gadugi: “Three Articles of Faith;” “Posthumanistic;” Divorce in the Cosmos: A Complaint.” He reviewed an article (written as a short story) for Enculturation: A Journal of Rhetoric, Writing, and Culture. And he was invited to be a discussion leader for the Research Network Forum (RNF) at the Conference of College Composition and Communication (CCCC) in March. These all-day sessions, facilitated by scholars recognized for their expertise in their fields, are dedicated to the working with and improving the research of doctoral students nationwide in rhetoric, composition and technical/scientific writing.

ENGLISH – Wittgenstein and Modernism, a book Michael LeMahieu co-edited with Karen Zumhagen-Yekplé (Tulane University), was published in January by the University of Chicago Press. LeMahieu gave two papers at the MLA Convention in Philadelphia, one on “Modernism and Civil Rights” and another on “Wittgenstein and Literary Studies.”

HISTORY – Pamela Mack published a reflection in the History of Science Society January 2017 newsletter.

HISTORY – Steven Marks gave a public lecture Jan. 6 titled “The Global Legacy of the Russian Revolution” at the Mining Institute in Newcastle, UK, in connection with the annual meeting of the British Study Group on the Russian Revolution. His article, “Cultural Migrations between Spain and Russia,” was published in Cuadernos de Historia Contemporanea (Universidad Complutense Madrid), vol. 28 (2016).

ENGLISH – Building the British Atlantic World, a book to which Lee Morrissey contributed an essay, won the 2016 Allen G. Noble Book Award. This award is given by the International Society for Landscape, Place and Material Culture and recognizes the best-edited book in the field of North American material culture. Building the British Atlantic World: Spaces, Places, and Material Culture, 1600-1850, was published in 2016 by the University of North Carolina Press

ENGLISH – Angela Naimou’s book, Salvage Work: U.S. and Caribbean Literatures amid the Debris of Legal Personhood (Fordham 2015), has received honorable mention for the William Sanders Scarborough Prize awarded by the Modern Language Association for an outstanding scholarly study of African American literature or culture. The Modern Language Association of America is the oldest and largest association for the study and teaching of languages and literature. The William Sanders Scarborough Prize was established in 2001 and named for the first African American member of the MLA, a scholar of classical philology and languages who was brought up in the South. Naimou’s book also won the 2016 ASAP book prize for best study of the arts of the present. In December, she was an invited speaker at “A Mobile World Literature and the Return of Place: New Diasporic Writing Beyond the Black Atlantic,” a conference hosted by the Catholic University of Eichstaett-Ingolstadt (Germany), where she presented her current work on refugee timespaces and contemporary literature.

ENGLISH – Barton Palmer’s most recent books are:

  • (With Marc C. Conner), eds. Screening Modern Irish Fiction and Drama.  This volume is the second to appear in the Palgrave Macmillan book series, Adaptation and Visual Culture, for which Palmer and Julie Grossman serve as general editors.
  • (With Homer Pettey and Steven Sanders), eds. Hitchcock’s Moral Gaze, published by SUNY Press.

Palmer also published “John Huston and Postwar Hollywood: The Night of the Iguana in Context” in Douglas McFarland and Wesley King, eds., John Huston as Adaptor (SUNY Press), 125-138.

PERFORMING ARTS – Shannon Robert is working with Salt Lake City Acting Company as the scene designer of the world premiere of Harbur Gate, a new trilogy by Kathleen Cahill, directed by Tamilla Woodward. Robert was nominated for the Broadway World Atlanta Regional Theatre Award for Best Professional Scenic Design for In The Heights at Aurora Theatre and Theatrical Outfit (at The Rialto).

LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE AND CITY PLANNING & REAL ESTATE DEVELOPMENT – Tom Schurch was invited to serve as a visiting professor at the Architecture and Building Institute at Kazakh National Research Technical University in Almaty, Kazakhstan. During an intensive two-week period this past December Professor Schurch presented daily lectures on urban design to graduate and undergraduate students in architecture, in addition to directing them in a studio project focused on campus master planning.

ARCHITECTURE – On Jan. 11, in Orlando, Fla., the National Association of Home Builders announced a house in Clemson, designed and detailed by Rob Seel, as the Best in American Living, Remodel of the Year. Seel and local builder, Ken Berry, were recognized for the renovation, additions and remodeling of a 1950 Cape Cod-style house for two sisters who grew up in the house and have returned to Clemson for retirement. “Cape Cod Revisited / Riggs Renovation” also received a Best in American Living Platinum Award for Remodel over $250,000. Through Blurb, Seel has published a photography monograph entitled Core Construction: an Artist-Architect’s View of the Job Site for the Clemson University Core Campus Project. The book presents a collection of 150 photos from the nearly 27,000 progress shots Seel took while serving as a local resource architect on the project for two years. Also through Blurb, Seel has published Central Focus: a Photographic Exploration of the Town of Central, South Carolina.  The book presents the photographs included in a 2014 exhibition plus photos taken since.

PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION – In December, Kelly Smith presented  “Social and Conceptual Issues in Astrobiology” to the engineering and medicine working panel of the National Academy of Sciences.

CITY PLANNING AND REAL ESTATE DEVELOPMENT – Jim Spencer has been invited to give a keynote and lead a discussion on his 2014 book, Globalization and Urbanization The Global Urban Ecosystem, at Cleveland State University’s College of Urban Affairs.

PERFORMING ARTS – Richard St. Peter directed a short film, The Truth and Nothing But the Truth, for the Romanian National Theatre, Marin Sorescu. It premiered online on Jan. 18 and will be screened throughout Europe and the United States as part of a transatlantic theatre festival known as the Plurality of Privacy Project. (The film will be screened at the College of William and Mary’s 10th Global Film Festival Feb. 23-26.) St. Peter is teaching at the University of Craiova in Romania this year as a Fulbright Scholar.

ENGLISH – Rhondda Robinson Thomas  participated in a roundtable on “The Civil War and Memory” at the Modern Language Association Conference in Philadelphia on Jan. 6.

LANGUAGES – Eric Touya read a paper entitled “Claudel diplomate, poète, et exégète” on the panel “(Re)-presenting Claudel Today” at the Modern Language Association Conference in Philadelphia Jan. 6. The program was arranged by the Paul Claudel Society.

ENGLISH – The New York Times published Jillian Weise’s essay, “The Dawn of the ‘Tryborg,’”  on Nov. 30. Her video, “How to Write for The New York Times,” appeared across the NYT social media platforms on Dec. 2. Weise was invited to an empathy event and profiled in New York Magazine on Dec.  26. She is featured in the documentary Guns & Empathy, which was nominated for a 2017 Ellie Award – the national magazine awards for print and digital media – in the video category.

HISTORY – Lee B. Wilson published “Worlds of Violence,” Reviews in American History 44 (2016): 532-38.

PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION – Daniel Wueste has been elected to a three-year term on the Executive Committee of the Society for Ethics Across the Curriculum.  The society holds an international conference annually in the fall (Clemson has hosted two of them: 2002 and 2015), and publishes the peer reviewed journal Teaching Ethics. Wueste served two terms as SEAC’s president (2007-2012).

 

Faculty news recap in the College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities, Oct. 26-Nov. 25, 2016

Faculty Notes

HISTORY – At the North American Conference on British Studies in Washington D.C.,  Stephanie Barczewski chaired a panel on “Objectifying Empire: The Legacy of Objects and the Imperial Experience,” while Caroline Dunn was commentator for the panel “Medieval Law and the Margins of Society.”

ARCHITECTURE – On Nov. 10, an exhibit of selected sketches and watercolors by Jim Barker opened in the Sheffield Wood Gallery at the Fine Arts Center in Greenville, S.C. In his first show, Jim displays works completed from 2000 until the present. Jim started drawing while an architecture student and has done pen-and-ink and pencil drawings of many campus scenes as well as places he has visited around the world. Since returning to the faculty, he has done several watercolors and experimented with charcoal. The Fine Arts Center, established in 1974, provides advanced comprehensive arts instruction to students who are artistically talented and wish to take an intensive pre-professional program of study. The exhibit runs through Feb. 3, 2017 in the Sheffield Wood Gallery, 102 Pine Knoll Road in Greenville.

PERFORMING ARTS – Anthony Bernarducci had the first movement of a three-movement choral work published with GIA Publications. The piece is titled “Kyrie: Missa Brevis San Francesco d’ Assisi.”

CONSTRUCTION SCIENCE AND MANAGEMENT – Joseph Burgett was awarded the “2016 Regional Excellence Teaching Award” by the Southeast Regional Associated Schools of Construction for his demonstrated excellence in teaching at the undergraduate and/or graduate level.

HISTORY – Vernon Burton’s essay, “Localism and Confederate Nationalism: The Transformation of Values from Community to Nation in Edgefield, South Carolina,” pp. 107-123, 233-39 was published in Citizen Scholar: Essays in Honor of Walter Edgar, edited by Robert H. Brinkmeyer, Jr. (USC Press). Oct 27, he presented a lecture “A New Birth of Freedom” (chap. 2) from his book manuscript “Race and the Supreme Court” at the American History Seminar at the Institute of Historical Research, University London. On Oct. 28, at the British American Nineteenth Century History (BRanch) 23rd annual meeting at Madingley Hall, he spoke briefly about historian Charles Joyner. The next evening he gave the keynote, “Reconstructing Reconstruction” at Cambridge University. For their 75th anniversary, on Oct. 8, Burton presented a lecture, “The South as Other: The Southerner as Stranger,” to the McKissick Club in Greenwood, S.C. On Nov. 26 at the Social Science History Association annual meeting in Chicago he presented a paper “Using the Social Web to Explore Online Discourse and Southern Identity and Memory of the Civil War” in a session on “Collective Memory and Public Discourse.” The next day he chaired and served as a commentator on the presidential session “Sustaining Soil Fertility in Agricultural Systems.”

HISTORY – Elizabeth Carney presented a paper titled “The Public Image of Eurydice, mother of Philip II” at the conference on Hellenistic Queenship at the University of Waterloo. 

LANGUAGES – Stephen Fitzmaurice was invited to present “High school interpreters:  What are the other duties?” at the national, biennial Conference of Interpreter Trainers held in Lexington, Kentucky.  This work was presented entirely in American Sign Language and is the result of a landmark ethnographic exploration uncovering the other functions an educational interpreter performs aside from the direct transfer of meaning in high school environments.

HISTORIC PRESERVATION – Frances Ford and Brent Fortenberry’s paper, “Hybrid Methodologies for Mortar Analysis, a View from the Carolina Lowcountry” was published in Proceedings of the 4th Historic Mortars Conference HMC2016, 673-680, edited by Ioanna Papayiannai, Maria Stefanidou and Vasiliki Pachta.

COLLEGE – Rick Goodstein has been elected as a member of the Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi, the oldest and most selective honor society for all academic disciplines in the United States. Founded in 1897, Phi Kappa Phi is a charter member of the Association of College Honor Societies.

HISTORY – Roger Grant’s 32nd book, “Electric Interurbans and the American People,” has been published by Indiana University Press. Grant gave an address on Oct. 31 to the Monday Luncheon Group in Columbia, S.C. on “Railroads and the Historian.” In early November, he represented Simpson College of Iowa at the inauguration of Scott Cochran as the new president of Spartanburg Methodist College. On Nov. 13, Grant gave an address to the Old Edgefield Genealogical Society on “The Georgia & Florida Railroad and Its Greenwood, South Carolina Extension.”

ENGLISH – Walt Hunter presented a paper at the Modernist Studies Association conference in Pasadena, California called “On Togetherness: Claudia Jones’s Poetics of Black Revolutionary Feminism.” Hunter was quoted on John Clare, poetics, and dispossession in an article in The Atlantic, “The Poems That Help With Sudden Change.” Hunter’s poem “No Trees” was published in November in the print issue of Prelude magazine.

ENGLISH – Steve Katz, Pearce Professor of Professional Communication, had “The Corpus of Poems” published in Pre/Text, a special issue on “Games and Rhetorics” edited by Jan Holmevik. The poems were: “After Reading Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid (A Pantoum);” “The Clone Comes to Consciousness;” “Neuronic;” “Mimesis Mine;” “Pinball Goes Subatomic;” “Anyon There?;” “Virtual Gloves;” and “Avatar of Love.” Steve also participated as a full committee member in a doctoral defense at NC State University, in which Elizabeth Pitts examined the ethics of genetic engineering as a new and unregulated form of writing in DIYi/hacker labs. She passed.

ARCHITECTURE – Peter Laurence’s book, “Becoming Jane Jacobs,” has won the Urban Communication Foundation’s 2016 Jane Jacobs Book Award. Also, the book is included on economist Tyler Cowen’s year-end list of the best non-fiction books of 2016. In late November, Laurence gave a keynote lecture at KTH in Stockholm, Sweden, following presentations at the University of Virginia and Boston College.

HISTORIC PRESERVATION – Amalia Leifeste coordinated a PechaKucha presentation and mixer event to bring together students studying the built environment through various degree programs in Charleston, S.C. Presenters and attendees hailed from the American College of the Building Arts, Clemson Architecture Center in Charleston, the College of Charleston’s historic preservation and community planning program, the Art Institute of Charleston’s interior design program and Clemson + CofC’s graduate program in historic preservation.

PERFORMING ARTS – Andrew Levin’s musical composition, “Round Dance no. 13,” was selected a winner in the South Carolina State Performance Assessment Sight Reading Composition Competition. Orchestras across the state will perform the piece in late spring 2017.

LANGUAGES – A new collection, “Nietzsche and Dostoevsky: Philosophy, Morality, Tragedy,” edited by Jeff Love and Jeffrey Metzger, has just been published by Northwestern University Press.

HISTORY – In November, Steven Marks delivered a keynote lecture titled  “Capitalism and the Information Nexus” at the ‘Costs of Information: Northern European Markets, 12th-18th Centuries” conference at the University of Copenhagen.  

HISTORY – Michael Meng chaired a panel at the Association for Slavic, East European and Eurasian Studies meeting in Washington D.C. “One for All and All for One: Mass Responses to Soviet Political and Cultural Influences, 1920s-70s” and chaired a roundtable session on “Tolstoy and the Fiction of History.”

LANGUAGES – Tiffany Creegan Miller published a book chapter entitled, “Una sociedad fragmentada: la heterogeneidad maya durante el conflicto armado guatemalteco y la violencia de la ‘posguerra’ en ‘Insensatez’” in the edited volume “Horacio Castellanos Moya: el diablo en el espejo,” published by Ediciones Eón in Mexico and edited by María del Carmen Caña Jiménez and Vinodh Venkatesh. In other news, Miller also presented work on appropriations of Japanese cultural forms in K’iche’ Maya poetry at the Symposium on Indigenous Languages and Cultures of Latin America (ILCLA) at Ohio State University. She also was invited to be a guest lecturer for a medical Spanish class at Brown University to discuss health care initiatives in Guatemalan Maya communities.

HISTORY – Maribel Morey was very active at the meeting of the Association for Non-Profit Organizations and Voluntary Actions meeting in Washington D.C, presenting papers in two sessions and also participating in a mini-plenary session. 

ENGLISH – Barton Palmer and Murray Pomerance  received the 2016 SAMLA Studies Award  for their multi-author volume “George Cukor: Hollywood Master,” published in 2015 by Edinburgh UP. The award is the first for an edited volume presented by the South Atlantic Modern Language Association

ENGLISH – Elizabeth Rivlin was invited by her alma mater, Vassar College, to participate in an alumni panel, as well as other events, to commemorate the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death. The panel included Shakespeare scholars and practitioners.

PERFORMING ARTS – Shannon Robert won the Atlanta Theatre Suzi Bass Award for Best Scene Design for a Musical for her design of “In The Heights” for Aurora Theatre and Theatrical Outfit.

CITY PLANNING AND REAL ESTATE DEVELOPMENT – Jim Spencer has been appointed by U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx  to serve as a subject matter expert on the new federal Advisory Committee on Transportation Equity (ACTE). According to the U.S. Department of Transportation, the committee is intended “to connect people to opportunity, strengthen and revitalize communities, and ensure that transportation systems and facilities reflect and incorporate the input of all of the people and communities they touch.” The ACTE will provide independent advice and recommendations to the Secretary of Transportation about USDOT’s efforts to: 1) institutionalize DOT’s Opportunity Principles into the Department’s programs, policies, and activities; 2) empower communities to have a meaningful voice in local and regional transportation decisions; 3) strengthen and establish partnerships with other governmental agencies regarding opportunity issues; and 4) sharpen enforcement tools to ensure compliance with opportunity-enhancing regulations. The ACTE will consist of up to 15 voting members who will serve two-year terms and meet approximately twice per year. The committee’s first public meeting will be held December 15, 2016 in Washington, D.C.

GEOGRAPHY – Billy Terry presented a paper titled “Seasonal Guest Work and Vulnerability in Hospitality and Tourism: Challenges for J-1 and H-2B Workers” at the annual meeting of the Southeastern Division of the Association of American Geographers.

ENGLISH – Rhondda Robinson Thomas (English) made three presentations on her project “Call My Name: African Americans in Early Clemson University History” at EDUMAX in San Diego on Nov. 1; for the roundtable “Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Public Memory and Commemoration of Racial Violence” at the Southern Historians Association Conference in St. Petersburg, Florida, on Nov. 3; and “Of Slaves, Sharecroppers, and Convicts: Unsettling Clemson University’s History” at the University of Maryland for the “Democracy Then and Now Series: co-sponsored by the Department of English and the Local Americanists on Nov. 7.

LANGUAGES – Graciela Tissera presented her research on the supernatural in Hispanic films, “Spirits Trapped between Worlds: The Devil’s Backbone by Guillermo del Toro,” and chaired a panel on film and paranormal phenomena at the Film and History Conference in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on Oct. 29. Tissera’s students, Jodie Holodak and Rebecca McConnell, participated in the panel to discuss their Creative Inquiry projects related to health and business topics in film and media. Tissera also attended the Film and Literature Conference organized by the University of Buenos Aires in Argentina (Nov. 8) to present her research paper entitled “Theories of Knowledge in the Fiction of Borges and Cortázar.”

LANGUAGES – Eric Touya published a book entitled “The Case for the Humanities: Pedagogy, Polity, Interdisciplinarity.” Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield, 2016. The book contends that the well-being of the humanities, as a field of study, has not only academic but also cultural, political and existential ramifications.

ART – Anderson Wrangle gave an artist’s talk at the Crutchfield Gallery of the Spartanburg County Public Library on Dec. 1 in conjunction with his exhibition “Falling Water.”

PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION – Daniel Wueste published, “Hard Cases, Discordant Voices: Professional Ethics and ‘Ethics Plain and Simple’,” in The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, Volume 102, Issue 6, 1785.

Program Notes

CONSTRUCTION SCIENCE AND MANAGEMENT – Student competition teams (Commercial and Design Build)  were awarded second place in the recent Southeast Regional Associated Schools of Construction Student Competitions. Thanks to Joe Burgett and Shima Clarke for all of their hard work serving as team coaches.

PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION – The Department of Philosophy and Religion hosted a visit by Dr. Brian Butler, Distinguished Professor of Humanities at UNC-Asheville on Nov. 9.  He gave a talk on a pragmatist approach to Constitutional Law as part of the Lemon Lectures in Social, Legal and Political Thought, and met with students in Andrew Garnar’s “American Pragmatism” seminar to discuss his forthcoming book. This provided the students an exciting opportunity to engage in a lively discussion with an expert in John Dewey’s philosophy of law.

ENGLISH – On Nov. 11, graduate students in Clemson’s Master of Arts in Professional Communication program hosted a World Usability Day celebration in the Class of 1941 Studio. Students from the Human Centered Computing program and several MAPC alumni were in attendance as well. The guest speaker lineup featured Mike Wolfe of Slalom Consulting, Maggie Reilly of TSYS, Cliff Anderson of Ally Bank, and Bryce Howard of U.S. Naval Air Systems Command. Presentations covered a wide range of topics within usability including entertainment platform design parameters, software development, realistic chatbot creation and scrum project management. The celebration concluded with a round table discussion of career opportunities in the field. The MAPC students would like to thank Dr. Tharon Howard for his help in planning and all our attendees who made the event a success.

PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION – The Clemson University Ethics Bowl public policy debate team, led by coaches Stephen Satris, John Park, and Adam Gies, took third place at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Ethics Bowl competition on Nov. 19. After going undefeated three rounds in a row, the team narrowly lost in the semifinal round with Wake Forest. The Clemson team earned a spot at the National Ethics Bowl Competition in Dallas in February 2017.

 

Faculty news recap in the College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities, Sept. 30-Oct. 25, 2016

ENGLISH – Susanna Ashton was invited to the recent premiere of “Gina’s Journey: The Search for William Grimes,” a documentary film for which she consulted and was interviewed. Ashton’s earlier published works on Grimes and his memoir of enslavement, escape and survival led to her involvement in the film.

ARCHITECTURE – President Emeritus James F. Barker, FAIA, has been named an honorary member of the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA). Honorary membership is among the highest honors ASLA may bestow upon non-landscape architects in recognition of notable service to the profession. According to ASLA, “James Barker has always valued a sense of place and has continually promoted and valued the profession of landscape architecture due to his decades of work as an architect and as president of Clemson University from 1999 to 2013. As Clemson’s former dean of the College of Architecture, Arts and the Humanities, Barker led the creation of South Carolina’s sole bachelor of landscape architecture program with graduates now spread throughout the country. Clemson’s master of landscape architecture program also became established during Barker’s tenure as president.” The award was announced at the annual meeting and expo of ASLA in New Orleans.

HISTORY – In September, Vernon Burton was interviewed about Texas voting rights history for Reveal, a weekly public radio show from The Center for Investigative Reporting that airs on over 300 NPR stations. Their story of Texas’s voting rights history was based largely on Burton’s expert report for the NAACP/LDF in the in-person photo voter ID case. The segment aired the weekend of Oct. 1. The story, part of a whole episode on voting rights, is here, and the podcast via iTunes is here. On Oct. 19, Burton presented a lecture “Breaking Massive Resistance, 1954-1971” and participated in a seminar on digital humanities at Manchester University. On Oct. 20, Burton presented his draft chapter 3, “The Supreme Court in Reconstruction” from his in-progress book manuscript “Race and the Supreme Court” to a seminar at the University of Edinburgh. On Oct. 24, he presented a lecture on “Race and the Supreme Court” and presented a seminar on digital humanities at Chester University.  On Oct. 25, he presented draft chapter 4, “The Supreme Court and the Jim Crow Counterrevolution” of his manuscript at the Rothmire American Institute University of Oxford.

PERFORMING ARTS – Paul Buyer’s article “Teaching Jazz Drumset” was published in the Jazz Education Network newsletter.

ART – Andrea Feeser’s research on Jimmie Durham, “Traces and Shiny Evidence,” was presented at the Textile Society of America’s 15th Biennial Symposium in Savannah, Ga. The symposium was held at the Savannah College of Art and Design in late October.

HISTORIC PRESERVATION – Frances Ford was invited to sit on a panel at her alma mater, the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. She spoke to current historic preservation students about her career path after graduation and participated in a question and answer period with the students. In other news, Ford was invited to present her paper, “Hybrid methodologies for mortar analysis, a digital view from the Carolina Lowcountry at the 4th Historic Mortars Conference on October 12th.” The subject matter of her presentation came from her fall 2015 advanced conservation class. On October 15 Ford presented a paper entitled, “Ruins in a New Age: Old Sheldon Church” at the Noreen Stoner Drexel Cultural and Historic Preservation program’s annual conference at Salve Regina University in Newport, Rhode Island.

COLLEGE – Dean Richard Goodstein’s article “The New Performing-Arts Curriculum” appeared in the Oct. 9 issue of the Chronicle of Higher Education. The piece was co-authored with Eric Lapin (Clemson performing arts) and Ronald C. McCurdy (University of Southern California Thornton School of Music). In other news, Goodstein has been invited to serve on the advisory board for the College of Creative Arts at Miami University, his alma mater.

HISTORY – Congratulations to Roger Grant for winning the 2016 Simpson College (Iowa) Alumni Achievement Award. The award recognizes outstanding career achievement, service to the community and service to Simpson College. Grant received the award at Simpson’s alumni recognition reception in October. In other news, Grant was recently re-elected president of the Lexington Group, Inc., an international transportation organization of academics and senior transportation executives.

HISTORIC PRESERVATION – Carter Hudgins and Amalia Leifeste recently presented “As Built: Documentation of CCC-era Buildings, Structures and Landscapes at Kings Mountain National Military Park as Planned vs. Practiced” at the symposium A Century of Design in the Park: Preserving the Built Environment in National and State Parks, sponsored by the National Center for Preservation Training and Technology in Sante Fe, New Mexico.

ENGLISH – Walt Hunter’s essay “For a Global Poetics” was published in ASAP/Journal 1.3. The essay precedes a forum on “global poetics” that Hunter edited and that includes the poets Manal Al-Sheikh, Omar Berrada, Whitney DeVos, Julie Morrissy, Katie Peterson, NourbeSe Philip, Marie de Quatrebarbes, Emma Ramadan, Keston Sutherland and Timothy Yu.

HISTORY – Thomas Kuehn published “Protecting Dowries in Law in Renaissance Florence,” in Studies on Florence and the Italian Renaissance in Honour of F.W. Kent, ed. Peter Howard and Cecilia Hewlett (Turnhout: Brepols, 2016), 199-216.

ARCHITECTURE – Peter Laurence’s book “Becoming Jane Jacobs” was featured in the November issue of The Atlantic magazine, where reviewer Nathaniel Rich described it as “a close, vivid study of Jacobs’s intellectual development.” In September, economist Tyler Cowen wrote that it was “definitely one of the best books of the year.” In addition to press coverage, Laurence has spoken and been invited to speak about his book and participate in symposia and master classes at the Technological University of Delft; Cooper Union; UC Berkeley Center for New Media; San Francisco Bay Area Planning and Urban Research Association; the Eldridge Street Museum in NYC; the Boston College Carroll School of Management; University of Virginia School of Architecture; and the KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm; as well as academic conferences in Chicago and New Orleans. For more information visit becomingjanejacobs.com.

HISTORY – In late September, Steven Marks gave an invited lecture at Tulane entitled “Russia and the History of the Word ‘Capitalism.'” The lecture was sponsored by Tulane’s Jewish Studies program.

ENGLISH – Kathleen Nalley has won the Red Paint Hill Press Editor’s Prize for her full-length poetry collection “Gutterflower.” The press will publish “Gutterflower” in fall 2017. Recently, Nalley’s work has appeared in concis, Fall Lines, Slipstream, New Flash Fiction Review, and the anthology “Red Sky” from Sable Books. South Carolina Poet Laureate Marjory Wentworth selected Nalley’s poem “Last Man on the Moon” as winner of the Saluda River Poetry Prize. Nalley read her work, along with poet Al Black, at Viva! il Vino in Pendleton on Oct. 25.

LANGUAGES – Salvador Oropesa published the book chapter “Lonely Souls in ‘Solo Dios Sabe’ by Carlos Bolado: Pastoralism and Syncretic Spirituality in Times of Crisis” in “The Latin American Road Movie,” edited by Jorge Pérez and Verónica Garibotto. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016. 121-36.

ENGLISH – Mike Pulley has been named facilitator of Clemson University’s fall 2016 writing group, a program offered by the Office of Teaching Effectiveness and Innovation (OTEI). The group, which meets on alternate Tuesdays at 2 p.m. in Brackett 234, is based on the research of Dr. Robert Boice, known by many as the “guru” of scholarly writing. Boice encourages academic faculty to write 15-30 minutes a day and belong to a group that holds them accountable for their writing goals. Clemson’s Writing Group is open to all faculty and graduate students. For more information, contact Mike Pulley (wpulley@clemson.edu) or OTEI (otei@clemson.edu).

ENGLISH— Geveryl Robinson was asked by the Washington Post and American Public Media to record an episode of their eight-part Historically Black podcast series. Robinson submitted a photo of her parents on their wedding day, along with a brief description of the photo’s meaning and her thoughts about the media’s negative depictions of relationships between Black men and women. According to the podcast website: “As part of the Washington Post’s coverage of the Smithsonian’s new National Museum of African American History and Culture, people submitted dozens of objects that make up their own lived experiences of black history, creating a ‘people’s museum’ of personal objects, family photos and more. The Historically Black podcast brings these objects and their stories to life through interviews, archival sound and music. The Washington Post and APM Reports are proud to collaborate in presenting these rich personal histories, along with hosts Keegan-Michael Key, Roxane Gay, Issa Rae and Another Round hosts Heben Nigatu and Tracy Clayton.”

PERFORMING ARTS – Kerrie Seymour performed recently in “Women in Jeopardy” at the Aurora Theatre in Lawrenceville, Ga.

ART – Greg Shelnutt conducted a workshop at the National Association of Schools of Arts and Design (NASAD) pre-meeting workshop on Wednesday, Oct. 12, for new and aspiring art and design administrators in higher education on “Goals, Planning and Time Management” in Baltimore, Maryland.

ENGLISH – Jillian Weise presented work at an experimental film and poetry screening hosted by Public Space One (Oct 9). She gave poetry readings at Converse College (Oct 4) and Coe College (Oct 19).

PHILOSOPHY – Daniel Wueste gave a keynote lecture, “Consequences and Responsibilities,” and conducted a plenary workshop, “Tools for Integrity,” at the 4° Congreso Nacional de Iintegridad Académica at the Universidad De Monterey, Monterrey, Mexico Oct. 20-21. Wueste presented a paper, “Norm Conflict and the Telos of Practice,” at the 18th International Conference of the Society for Ethics Across the Curriculum, “Social Justice and Bioethics: The Rich, the Poor, and the Rest of Us,” in Salt Lake City, Utah, October 6-8. A paper Wueste coauthored with Nicole Martinez (Department of Environmental Engineering and Earth Science, Clemson University), “Balancing theory and practicality: engaging non-ethicists in ethical decision making related to radiological protection,” has been published in Journal of Radiological Protection 36 (2016) 832–84.

ART – Valerie Zimany’s ceramic artworks are currently on view in three international exhibitions at prominent institutions across the country. Her sculpture “Chigiri-e (Bakusou)” is featured in Transference: Transfer Printing and Contemporary Ceramics, an international juried and invitational exhibition at The Clay Studio in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Transference explores how the combination of ceramics and transfer print technology enables the immediacy of printmaking to be joined with the enduring nature of fired clay. Artists use everything from traditional intaglio printing methods to modern technology to make prints that are immediate, personal, digitized, and/or imbued with historic references. The combination of historic process with contemporary ideas and design continues to result in dynamic, thoughtful works of art that resonate through the fields of art, design, history, and technology. The exhibition runs from Oct. 7  – Nov. 28, 2016.  “Chigiri-e (Moonwalker)” was selected for Points of Departure, an international juried exhibition at the John Michael Kohler Arts Center in Sheboygan, Wisconsin from Oct. 20, 2016 through Jan. 1, 2017. A vessel grouping of Zimany’s “Toddlers” is highlighted in A to Z: AMOCA’s Permanent Collection at the American Museum of Ceramic Art in Pomona, California. Zimany’s work was accessioned into the museum collection in 2012 as a gift of Gail A. and Robert M. Brown. The exhibition runs through April 23, 2017.

 

Faculty news recap in the College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities, Aug. 20-Sept. 29, 2016, 2016

ART – The artwork of Todd Anderson was recently acquired by the New York Public Library Print Collection. The collection is one of the few comprehensive, national repositories of printed ephemera and artwork in the country. As such its holdings represent the historic roots of printmaking while simultaneously being a physical collection of fine art prints that collectively constitute the field’s canon. Anderson’s artwork was also recently acquired by U.S. Library of Congress — the de facto national library for the country and  the oldest national cultural institution in the U.S. It holds the second-largest library collection in the world. Artwork acquisition by the U.S. Library of Congress is considered one of the most significant career achievements for a visual artist. Lastly, Todd Anderson’s artwork was acquired by the The Metropolitan Museum of Art. With over 2 million artworks in their permanent collection, the “Met” is the largest museum in the United States. The Met’s collection spans 5,000 years of art from around the globe. Artwork acquisition by the Met can be considered the pinnacle career achievement for an artist. Examples of Todd’s artwork can be seen at www.TheLastGlacier.com

HISTORY – A review essay by Stephanie Barczewski appeared in the Aug. 19 issue of the Times Literary Supplement. Barczewski’s article, entitled “Imperial measurement: Arguing that the British Empire was neither as dominant nor as unified as is often thought,” reviews new volumes by Bernard Porter and Antoinette Burton.

CONSTRUCTION SCIENCE AND MANAGEMENT – Joe Burgett is the first recipient of the Construction Science and Management Endowed Professorship. The professorship was established at Clemson University in 2015 as a result of an endowment fund established by an anonymous donor in recognition of the contribution to the construction industry made by the department faculty through teaching, research and service. Candidates must have an outstanding reputation in the construction discipline as demonstrated by a sustained record of scholarly accomplishment, excellence in classroom teaching and service to the construction industry on a regional, national and/or international level.

HISTORY – On Sept. 14, Vernon Burton presented a paper entitled, “Proving Intent in Voting Rights Cases” at the Harvard University Center for Governmental and International Studies. He spoke at USC – Aiken on “Race and the Supreme Court” for Constitution Day on Sept. 16, and on Sept. 17, spoke on the Civil War at the Edgefield Southern Literary Showcase. Burton was interviewed and quoted in the State newspaper about the scholarship of historian Charles Joyner on Sept. 16; he also published an obituary on Joyner for the College of Charleston’s Lowcountry and Atlantic World (CLAW) website. An interview on his edited book, “Becoming Southern Writers,” was aired on Walter Edgar’s Journal on SC ETV radio. On, Sept. 29, Burton participated in the “The People Speak: Clinton v. Trump,” a Clemson TV webcast. In August, Burton was informed that he had been selected for the S. C. Governor’s Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Humanities to be awarded by the S.C. Humanities Council.

ART – In September, Andrea Feeser was asked by PBS NewsHour to comment on a recently found ancient, indgo-dyed Peruvian textile. The story, “Blue jeans have a 6,000 year-old Peruvian ancestor,” is about a scrap of indigo-dyed fabric that may “rewrite the history of clothing.” Feeser was interviewed because of her research on indigo and her book, “Red, White, and Black Make Blue: Indigo in the Fabric of Colonial South Carolina Life.”

HISTORY – Roger Grant’s article, “Whatever Happened to the Little Red Caboose” appeared in September on the Smithsonian’s “What It Means to Be An American” website. In August, Grant was quoted in the New York Times article “‘A Piece of Penn Station:’ An Existing Departures Board Prompts Wistful Goodbyes.”

ENGLISH – Cynthia Haynes published a new book, “The Homesick Phone Book: Addressing Rhetorics in the Age of Perpetual Conflict, from Southern Illinois University Press.” From the catalog description: “Terrorist attacks, war, and mass shootings by individuals occur on a daily basis all over the world. In “The Homesick Phone Book,” author Cynthia Haynes examines the relationship of rhetoric to such atrocities. Aiming to disrupt conventional modes of rhetoric, logic, argument, and the teaching of writing, Haynes illuminates rhetoric’s ties to horrific acts of violence and the state of perpetual conflict around the world, both in the Holocaust era and more recently.”

ARCHITECTURE – Ulrike Heine was appointed by S.C. Governor Nikki Haley to the Energy Independence and Sustainable Construction Advisory Committee. The purpose of this committee is to assist the state engineer and State Fiscal Accountability Authority (SFAA) by reviewing and analyzing current rating systems referred to the committee by the SFAA board, monitoring the development of new ratings systems as well as updates to current systems, making direct recommendations to the state engineer concerning regulations of rating systems and reporting to the SFAA board concerning the effectiveness of current rating systems.

LANGUAGES – Joseph Mai published an article on how a contemporary French novelist uses literary experimentation to explore ways in which humans and animals are defined in relation to one another: ‘“Un tissu de mots”: Writing Human and Animal Life in Olivia Rosenthal’s Que font les rennes après Noël ?’ appeared in Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal: 49, 3. He also participated in the scientific committee and was an invited speaker at the World Cinema and Television in French Conference, held in September at the University of Cincinnati.

CITY AND REGIONAL PLANNING – Eric A. Morris, won a major paper award for “Negotiating a Financial Package for Freeways: How California’s Collier-Burns Act Helped Pave the Way for the American Interstate Highway Era.” The paper was co-authored with Jeffrey Brown (Florida State) and Brian Taylor (UCLA); Dr. Morris was first author. It won the Wootan Award for best paper in transportation policy and operations from the Transportation Research Board of the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine, one of the seven awards given in 2016 from among the roughly 5,400 manuscripts submitted. The paper examines legislation in California that pioneered a method for paying for a massive freeway system, arguing that 1) the inclusion of urban routes at a time when highway systems were thought to be meant to serve rural areas, 2) a trust fund that sequestered driving-related revenues for use exclusively on roads, and 3) under-taxation of trucking relative to the road damage trucks cause were essential for funding our highway system both in California and later at the national level. The paper will be published in the Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board.

SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY IN SOCIETY – Tom Oberdan was invited to deliver the 24th Vienna Circle Lecture at the University of Vienna on September 16. The topic of his presentation was “‘Our Common Method’ in Logik, Sprache, Philosophie.”

PERFORMING ARTS – Shannon Robert was nominated for a Suzi Bass Award award (an Atlanta-area theatre award) for her scenic design of “In The Heights,” a co-production of the Aurora Theatre and Theatrical Outfit in Lawrenceville, Georgia.

ARCHITECTURE – The photography of Rob Silance was included in a national exhibition of photography titled “Man in the Landscape” at the Photo Place Gallery in Middlebury, Vermont. The opening call for the exhibit states, “The hand of man may lie lightly or heavily  on the landscape but few places on Earth are completely untouched; the visible presence of humans on the planet is almost unavoidable. Here we seek images that demonstrate human impact in ways ranging from the subtle to grotesque.” Silance is currently showing a portion of an ongoing photographic project titled “Dirt for Sale: Constructing the Landscape of the New American South” at the Spartanburg Museum of Art in the group exhibition “(Un)common Space(s).” This national exhibition “broadly examines the relationship between natural, deconstructed, and decaying space. As the health well-being of our planet continues to decline, viewers are challenged to consider such themes as the loss of natural resources, the lack of interaction between humanity and nature, and the decay of urban landscapes.”

ART – Kathleen Thum presented her paper “Depicting Carrying Capacity: Imagined Petroscapes,” at the Petrocultures Conference at Memorial University in St. John’s, Newfoundland, Canada, Aug. 31- Sept 3. This international conference brought together scholars, policy makers, industry employees, artists and public advocacy groups to discuss the social and cultural dimensions of oil and energy. Her solo exhibition, “Carrying Capacity,” was on view at the Wiseman Gallery at Rogue Community College in Grant Pass, Oregon until Aug. 25.

ENGLISH – Inside Higher Ed profiled Jillian Weise’s video art “How to Rush the Academic Job Market.” Weise was an invited speaker at Ohio State University (Sept. 16-17) and the University of Toledo (Sept. 19). At OSU, she led a graduate workshop on academic and creative personae. She also gave a master class on digital production, disability activism and public writing.

RELIGIOUS STUDIES – Benjamin White’s book, “Remembering Paul: Ancient and Modern Contests over the Image of the Apostle” (2014, Oxford University Press) will appear in paperback later this fall.

ART, LEE GALLERY – Denise Woodward-Detrich has a ceramic work titled “Mechanical Alveoli” included in an exhibition titled 10x10x10xTieton. The exhibit is hosted at the Mighty Tieton Warehouse Gallery in Tieton, Washington, and was juried by Adam Gildar of Gildar Gallery in Denver, Colorado. The work is on view through October 9th.

ART – Falling Water, an exhibition of video and photography by Anderson Wrangle is on display through December 8 at the Crutchfield Gallery in the Spartanburg County Public Library. Wrangle describes this body of work as “an exploration of the power and wonder of falling water and the dichotomy between winter and summer. He says, “The fountain has always been a rich metaphor for inspiration, and for a rich inner life, and I see these waterfalls as playing a part in that mode. The contemplation is restorative and rich, even as the subject is powerful and inexorable.”

 

 

Faculty news recap in the College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities, June 1-Aug. 19, 2016

Todd Anderson (art) received a grant through The Sustainable Arts Foundation to help fund the purchase of his own printmaking press. More than 1,300 individuals applied for the grant, and Anderson was one of only two visual artists to receive the award. In other work over the summer, Anderson conducted research visits to the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Boulder, Colorado, as well as the Byrd Polar and Climate Research Center at Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio. The purpose of his visits was to collect data about the glaciers of Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado as well as those on Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania. In related research, Anderson and co-PI Bruce Crownover (University of Wisconsin-Madison) conducted fieldwork at Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado, hiking to the park’s remaining eight glaciers. This project, “Rocky Mountain National Park: The Last Glacier,” is being funded in part by a Clemson University Project Initiation Grant. Finally, a two-person exhibition, “The Last Glacier: Todd Anderson and Bruce Crownover,” opened at the Overture Center for the Arts in Madison, Wisconsin on June 14th.

Anthony Bernarducci (performing arts) had a feature article published in the Florida Music Director journal. It was titled “The Neutral Syllable: Sending a Soundscape of Subliminal Messages,” focusing on pedagogy in the choral rehearsal. 

Caroline Dunn (history) presented the paper “‘If there be any goodly young woman’: Female Servants in Aristocratic Households” at the annual Harlaxton Medieval Symposium in England. This year’s conference theme was “The Great Household, 1000-1500.”

Linda Dzuris (performing arts) was commissioned to write a piece for carillon by Yale University in celebration of their student guild’s 50th anniversary. It was premiered in June in New Haven on Yale’s 43-ton instrument during a congress of the Guild of Carillonneurs in North America. Also premiered by Dzuris were newly released arrangements from her second volume of Yiddish Carillon Music, published by American Carillon Music Editions, and Gershwin’s famous Rhapsody in Blue, published by the guild. Other summer concerts were performed in Michigan: Grand Valley State University, Cook Carillon, Allendale; Grand Valley State University, Beckering Family Carillon, Grand Rapids; Kirk in the Hills Presbyterian Church, Bloomfield Hills; St. Hugo of the Hills Catholic Church, Bloomfield Hills; and Oakland University, Elliott Carillon, Rochester.

Andrea Feeser (art) worked with student artists over the summer to study and represent how colonial and early republican white South Carolinians displaced Cherokees from their town Esseneca, the land Clemson University sits upon. The primary outcomes of this project consists of two major, collaborative artworks. The first is a large-scale print and drawing by recent BFA graduate Kevin Pohle, in a handcrafted frame created by recent BFA graduate Chip Sox, which addresses native and colonist use of the Cherokee medicinal plant Indian root. The second is a photograph by MFA candidate Haley Floyd of historical Esseneca lands, which are currently under development to expand the university’s athletic district. Both of these artworks will be displayed on campus at sites that will encourage reflection on the university’s past uses of its lands. Feeser’s project was supported in part by a College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities faculty research development grant.

On June 11th C-Span showed H. Roger Grant’s lecture, “Electric Interurbans,” from his History of American Transportation class. C-Span has archived this presentation, and it can be viewed at any time. Grant is the Kathryn and Calhoun Lemon Professor of History

In July Professor Steven Grosby (philosophy and religion) published the following:

  • Steven Grosby, “National Identity, Nationalism, and the Catholic Church,” Oxford Handbooks (Oxford University Press), pp. 1-26, and
  • Steven Grosby, “Religion and Liberty in Neglected Great Works of the Ancient Near East,” in Will Jordan & Charlotte Thomas, eds., The Most Sacred Freedom: Religious Liberty in the History of Philosophy and America’s Founding (Macon: Mercer University Press, 2016), pp. 9-33.

Walt Hunter (English) was named the 2017 South Carolina Arts Commission Poetry Fellow. The $5,000 fellowship was awarded to four South Carolina artists in the categories of prose, poetry, dance choreography and dance performance.

Thomas J. Kuehn (history) published “Property of Spouses in Law in Renaissance Florence,” in Family Law and Society in Europe from the Middle Ages to the Contemporary Era, ed. Maria Gigliola di Renzo Villata (New York: Springer, 2016), 109-134.

Joey Manson’s (art) sculpture, Slip, was installed in the Chicago Sculpture Exhibit in Chicago Illinois, in June, and will be on display for one year.

Steven G. Marks’ book The Information Nexus: Global Capitalism from the Renaissance to the Present was published this summer by Cambridge University Press. Marks is Clemson University Alumni Distinguished Professor of History.

Professors Hala Nassar and Robert Hewitt (landscape architecture) were invited by Huazhong Agricultural University’s department of landscape architecture in Wuhan, China to teach an urban design studio during June and July. The invitation was due in large part to Nassar and Hewitt’s international award from the 10th Annual China Garden Design Competition where they received third prize. The “vertical” studio course taught in China consisted of 30 students at undergraduate, masters and doctoral levels, and addressed a site known as Fang Island on the Yangtze River. The city of Wuhan experienced overwhelming flooding twice while Professors Nassar and Hewitt where on campus in China. Turning the devastating events into teaching opportunity, their urban design studio addressed the challenging conditions by incorporating resilient city and sustainable urban design concepts in their design approaches. At the conclusion of the studio, the University President Xiuxin Deng and Vice President Professor GAO Shi bestowed Huazhong Agricultural University’s highest level of accolade granted to a foreign professor by appointing Nassar and Hewitt guest professors (2016-2019) – the first foreign professors to receive this honor.

Elizabeth Rivlin (English) presented a paper at the World Shakespeare Congress in Stratford upon Avon in the UK, which took place August 1-6. Her paper was titled “‘Everyday Shakespeare’ in the Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle” and was part of a seminar titled “Everyday Shakespeare.”

Greg Shelnutt (art) participated in ThinkTank9: Citizen/Artist: Education and Agency at Montana State University in Bozeman in June. Hosted by the Montana State University School of Art, TT9 brought together art and design master and emerging teachers and administrators to address thematic issues of higher education. The workshop employed a mix of facilitated discussions, workshops and presentations, interspersed with informal meals and social interaction.

Eric Touya (languages) presented “Fluid Selves in Isabelle Eberhardt’s ‘In the Shadow of Islam’: Gender, Cross-Cultural, and Nomadic Identities” at the Women in French Conference at Gettysburg College in June. He was also scholar-in-residence at the University of Virginia while participating in a National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Seminar on Alexis de Tocqueville’s Democracy in America.

Rhondda Robinson Thomas (English) was selected as a fellow for the “Hearing the Inarticulate: Ethics and Epistemology in the Archives” Seminar and Writing Retreat at the Prindle Institute for Ethics at DePauw University, June 20-29, 2016, where she gave a public talk and wrote biographical essays about African American convict laborers who helped to build Clemson University.

Kathleen Thum (art) was awarded a quarterly support grant from the South Carolina Arts Commission to help cover the cost of travel and supplies for her Jentel Artist Residency in Wyoming in May and June.

This fall Jillian Weise (English) is guest editor-in-residence at The Iowa Review.

Benjamin L. White (religious studies) co-authored an article with Alexander Batson, an undergraduate student majoring in religious studies, that was accepted into the blind, double-peer reviewed journal The Journal for the Study of Paul and His Letters. The article, entitled, “Paul’s Collection through the Saints: Romans 15:31 in Papyrus 46” explores a little known textual variant in the earliest manuscript of Paul’s letters and stems from research in a course on early Greek manuscripts of the New Testament. In June White delivered an invited paper entitled “Paul and Justin” at an international gathering of scholars in Rome, Italy. The 30-person seminar was the 7th Nangeroni Meeting of the Enoch Seminar and was partially subsidized by the Michigan Center for Early Christian Studies.

Valerie Zimany (art) was promoted to associate professor. During the month of July, she received a competitive South Carolina State Arts Commission quarterly project grant for artists to conduct research on ceramic imagery and three-dimensional printing as a resident artist at Medalta International Artists in Residence, Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada. Zimany was awarded the artist residency as the grand prize recipient of Medalta’s 2015 International Juried Exhibition, in which her artwork was acquired into Medalta’s permanent museum collection. During the residency, Zimany held a master class, “COLOUR @Medalta,” on Japanese Kutani enamels and their contemporary application from July 23-24, 2016. The residency was also made possible through a  faculty research award from the College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities.