College of Arts and Humanities

College of Arts and Humanities – Faculty News – January 2026

HISTORY & GEOGRAPHY –  Assistant Professor Camden Burd published his article “In Search of a Postextractive Future: Ruin, Recreation, and Militarism in the Upper Midwest,” in a special issue of Agricultural History themed “Writing History in Place.” His article examines the various attempts of boosters and regional organizations in Michigan’s Keweenaw Peninsula as they responded to the shifting economic landscape in the decades after the Second World War. Though varied, each proposal was influenced by the boosters’ sense of place. As such, the search for a postextractive future relied upon the unique industrial history and environments that had defined the region for over a century.  Burd also published a short essay in an edited collection titled Lingering Inland: A Literary Tour of the Midwest, which was recently published by the University of Illinois Press. His essay explores the environmental and place-based influences of the writer and poet Jim Harrison.

ENGLISH – Assistant Professor of English Jonathan F. Correa Reyes published an article, “Towards a Medieval Theory of the Human: Literacy and Bede’s Parable of Cædmon”, in the 2026 special issue of Speculum: A Journal of Medieval Studies.

PERFORMING ARTS – Lillian Utsey Harder, Brooks Center director emerita and artistic director of the Utsey Chamber Music Series, secured four broadcasts on American Public Media’s Performance Today: Grazyna Bacewicz’s Piano Quintet No.1 (movt.1) and Duke Ellington’s Cotton Club Stomp performed by the Verona Quartet and pianist David Fung on December 3 from their concert on November 1, 2022; Beethoven’s Sonata No. 9 in A Major (movt. 3), arr. Ruben Rengel, performed by Sphinx Virtuosi on December 4 from their concert on March 30, 2023; Joachim Stutschewsky’s Hassidic Fantasy  and Ernest Bloch’s From Jewish Life performed by the Goldstein-Peled-Fiterstein Trio on December 17 from their concert on February 9 2023; Viet Cong’s Flora (movts. 1 and 3) performed by WindSync on December 30 from their concert on March 7, 2025.

PHILOSOPHY & RELIGION – Associate Professor Elizabeth Jemison joined the Board of Scholars for Facing History & Ourselves, a national educational nonprofit that supports middle and high school teaching of civics and history. Members of the Board of Scholars volunteer their various scholarly expertise for curriculum creation, staff education, and public-facing lectures with FH&O.

PERFORMING ARTS – Lecturer Kailey Potter recently produced and directed a staged reading of John Ford’s ‘Tis Pity She’s a Whore for Mortal Fools Collective in Virginia, reviewed here by Peter Kirwan of Mary Baldwin University. Potter’s critical review of the Atlanta Shakespeare Company’s fall production of Matt Barbot’s The Venetians will appear in the next edition of Shakespeare Bulletin.

LANGUAGES – Professor Johannes Schmidt published a review on “Johann Gottfried Herder Predigten: Riga 1765–1769” by Dominik Fugger and Jenny Lagaude in the Lessing Yearbook 52 (2025).

ENGLISH – Professor and Chair Will Stockton edited The Routledge Companion to Shakespeare and Religion. The 34-chapter volume surveys new and longstanding critical conversations about the role of religion in Shakespeare’s plays and poems. It contains essays from over thirty scholars on a range of different religious topics, from Reformation and Paul to Antitheatricalism and Bardolatry.

LANGUAGES – Professor Eric Touya published two book reviews. The first was on Francophone Oceania Today: Literature, Visual Arts, Music, and Cinema  (Liverpool University Press, 2025) by Michelle Royer, Nathalie Ségeral and Léa Vuong, and his review was published in French Review, 99.3, 2026, p. 198-199. The second review, on Voices of Pain, Cries of Silence: Francophone Jewish Poetry of the Shoah, 1939-2008 (Peter Lang, 2024) by Gary D. Mole, was published in Dalhousie French Studies, Revue d’Études Littéraires du Canada, vol. 127, 2025, p. 128-129.

PHILOSOPHY & RELIGION – Associate Professor and Chair Ben White was recently elected to the editorial board of the Journal of Biblical Literature, the flagship journal for Biblical Studies, published continuously since 1881.

College of Arts and Humanities – Faculty News – November 2025

ENGLISH – Professor Susanna Ashton presented a community storytelling event about the History of Pendleton and an 1849 attack on the post office at Everlan, the senior living community in Patrick Square at Clemson, on November 12.

HISTORY & GEOGRAPHY – Professor Vernon Burton introduced former Savannah mayor and Civil Rights leader Dr. Otis Johnson for a discussion of civil rights at the Beech Institute in Savannah during the “The Legacy of Slavery and the Struggle for Freedom” conference on November 2.  Later that afternoon, he led a discussion with CORE leader Mercedes Wright Arnold at the African American Civil Rights Museum in Savannah followed by a tour of the museum.  On November 3, Vernon and Georganne Burton gave a lecture and discussed the role of Penn Center, from its Civil War beginnings to its major role in the Civil Rights movement. Also at the Penn Center, Burton introduced the Civil Rights icon David Dennis for a discussion followed by a tour.  That evening, he was the host and moderator for the Organization of American Historians (OAH) “Future of the Past” webinar on “Voting Rights.”  On November 4, he led a tour of Mother Emmanuel AME Church in Charleston and participated in a panel discussion with the minister Eric S.C. Manning and author Kevin Sack.  That day, he also introduced and moderated talks by Joseph McGill, Jr. and Herb Frazier on their Slave Dwelling Project.  On November 5, he led the conference group on a tour of the International African American Museum and participated in a panel discussion. That afternoon, he led a tour of the Avery Research Center at the College of Charleston and introduced and moderated panels with Dr. Millicent Brown, who was the lead plaintiff in the first successful South Carolina public school desegregation case, and Cecil Williams, the chronicler of the Civil Rights Movement in the state.  That evening, he gave a lecture at the conference on the 1968 Hospital Strike in Charleston.  At the annual meeting of the Southern Historical Association, on November 7, he was part of the plenary panel discussion on “Nonviolent Direct Action and the Struggle for Civil Rights with legendary civil rights activists Bernard Lafayette, Jr., Joan Browning and Kredelle Petway.  On November 8, he presided and commented on the session “Reckoning with the Past: Digital Tools and the Documentation of Racial Violence roundtable. On November 21, he was part of the Social Science History Association’s (SSHA) plenary panel and delivered a paper, “Practices that Sap Voting Power: Restrictions, Gerrymandering, Suppression.”  On November 22, he spoke at the SSHA’s memorial service for his friend, the sociologist and demographer, Dr. Andrew Beveridge.

LANGUAGES – Associate Professor of American Sign Language Jody Cripps and his colleagues, Carlisle Robinson, Maryam Hafizirad and Dawn Jani Birley gave a presentation on Deaf Arts Academy at Tokyo International Deaf Arts Festival in Za-Koenji Public Theatre, Tokyo, Japan on November 9th, 2025. In this presentation, he talked about signed music and his experience as a signed music professor at the academy. 

HISTORY & GEOGRAPHY – Professor Caroline Dunn was invited by the conveners of the Late Medieval Seminar to present an overview of her latest book Ladies-in-Waiting in Medieval England  at the Institute of Historical Research (London) on November 14.

LANGUAGES – Associate Professor Stephen Fitzmaurice co-authoredIntroducing ASL-English Educational Interpreting (Routledge), a groundbreaking textbook designed for educational interpreting students and educators.  The text offers a research-informed framework for understanding the diverse range of competencies necessary for effective interpreting with Deaf students in public schools.

PERFORMING ARTS – Lecturer Yuriy Leonovich has researched, edited, and published multiple works by renowned cellist David Popper, including orchestrations and new Urtext editions. His recent achievements include orchestrations of twelve works, ten of which are organized into two suites of five pieces each. He also contributed new scholarly prefaces to more than twenty previously published editions, expanding historical and editorial context for performers and researchers. His work also included updating and verifying the recording list for every work that currently has a known recording, providing a clearer overview of the performance history of Popper’s music. Results of Leonovich’s research can been seen at www.davidpopper.org.

LANGUAGES – Professor and Chair Joseph Mai presented at 25 Years of French and Francophone Cinema in the 21st Century at Villanova University. The colloquium will result in an edited volume, with each chapter focusing on an important French or Francophone film from each year of the first quarter of the century. He also participated in a roundtable titled “Watching the First Lumière Films, 130 Years Later” at the Wilson Center for the Humanities and Arts at UGA, discussing Gabriel Veyre, an early camera operator sent by the Lumière brothers to French Indochina to make the first moving images there. 

HISTORY & GEOGRAPHY – The research of Professor Brent Morris was featured in the November 17 episode of Origins, a project of PBS/WKNO Memphis. “Origins of Everything” is a show about the undertold histories and cultural dialogues that make up our collective story. Morris’ research and most recent book, Dismal Freedom: A History of the Maroons of the Great Dismal Swamp explores the lives of maroons—people who self-emancipated from enslavement and took refuge in the largest swamp in the United States—and unearths the stories of these freedom fighters, their lives, and their struggles for liberation. This same research has also been featured in the New York Times as well as an exhibit at the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture.

LANGUAGES – Assistant Professor Kumiko Saito has begun her role as Associate Editor-in-Chief for the online journal Literature.

PHILOSOPHY & RELIGION – Associate Professor and Chair Ben White participated on a review panel of his recent book, Counting Paul: Scientificity, Fuzzy Math, and Ideology in Pauline Studies (OUP, 2025) at the annual meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature in Boston on November 23. 

College of Arts and Humanities – Faculty News – October 2025

HISTORY & GEOGRAPHY – Professor Rod Andrew has published a new book, The Marines’ Fight for Survival: War, Politics, and Institutional Crisis, 1945-1952 through The University Press of Kansas. The book explains how the U.S. Marines and their allies advocated for the Corps’ continued role in national defense following World War II.

ENGLISH – Professor Susanna Ashton published the Deeds Unbound project on partnership with Clemson Libraries. Deeds Unbound seeks to unearth the records of slavery found in Registers of Deeds offices across South Carolina. For the first time, the names of thousands of men, women, and children sold for profit and recorded only as property in South Carolina’s 19th-century deed books will be accessible in a digital format.

She also presented an hour-long workshop for a national audience organized by the Teagle Foundation about the teaching of Mark Twain’s classic novel, Huckleberry Finn, and Percival Everett’s Pulitzer-Prize Prize-winning reinterpretation, James.

HISTORY & GEOGRAPHY – Assistant Professor Camden Burd published his essay “The Nature of the Midwest: Environmental History, Regionalism, and the Future of Midwestern Studies” in Between Loving and Leaving: Essays on the New Midwestern from the University of Oklahoma Press. The historiographic essay examines the trajectory of midwestern environmental history while proposing new avenues for research. He argues that any history of the Midwest must consider environmental transformations as formative components of placemaking and regional formation.

HISTORY & GEORAPHY – On October 4 and 5, Professor Vernon Burton discussed two documentaries, one on Dr. Benjamin E. Mays and another on Thurgood Marshall at the annual meeting of the Association for the Study of African American History and Life.  On October 8, he participated on a panel for the annual Joseph De Laine program on Briggs v. Elliot and Brown v. Board of Education at the Madren Center at Clemson.  On October 25, he spoke on memorialization and commemoration at Furman University, then on “Religion in the South” at Old Stone Church as part of the launch for University Historian Otis Pickett’s  new book Southern Shepherds and Savage Wolves. On November 1 in Savannah, Georgia, he keynoted the Legacy of Slavery and the Struggle for Freedom conference with a speech on the Civil Rights movement.

LANGUAGES – Associate Professor Jody Cripps participated in the Deaf Arts Academy as one of the signed music professors at Grande-Digue, New Brunswick, from October 5-9, which was featured on CBC News.

He also co-presented a presentation with Dr. Julia Silvestri (Yale University), Ian Sanborn (The Sanborn Arts), Pamela Witcher (Vancouver Community College), and JB Begue (Towson University) titled “A Different Kind of Quiet: Collaborative Discussion from Deaf Performers” at the Quiet Relations Symposium on October 20 at Duke University. It was supported by Duke University’s Office for Research and Innovation, with co-sponsorship from John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute, and by the Music department staff. Cripps, Witcher and Begue have created a signed music hub that includes solo and ensemble performances, education, documentary, research and more.

PERFORMING ARTS – Lillian Utsey Harder, Brooks Center director emerita and artistic director of the Utsey Chamber Music Series, secured six broadcasts on American Public Media’s Performance Today: violinist Hannah White’s performance of Carlos Simon’s “Between Worlds” with Sphinx Virtuosi on September 16 and Valerie Coleman’s Tracing Visions (mts. 1 and 2) on October 23  from their concert on March 30, 2023; Verona Quartet’s performance of Dvorak’s String Quartet No. 13 in G Major, Op. 106, (movt. 1) on September 30 from their concert on November 1, 2022; Heitor Villa-Lobos’s Bachianas Brasileiras No. 9 by Sphinx Virtuosi on October 10 from their concert on March 30, 2023; violinist Geneva Lewis and pianist Evren Ozel’s performance of Brahms’ Sonata in G Major for violin & piano, Op. 78 on October 14 and Bela Bartok’s Romanian Folk Dances, Sz. 56 on October 31 from their concert on March 28, 2024.

ENGLISH –Assistant Professor of English and World Cinema Maziyar Faridi presented an invited talk titled “To Venture from Home on the Thread of a Tune: Noise, Refrain, and Rhythm in Port City Films” at Tulane University. In this talk, Faridi presented sketches from a new book project on ecological rhythms.  

ENGLISH – Principal Lecturer Amy Monaghan moderated a post-screening discussion of the new film, Fairyland: A Memoir of My Father, with author Alysia Abbott. The event on November 1 at the Coolidge Corner Theatre in Brookline, Massachusetts, drew approximately 200 attendees. Produced by Oscar® winner Sofia Coppola  and based on the acclaimed memoir of the same name by Abbott, Fairyland is a coming-of-age story set against the backdrop of San Francisco’s vibrant cultural scene in the 1970s and ’80s. The film chronicles a father-daughter relationship as it evolves through an era of bohemian decadence to the heartbreaking era of the AIDS crisis.

PERFORMING ARTS – On October 6, Associate Professor Lisa Sain Odom performed a duo vocal recital alongside tenor Jaeyoon Kim at the University of North Carolina- Pembroke. Odom sang classical vocal pieces by Richard Strauss, Leslie Adams, Ivor Novello and Lori Laitman, as well as musical theatre pieces by Jason Robert Brown, Adam Gwon and Richard Rodgers. Odom and Kim were accompanied by pianist Seung Ah Kim and performed the duet “Lippen Schweigen” from Franz Lehár’s The Merry Widow to end the recital. On November 1, Odom traveled with eleven Clemson students, as well as faculty members Heather Haithcock and Jonathan Doyel, to the Classical Vocal Auditions for the South Carolina chapter of the National Association of Teachers of Singing. Over thirty-five teachers and more than two hundred student singers attended this event. During the auditions, three Clemson students won first place in their respective categories and were invited to sing in the public recital at end of day, one student won second place in his category, and three students won third place in their categories, with two additional students scoring high enough to advance to Regional auditions along with those who placed. 

PERFORMING ARTS – Professor Kerrie Seymour just wrapped a production of Jen Silverman’s The Roommate at LEAN Ensemble Theatre on Hilton Head Island. Working under contract with Actor’s Equity Association, she performed the role of Sharon in the two-person play. She is now in rehearsals for The Game by Bekah Brunstetter at Greenville’s The Warehouse Theatre where she will again perform under AEA contract as Rhonda. The show runs from December 5 – 21. She was recently signed to The Wayne Agency for nationwide talent representation for TV, film, and commercial work, and she was also added to Busch Management’s talent roster.

PHILOSOPHY & RELIGION— Kathryn and Calhoun Lemon Professor of Philosophy Daniel Wueste received the Society for Ethics Across the Curriculum 2025 Distinguished Service Award at the annual SEAC conference, October 8-10, at Villanova University. His “Doing Ethics with Integrity” was published as Chapter 13 in the Wiley-Blackwell A Companion to Doing Ethics, edited by Alan A. Preti and Timothy A. Weidel.

College of Arts and Humanities – Faculty News – September 2025

HISTORY – Professor Rod Andrew gave an invited lecture to the Upcountry History Museum in Greenville for the Museum’s Lunchbox Learning Series.  The topic was “Operation Starlite,” the first regimental-sized action, or major battle, between US ground troops (mainly Marines) and communist forces in Vietnam.  He noted that the battle was a tactical victory for US forces but had strategic implications for the rest of the Vietnam War, for better and for worse.

ENGLISH – Professor Susanna Ashton travelled to Mandarin Florida to speak with the Mandarin Museum and Historical Society as well as the Mandarin Community Club to give a research lecture on her book, A Plausible Man.

HISTORY – Professor Vernon Burton spoke on the impact of World War II at the South Carolina Statehouse as part of the “South Carolina Remembers: The 80th Anniversary of the End of World War II” and informed legislators and the audience about the Clemson University Veterans Project on Sept. 2. On Sept. 3, Burton was part of a panel at the premier screening of “Becoming Thurgood: America’s Social Architect” at SC State University alongside Cecilia Marshall (Thurgood Marshall’s grandchild) and Cecil Williams, chronicler of the SC Civil Rights Movement, and the panel was moderated by SCSU President Alexander Conyers. At the Association for the Study of African American Life and History’s annual meeting this year in Atlanta, Burton discussed two documentaries that premiered there. On Sept. 25-26, Burton served on two panels at the Association for the Study of African American Life and History meeting in Atlanta to discuss a documentary film on the life of Dr. Benjamin E. Mays as well as “Becoming Thurgood.”

HISTORY – Assistant Professor Kathryn A. Langenfeld, had two articles published. One, ‘Fraud and Forgery in the Reign of Constantius II: The Silvanus Affair of 355 CE,’ reinvestigates a fourth-century forged-letter conspiracy and forestalled coup in the late Roman Empire. It appears in the latest volume of Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschicte, a premier international journal of ancient history. The other, ‘Firmus and the Crocodiles Revisited: Paradoxography and the Historia Augusta’s Life of the Four Tyrants,’ appeared in Histos, an online journal of ancient historiography.

ENGLISH – Lecturer Chelsea McKelvey published a chaper titled, “Closet Catholicism, Private Entertainments, and Shakespeare in Seventeenth-Century Yorkshire” in Early Modern Performance Beyond the Public Stage.

LANGUAGES – Professor Johannes Schmidt presented a paper entitled “Herder’s Spacio-Poetics” at the bi-annual meeting of the International Herder Society in Toronto.

College of Arts and Humanities – Faculty News – August 2025

INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES – Associate Professor Todd Anderson has taken on a new service role in the CU Honors College serving as a National Scholars Program Faculty Advisor. His duties include teaching a special seminar to the freshman 2029 NSP Cohort this semester, then serving as a mentor for the cohort until their matriculation in 2029. 

HISTORY & GEOGRAPHY– Professor Rod Andrew published “Flying Leathernecks: The Public Debate over Close Air Support and the Future of the U.S. Marine Corps, 1945-1952” in the July 2025 edition of the Journal of Military History.

ENGLISH – During June, July, and August of 2025, Professor Susanna Ashton delivered lectures at Coastal Carolina University in Conway SC; the American Antiquarian Society in Worcester, Massachusetts; the William L. Clements Library at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor; and the Harriet Beecher Stowe House in Cincinnati, Ohio.

HISTORY & GEOGRAPHY – Professor Vernon Burton, as Executive Director of the College of Charleston’s Lowcountry and Atlantic World (CLAW) program, welcomed the Omohundro Institute’s 28th Annual Conference to the College of Charleston on June 12. In June and July, Burton introduced historian Peter Wood and University of South Carolina Distinguished Professor of Literature David Shields as speakers for the Clemson Historic Properties’ “Brick by Brick” Series.  On June 20, the Dr. Benjamin E. Mays Historic Preservation Site  and GLEAMNS Human Resources Commission honored Burton with the official dedication of The Orville Vernon Burton Research Library. On July 17, Burton delivered a lecture, “Reconstruction, Liberty, and the Supreme Court’s Denial of Justice,” as the keynote at the annual meeting of the interdisciplinary St. George Tucker Society.  On July 24, Burton spoke in Charleston at the Annual Association of African American Museum conference on the 60 year history of the Voting Rights Act.  Also in July, Burton was interviewed by AP reporter Sue Carpenter for “Voting Rights Act Turns 60: What’s Next for the Landmark Civil Rights Law.”  On August 13, New York Times Political columnist Thomas Byrne Edsall interviewed Burton on comparing the current president with other presidents for an upcoming article.

LANGUAGES – Associate Professor Jody Cripps published three articles. The first was titled, “Breaking the Barriers: Bringing the Signing Deaf People’s Voices to the Academia” and it was published in Sage Perspectives. Second, he and his colleague Russell Rosen wrote a chapter titled, “Routing Process in Research Methods: Original and Replication Studies of Flipped-Type Pedagogy in American Sign Language” and it was published in Sage Research Methods: Data and Research Literacy. Lastly, he wrote a research paper with his students, Sophia La Porta, Ashley McCollum, and Allison Rambo, and two community partners, Lynn Thorp and Doreen Simon, titled “The Buried History of Martha’s Vineyard: Nine Deaf Ancestors at Abel’s Hill Cemetery” and it was published in Martha’s Vineyard Museum Quarterly

PERFORMING ARTS – Lillian Utsey Harder, Brooks Center director emerita and artistic director of the Utsey Chamber Music Series, secured seven broadcasts on American Public Media’s Performance Today: violinist Hannah White’s performance of Carlos Simon’s “Between Worlds” with Sphinx Virtuosi on June 13 from their concert on March 30,2023; the Verona Quartet’s performance of Dvorak’s String Quartet No. 13 in G Major Op.106 (mvt. 1) on June 27 from their concert on November 1, 2022; Sphinx Virtuosi’s performance of Michael Dudley’s “Prayer for our Times” on July 7 and Valerie Coleman’s “Tracing Visions” (mvts. 1 and 2) on July 21 from their concert on March 30, 2023; Geneva Lewis and Evren Ozel’s performance of Brahms’ Sonata in G Major for violin and piano in G Major, Op. 78 on July 11 from their concert on March 28, 2024; WindSync’s performance of Nadia Boulanger’s 3 Pieces for Organ, mvt. 1 (arr. by Lara LaMoure) on July 29 from their concert on October 29, 2024; and clarinetist Anthony McGill and the Pacifica Quartet’s performance of James Lee III’s Quintet for Clarinet and String Quartet on August 14 from their concert on September 14, 2023.

INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES – Lecturer Josh Herron was an invited speaker in a webinar on AI Literacies with MIT Open Learning in May as part of a jury-selected publication, AI Literacies and the Advancement of Opened Culture: Global Perspectives and Practices, the latter which was released earlier this year.

HISTORY & GEOGRAPHY– Assistant Professor Emily Hoge recieved a Kluge Fellowship at the Library of Congress for the 2025-2026 year. According to the John W. Kluge Center, the fellowships are offered to scholars in the humanities, social sciences and professional fields such as architecture or law. Twelve Kluge Fellowships are awarded each year through a competitive selection process.

ENGLISH – Lecturer Seth McKelvey published his first book, No Exit: Contemporary American Literature and the State, with the University of Virginia Press in June. Offering a new perspective on anti-state attitudes in American culture, McKelvey argues that a major body of work in 20th- and 21st-century American literature links literary representation to political representation in order to imagine escape from the political state, constituting what he terms a “poetics of escape.” Portions of this book previously appeared as articles in American Literature and the Journal of Modern Literature, and McKelvey will be presenting work from No Exit at this year’s Modern Language Association annual convention.

HISTORY & GEOGRAPHY – For the tenth year, Professor Brent Morris was a lecturer for the UPenn Wharton School Lauder Institute. An integral part of Wharton international MBA students’ Global concentration is the Summer Immersion which takes place in a student’s first year in the Lauder program. Students travel to multiple sites across different continents to learn about the culture, history, social customs, and business practices in the target region. Each year, Morris opens the program in South Carolina with a series of lectures on Southern social and economic history before seeing the students off on the Asia leg of the program.

ENGLISH – Alumni Distinguished Professor Lee Morrissey’s book, Milton’s Ireland: Royalism, Republicanism and the Question of Pluralism (Cambridge University Press, 2024), was launched in the beautiful surroundings of historic Marsh’s Library, Dublin, on July 8th, by Daneille Clarke, Professor of English at University College, Dublin, and Jason McElligott, Director of Marsh’s.  Those in attendance included faculty and graduate students from Irish universities, the parent of a recent Clemson English alumnus, and a current Clemson English major.  His book was also reviewed in TLS by Roberta Klimt.

PERFORMING ARTS – On June 20, Associate Professor Lisa Sain Odom created and hosted the first annual Summer High School Festival for the South Carolina chapter of the National Association of Teachers of Singing (SCNATS), as part of her position as SCNATS President. The event featured high school students from throughout the state who performed in master class and were coached by various university professors from South Carolina. Also, in her role as SCNATS President, she traveled to the National Association of Teachers of Singing AuditionCon in Philadelphia in June, where she sponsored Clemson student singer Michael Stebbins who won third place in the nation for his vocal performance in his category of Upper College Musical Theatre Tenor/Baritone/Bass voices. In May, she assumed the duties of Vice Chair of Musical Theatre and Dance for the Southeastern Theatre Conference after being elected to the position. 

ENGLISH – Postdoctoral felllow Jagadish Paudel received an honorarium from the American Society for the History of Rhetoric (ASHR) for preparing a teaching resource for both graduate and undergraduate rhetoric courses for the project “Expanding History of Rhetoric Pedagogy Initiative” (2025). The resource he prepared was on Vāda discussion as a rhetorical practice: Reimagining dialogue through ancient South Asian traditions. He also received an honorable mention from the  Council of Writing Program Administrators’ Graduate Research Award (2025) for his project, Rhetoric of Multilingualism: WPAs’ Initiatives in Enacting Linguistic Justice.

LANGUAGES – Associate Professor Kelly Peebles presented a paper, “A Young Queen for an Auld Alliance: Grieving Madeleine de France, Briefly Queen of Scotland,” at Femmes et Fama. (Re)Writing Women’s History in France and Burgundy, 1400-1600. The conference, a celebration of emerita Art Historian Kathleen Wilson-Chevalier (American University of Paris), was held at the German Historical Institute/Deutsches Historisches Institut in Paris, June 17-18. Additionally, she recently joined the Editorial Team of the Royal Studies Journal as Layout Editor. 

LANGUAGES – Professor Johannes Schmidt’s article “The Lost Legacy of Johann Gottfried Herder” was published in a Special Edition of The European Legacy: Toward New Paradigms—Journal of the International Society for the Study of European Ideas.

INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES – Senior Lecturer John Smith published “Bedraggled Magnolias: Song of the South’s 1986 Return to Atlanta” in the Summer 2025 edition of Journal of Film and Video. “Bedraggled Magnolias” is a study of domestic politics and the Disney film Song of the South (Wilfred Jackson and Harve Foster, 1946). Editor Cynthia Barton’s introduction notes, “In an inventive study of social dynamics in Atlanta, Smith explores the white nostalgia surrounding the dominant culture’s appreciation of the film in 1946 and 1986 as well as African American responses to Disney’s racialized plantation genre film. As Smith documents, there were more protests in response to the 1946 release than in response to D.W. Griffith’s The Birth of a Nation (1915), and the wide acclaim for Spike Lee’s 1986 film She’s Gotta Have It confirmed the rising import of Black-authored productions in 1980s entertainment.”

PERFORMING ARTS – Associate Visiting Professor Kimberly W. Souther has been selected as a guest conductor/clinician for the Region 2 South Carolina Music Educators Association Honors Orchestra on November 14-15 and Oconnee County Honors Orchestra on October 21.  She will rehearse and lead the orchestras, sharing her research in audience engagement with South Carolina music educators, staff, and students in attendance.  Both opportunities culminate in a final live and recorded performance.

LANGUAGES – Professor Éric Touya read a paper entitled “Christianity’s Decline in France and the Future of Democracy” at the Fifteenth International Conference on Religion & Spirituality in Society at Sapienza University in Rome, Italy. The topic of the conference was “Fragile Meanings: Vulnerability in the Study of Religion and Spirituality.”

PHILOSOPHY & RELIGION – Associate Professor and Chair Ben White published a research article, “The Apostle of Struggle: Reappraising Howard Thurman on Paul,” with Peter Eisenstadt, a former affiliate member of the Department of History & Geography, in the journal Church History.  The article’s concept was born in discussions of the Religious Studies Faculty Reading Group, which has met bi-weekly every semester for ten years.  White was also elected into the Studiorum Novi Testamenti Societas, founded in 1938 “for the furtherance of New Testament studies internationally,” at their annual meeting in Regensburg, Germany.

College of Arts and Humanities – Faculty News – May 2025

INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES – Professor David Blakesley chaired the 12th Triennial Conference of the Kenneth Burke Society on the theme, “Kenneth Burke, the Humanities, and Agency in the Era of AI.” This virtual conference was hosted by Clemson’s Department of Interdisciplinary Studies from May 22–25, 2025, and included a film festival, at which Blakesley presented “The Making of The Wordman Film.” Twenty-two Clemson faculty members and graduate students in the Rhetorics, Communication, and Information Design program presented at the conference, which was attended virtually by over 100 scholars from as far away as South Africa, China, and Belgium. Assistant Professor Eddie Lohmeyer created and hosted an art exhibit, the “Virtual Burkeian Parlor,” in New Art City featuring creative projects by Clemson students, faculty and others.

HISTORY & GEOGRAPHY – On April 25, Professor Vernon Burton keynoted the Liberty Fellowship 20th anniversary meeting in Greenville, where he spoke on the significance of Lincoln and liberty today, and also participated in a panel on arts and society.  On April 30, the New York Times published an analysis of 35 presidential historians, including Burton, surveyed to assess the questions, “Are Trumps’s Actions Truly Unprecedented?” On May 1, Burton and his coauthor of Justice Deferred published an op-ed, “If there is no birthright citizenship, are you a citizen – and can you prove it?” in the Post and Courier. On May 6, Burton was quoted in the Associated Press story, “Marco Rubio Now Holds 2 Top Jobs.  Just one other politician has done the same,” which was published in the Miami Herald. On Thursday, May 8, Burton spoke at SCETV at the annual meeting of the South Caroliniana Library, which this year paid tribute to South Carolina historian Walter Edgar. On May 12, at the Forum Club meeting of the Clemson University Emeritus College, he spoke on his discipline, History, in the academy today.

LANGUAGES – Associate Professor Jody Cripps published a chapter titled “Signed Music and the Deaf Community” in Ana Cruz’s book, “Culture, Deafness & Music: Critical Pedagogy and a Path to Social Justice.” It talked about how music in signed language is integrated in the deaf community. He also led the study abroad program, “Life as a Signer: The Deaf’s Perspective.” He and seven Clemson students, along with three from other colleges, went to New Zealand and Australia for three weeks. While in Wellington and then in Auckland, he gave presentations titled “What does ‘Sign Language Community’ mean to us?” to the deaf community in both areas. Moreover, in Australia, he and the deaf tour guide from Deaf Adventures, Rachel Soudakoff, gave a presentation about their deaf-led study abroad experiences to a deaf agency in Melbourne.

HISTORY & GEOGRAPHY – Associate Professor Caroline Dunn, with co-author Mikkaela Bailey ’19 (M.A. History), published “Visualizing Elizabeth of York’s Ladies-in-Waiting” in Volume 51 (2) of the journal Historical Reflections/Réflexions Historiques. The article illuminates the experiences of female attendants in both ritual occasions and daily life at the queen’s court and explores ways to visualize their roles and networks, using Net.Create software. The authors demonstrate the monarchs’ reliance upon courtiers, and proves that rather than being isolated in gendered, female quarters, women engaged with men at court daily; their interconnectivity within the network of governance reveals the multiple spokes – male and female – that comprised the wheels of medieval royal governance.

ENGLISH – Assistant Professor Stevie Edwards’ fourth book, The Weather Inside, was a finalist for the Miller Williams Prize and has been offered publication from University of Arkansas Press; the book will be released in spring 2026. Stevie’s poem “My Dear Felicity” appeared in Asterales Journal. She also had two poems, “Rogue” and “Dream After Watching Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,” published in Crab Orchard Review. Edwards is looking forward to two writing residencies this summer: the Sundress Academy for the Arts’ Firefly Farms in Knoxville, Tennessee, and the Buinho Creative Hub in Messejana, Portugal.

PHILOSOPHY – Assistant Professor Quinn Hiroshi Gibson published a paper in Neuroethics entitled ‘Depression, Intelligibility, and Non-Rational Causation‘. It argues for the use of an updated version of an old clinical distinction between endogenous and exogenous depression, one based on whether depressive symptoms are intelligibly related to their causes.

PERFORMING ARTS – Lillian Utsey Harder, Brooks Center director emerita and artistic director of the Utsey Chamber Music Series, secured two broadcasts on American Public Media’s Performance Today: WindSync’s performance of Nadia Boulanger’s Prelude from 3 Pieces for Organ, (arr. By Lara Lamoure) on April 25 from their concert on October 29, 2024; and clarinetist Anthony McGill and the Pacifica Quartet’s performance of James Lee III’s Quintet for Clarinet and String Quartet on May 12 from their concert on September 9, 2023.

HISTORY & GEOGRAPHY – Assistant Professor Stephanie Hassell presented a paper, “African Experiences of Slavery in Portuguese India, 16th – 18th Centuries,” at Yale University’s Virtual International Conference on the Black Indian Ocean: Slavery, Religion, and Expressive Cultures (1400-1700), on April 2-3, 2025. Also, her first book, Slavery and Religious Conversion in Portugal’s Indian Empire, 1500-1700will be released in April 2025 as part of Ohio University Press’s Indian Ocean Studies Series.

LANGUAGES – Assistant Professor Magdaléna Matušková recently published an article Allegro Moderato: Music, Memory, and Self-Reflection in Santiago by João Moreira Salles in the Annals edition of The Latin Americanist, Volume 69, Number 1, March 2025. It is also accessible through Project MUSE. The article is about the role of music in the Brazilian documentary, Santiago, directed by João Moreira Salles.

ENGLISH – Senior Lecturer Kathleen Nalley had a series of sonnets published in the May 1 issue of South Florida Poetry Journal, as well as in the spring issue of Brillig: a micro lit mag. Additionally, her second full-length poetry collection, a collaborative manuscript with poet Gabrielle Freeman, titled DISSENT, was accepted for publication by Harbor Editions and is forthcoming in November. Nalley was also named interim director of the Converse University MFA program.

ENGLISH – On April 22, 2025, Professor Rhondda Robinson Thomas gave a talk about her work on the Cemetery Hill Project to a group in Spartanburg, SC, who are seeking to identify all graves and establish a preservation plan for the Old City Cemetery, established in 1900 when graves were reinterred from the first cemetery established for Black residents in 1849. The meeting took place at the Mount Moriah Baptist Church in Spartanburg.

College of Arts and Humanities – Faculty News – April 2025

ENGLISH – Professor Susanna Ashton was the keynote speaker for the Celebration of Writing: Publication and Public Action, April 24th, a conference held at Coastal Carolina University.

HISTORY & GEOGRAPHY – Assistant Professor Camden Burd’s essay, “Green as a Shade of Blue: Political Rhetoric, the Democratic Party, and the Early Environmental Movement in the Upper Midwest,” was recently published an edited collection from the University of Kansas Press in The Liberal Heartland: A Political History of the Postwar American MidwestThe essay explores how democratic politicians harnessed a language that criticized industrial malpractice, advocated for resource preservation, and demonstrated a commitment to the working class to pass a series of environmental legislation in the 1960s and 1970s.  On April 22, 2025, Burd presented research from his first book, The Roots of Flower City: Horticulture, Empire, and the Remaking of Rochester, New York (Cornell University Press, 2024), as part of the Neilly Author Series and the Dr. Matthew E & Ruth Harmon Fairbank Alumni Lecture presented by the River Campus Libraries and the School of Arts and Sciences in partnership with the Local History & Genealogy Division of the Rochester Public Library.

HISTORY & GEOGRAPHY – On April 2-3, Professor Vernon Burton keynoted the premiere of a documentary film on Benjamin E. Mays (in which he was a commentator) and served on a panel to discuss the documentary at Howard University.  On April 10, he spoke on emancipation at the Charleston Library Society and discussed the meaning of emancipation with former Clemson M.A. student Ben Parten of Georgia Southern University.  On April 22, he participated in a Rutgers History and Literature Departments’ panel discussing “The haunting stereotype of ‘The Old Time Negro’ and Black Storytelling in the Plantation’s Shadow.”  On April 24-25, he was the keynote speaker at the 20th anniversary meeting of the SC Liberty Fellowship, speaking on liberty and participating in a panel on arts and society.  

PERFORMING ARTS – Assistant Professor of Music Lauren Crosby published a peer-reviewed article, “The Sound of Boba Fett: Star Wars Leitmotifs in Streaming Television,” in a special issue of the French academic journal Emergences: Son, Musique et médias audiovisuels that focuses on new perspectives on the music of John Williams.

ENGLISH – Assistant Professor Stevie Edwards’s poem “My Dear Felicity” was featured in the second issue of the journal Asterales. This poem is from the manuscript-in-progress for her fourth book, Childless Dog Lady.

PHILOSOPHY & RELIGION – Associate Professor Quinn Hiroshi Gibson, together with former Clemson Visiting Assistant Professor Sarah Arnaud, published ‘Neurodiversity, Identity, and Hypostatic Abstraction’ in Philosophical Studies.

PERFORMING ARTS – Lillian Utsey Harder, Brooks Center director emerita and artistic director of the Utsey Chamber Music Series, secured five broadcasts on American Public Media’s Performance Today: WindSync’s performance of Mozart’s Serenade for Winds in C Minor, K. 388 (Movt. 2: Andante) on April 2 from their concert on October 29, 2024; Verona Quartet and pianist David Fung’s performance of Grazyna Bacewicz’s Piano Quintet No. l (Movt. 1) on April 3 from their performance on November 1, 2022, and the Verona Quartet’s performance of Duke Ellington’s Cotton Club Stop from their performance on November 1, 2022; violinist Geneva Lewis and pianist Evren Ozel’s performance of Stravinsky’s Divertimento, “The Fairy’s Kiss” (arr. by Samuel Dushkin) on April 10 from their concert on March 28, 2024; and Sphinx Virtuosi’s performance of Michael Dudley’s “Prayer for our Times” on April 16 from their performance on March 30, 2023.

PHILOSOPHY & RELIGION – Professor Charlie Kurth organized the visit of Sara Protasi from the University of Puget Sound on April 10-11. While at Clemson, Protasi gave a public lecture titled “Cultivating Courage in an Age of Fear,” which was attended by over 40 faculty and students. Funding for the events was generously provided by the Department of Philosophy and Religion and the Humanities Hub. Protasi also met with undergraduate philosophy majors and minors for a separate conversation about her work on envy. The visit concluded with a research meeting where Protasi and Kurth talked with Associate Professor Charlie Starkey and Professor Cindy Pury (Psychology) about potential collaborations that would bring together their work on emotion and courage.

PERFORMING ARTS – Professor Linda Li-Bleuel received the 2025 Outstanding Service Award for dedicated service to the Clemson University commissions. This was the result of voluntarily assuming the role of Chair for the Asian Pacific Islander Desi American (APIDA) Committee, an advisory group devoted to promoting appreciation, understanding, and safety for Clemson’s APIDA community. This committee gained recognition for its work and was elevated to the status of the APIDA Commission in 2022, and Li-Bleuel continued as Chair.

ENGLISH – Postdoctoral Writing Fellow Jagadish Paudel presented his paper, “Introducing ‘Image Events’ in the FYC Classroom: Teaching Composition by Combating Racial and Social (In)justice,” at the 2025 Conference on College Composition and Communication, held in Baltimore from April 9–12. In recognition of his conference paper, Paudel also received the prestigious 2025 Chairs’ Memorial Scholarship at the conference.

ENGLISH – Assistant Professor Jon Correa Reyes co-authored the article, “From Chile to Camelot: Reception of the Arthurian Arc of Mampato and Ogú in Arthuriana: the Journal of Arthurian Studies. The essay analyzes how the Arthurian arc of the Chilean comic Mampato and Ogú challenges the neocolonial rhetorics that cast Chile as a stagnant country, and how it afforded Chileans an opportunity to participate in a global cultural current of Arthurian adaptations. He also served as the guest editor for this issue of Arthuriana, authoring the introductory essay, “Medieval Studies as a Public Good.” 

LANGUAGES – Together with co-editor Rainer Godel, Professor Johannes Schmidt published the Herder Yearbook 17, now for the first time with Mohr Siebeck publishers, one of the oldest in Germany. This is the sixth time Johannes co-edited this academic journal for the International Johnn Gottfried Herder Society. This new venue allows for eBook and Open Access, while continuing the series in print.

PERFORMING ARTS – Associate Professor Kerrie Seymour wrote and acted in the new short film PURPLE, which was screened at both the Maryland International Film Festival and Greenville’s Reedy Reels Film Festival. The film won the Best Film Made in Upstate SC at Reedy Reels. Additionally, she was featured in a commercial for Tekmetric, based out of Texas.

PHILOSOPHY & RELIGION – Associate Professor Charles Starkey co-authored “Memorialization of Courage,” which was presented by author Cynthia Pury (Psychology) at the Memorialization: Theory, Methods, Goals, and Ethics conference at the University of Mississippi.

LANGUAGES – Professor Eric Touya had published an article, “Developing Humanities Perspectives across Disciplines”, in “Public Humanities: Theories and Methods”, Publications of the Modern Language Association, Vol. 140, Issue 1, 2025. Drawing on his experience teaching women in business in the francophone world, Toya considers the value of the humanities in cultivating civic- and community-mindedness in students and preparing them to take humanistic inquiry into their future careers. He seeks to demystify and deconstruct the discourses of the economists most often studied in university courses, whose models are often purportedly grounded in mathematical reasoning. From a public humanities perspective, his critical intervention reexamines the dichotomies of campuses/communities and academy/public and demonstrates how the work within our classrooms is integral to preparing students for engaging with other communities in the ways they bring humanistic inquiry into the world beyond college. Exploring connections between the classroom and the community, in conjunction with humanities-based reflection on issues of race, gender, and class, helps students to understand the complexity and diversity of socioeconomic realities from a non-Western perspective. 

PHILOSOPHY & RELIGION – Associate Professor and Chair Ben White’s new book, Counting Paul: Scientificity, Fuzzy Math, and Ideology in Pauline Studies, was released this month with Oxford University Press.

College of Arts and Humanities – Faculty News – March 2025

ENGLISH – Professor Susanna Ashton authored an article in Publishing History issue 36 entitled “William Stanley Braithwaite and Poetic Stereotypes,” which examines the life and work of African American printer, publisher, critic and poet William Stanley Braithwaite.

ENGLISH – Associate Professor Nic Brown authored the cover story for issue No. 10 of The Bitter Southerner, published March 28. The story is a profile of actor Michael Shannon, focusing on a recent project recreating the music of the pioneering alt-rock band R.E.M.

HISTORY – Professor Vernon Burton presented a paper, “What is Victory Day to the Black Man?” on March 1, at the South Carolina Historical Association annual meeting held this year at Francis Marion University. From March 19 to 21, he gave a public lecture on his book, Justice Deferred: Race and the Supreme Court, to the University of Georgia School of Law and Department of History, in addition to directing two seminars for history graduate students. On March 27, at the Captain Kimberly Hampton Memorial Library in Easley, SC, he presented a lecture, “Lincoln, Liberty, Reconstruction, and the Supreme Court.” On March 22, he presented a guest lecture on “Reconstruction in South Carolina” at the Modjeska Simkins School. He also secured grants from the 1772 Foundation and the South Carolina African American Heritage Commission to support the University of South Carolina’s publication of Georganne Burton and his graphic history of Penn Center.

PERFORMING ARTS – Lillian Utsey Harder, Brooks Center director emerita and artistic director of the Utsey Chamber Music Series, secured six broadcasts on American Public Media’s Performance Today: Goldstein-Peled-Fiterstein Trio’s broadcast of Joachim Stutschewsky’ s Hassidic Fantasy on December 26 and March 25 from their concert on February 9, 2023; guitarist Jason Vieaux’s broadcast on December 27 of Agustin Barrios’ Waltz in G Major, Op. 8, No. 3 from his concert on September 14, 2024; Sphinx Virtuosi’s broadcast on January 1 of Michael Dudley’s Prayer for our Times from their concert on March 30, 2023; pianist Maxim Lando’s broadcast on January 9 of Nikolai Kapustin’s Variations, Op. 41 from his concert on September 15, 2022; and Lincoln Center Chamber Music Society’s broadcast on January 14 of Howard Ferguson’s Octet for Winds and Strings, Op. 4 from their concert on October 18, 2021.

LANGUAGES – Under the guidance of Assistant Professor Magdaléna Matušková, Clemson students Cassie Hunt and Hayden Roof participated at the UGA Conference on the Americas on February 21, 2025, in Athens, GA. Roof, writing and presenting entirely in Spanish, won the award for best undergraduate student essay with his writing on the film, También la lluvia (Icíar Bollaín, 2010).

ENGLISH – Assistant Professor Jonathan F. Correa Reyes pulished “Conjuring Ethiopia: Blackness as Dignity in Juan Latino’s Poetry,” in Viator 55, no. 1 (2025). Reyes’ study revisits the sixteenth-century author’s references to Ethiopia and the Ethiopians in his first published volume of poetry, examining recent questions regarding Latino’s birthplace in light of the power of his writing.

ENGLISH – Associate Professor Elizabeth Rivlin presented a paper titled “Hull House: A Historical Case Study in Public Shakespeare,” in the Public Shakespeare / Public Humanities Seminar, at the Shakespeare Association of America Annual Meeting March 20-22 in Boston.

PERFORMING ARTS – Professor Shannon Robert was inducted into the Southeastern Theatre Conference Hall of Fame in Baltimore. This recognition honors the dedicated contributions of theatre artists to the SETC organization and its mission to develop theatre education, promote opportunities, and support live theatre regionally and nationally.

INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES – Associate Professor Aga Skrodzka has published her new monograph, The Sex Slave in Cinema: An Inegalitarian Spectacle, with Edinburgh University Press. This book examines the visual politics of the cinematic figure of the ‘sex slave’ from its origins in silent film to its iterations in blaxploitation cinema, European art cinema, Nollywood, and, in its most concentrated form, the Hollywood blockbuster thriller.

PHILOSOPHY & RELIGION – Associate Professor Charles Starkey presented “Perception, Value, and Virtue: Huff and Fuchert’s Taking Moral Action” as part of a symposium on moral psychology at the annual meeting of the Association for Practical and Professional Ethics in Norfolk, Virginia.

PHILOSOPHY & RELIGION – Associate Professor and Chair Ben White gave the annual George Howard Lecture in the Department of Religion at the University of Georgia on March 24.  The lecture was entitled: “Fuzzy Math: the Challenge of Counting Paul’s Authentic Letters,” based on White’s forthcoming book, Counting Paul: Scientificy, Fuzzy Math, and Ideology in Pauline Studies.

College of Arts and Humanities – Faculty News – February 2025

HISTORY – Professor and Humanities Hub Director James Burns presented on the Humanities Hub’s Mellon Foundation Teacher Scholar Grant at two national conferences in Washington D.C.  The first was the Annual Conference of the Assocation of Undergraduate Educating Research Universities. The second presentation, with a different cohort of Teacher-Scholars, was at the Meeting of the Association of American Colleges and Universities.

HISTORY – Professor Vernon Burton appeared with Andrew Sullivan on NPR’s The Middle with Jeremy Hobson to discuss the topic “Is democracy really at risk?” in January. On Feb. 4, Burton was the lead historian for an amicus brief filed with the U.S. Supreme Court on maintaining the integrity of the Georgia election system (Case S25A0490 Brief of AmiciCuiae History Professors in Support of Appellees External Vigilance Action, inc., et al.).  Burton has also been appointed to the South Carolina Sesquicentennial Commission (SC250) Advisory Council for Scholars to assist the Commission in helping shape educational programming, public history initiatives, and commemorations that highlight South Carolina’s essential contributions to the Southern Campaigns of the American Revolution.  On Feb. 3, he spoke at Wofford College on the Civil Rights Movement in South Carolina.  On Feb. 13-14,  he participated in a radio program in Chicago on Abraham Lincoln’s legacy and a conference at the University of Illinois on Lincoln and Liberty.  Lastly, on Feb. 25, he chaired a panel as a commissioner at the annual conference of the South Carolina African American Heritage Commission at the State Archives.  

LANGUAGES – Jody Cripps, Associate Professor of American Sign Language, and his colleague, Dr. Anita Small had published a chapter titled “Exploring the Creation of Lyrics, Composition, and Performance in Signed Music” in “Lights: The Real Us Behind the Scenes & Activity Guide.” 

ENGLISH – Assistant Professor Stevie Edwards’ poem “Father’s Day” was featured as The Best American Poetry’s “Pick of the Week.” Additionally, their poems “Heat Wave,” “After Watching Thelma & Louise,” and “With Wings” were published in The Screen Door, a journal for literary voices of the queer south.

PHILOSOPHY – Assistant Professor Quinn Hiroshi Gibson published a chapter in the Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Delusionedited by Ema Sullivan-Bissett. It was published early in the year, though I don’t know exactly when. His chapter, ‘Delusion and Rationality’, (Chapter 14, pp. 214–227) discusses the philosophical positions on the relation between delusions and rationality and argues that delusions are best understood as irrational beliefs, as opposed to non-beliefs, or rational beliefs. He further argues that, given this interpretation, delusions should be modeled in terms of where the irrationality enters, at the stage of entertainment, the stage of formation, or the stage of maintenance.  

Hiroshi Gibson also published a post on the American Philosophical Association’s blog entitled ‘Reconciling the Manifest and Scientific Images of Addiction‘ in which he argues that by appealing to a leading neuroscientific theory of addiction, we can make progress understanding addiction in ordinary interpersonal, psychological, and moral terms.

RELIGIOUS STUDIES – Associate Professor Elizabeth Jemison has joined the Steering Committee of the Afro-American Religious History Group of the American Academy of Religion, where she will serve a three-year term.

PHILOSOPHY – Professor Charlie Kurth’s paper, “Shames and Selves: On the Origins and Cognitive Foundations of a Moral Emotion” was accepted at the British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, the premier venue for philosophical research on the sciences.  In the paper, Kurth draws on work from a range of disciplines—philosophy, anthropology, psychology, primatology, cognitive science and history—to argue that evolutionary forces equipped humans with a distinctly moral form of shame.

ENGLISH – The Writing Program Administrators (WPA) team composed of Associate Professor Michelle Smith, Senior Lecturer Mary Nestor, and Post-Doctoral Fellows Kelly Sauskojus, Matthew Burchanoski, and Jagadish Paudel participated in and presented at the Carolinas Writing Program Administrators Meeting on February 7 at Furman University in Greenville, SC. The presentation, “Questions From a WPA Team,” was a roundtable discussion featuring Smith’s reflections on a plan for transitioning and changing Clemson’s first-year writing (FYW) program. Smith highlighted the introduction of a new WPA postdoctoral fellows’ program and topics for revising the first-year curriculum, which incorporates inquiry-based research and reflective writing.

PERFORMING ARTS – Visiting Assistant Professor Kimbery Souther has been appointed to the Executive Board of the College Orchestra Directors Association (CODA) as Chair of Development. In this role, she will help CODA activate their strategic plan, increase enrollment, develop methods for financial contributions, and improve the quality and impact of publications, policies, advertising, and fund-raising. The chair of development also implements new policies and aids the organization in increasing accessibility and effectiveness for all collegiate orchestra directors and graduate students.

HISTORY – On February 1, 2025, D’Ondre Swails, Assistant Professor of History and Global Black Studies, delivered the keynote address at the 44th annual King’s Feast hosted by the University of Michigan School of Dentistry. The event celebrates the life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. 

LANGUAGES – Éric Touya published the new book Penser la ruralité en Aquitaine : Saubusse (1930-2020). Héritage, Territoire, Transmission (Bordeaux: Presses Universitaires de Bordeaux)  The book explores France’s past and present from a rural perspective, a topic not often studied or understood. It examines the transformations of rural France over the past century (including the collapse of agriculture and the rise of technology and globalization) and what these changes mean for our perception of what constitutes a community, the common good, civic engagements, democratic values, and the future of France. The book has been reviewed by Damien Bouhours in Le Petit Journal.com, Philippe Miquel: “Landes: l’histoire du village de Saubusse sous la loupe d’un universitaire américain”, in Sud-Ouest, and Nathalie Benoy in Radio France Bleu Gascogne  on January 12, 2025 ; Histoire et Sociétés Rurales, Vol. 63, 2025, and Dalhousie French Studies: Revues d’études littéraires du Canada, Vol. 127, 2025.

College of Arts and Humanities – Faculty News – January 2025

HISTORY – Professor Vernon Burton  had two articles published: “Confronting the Lost Cause Memorialization in South Carolina” in Grappling with Monuments of Oppression: Moving from Analysis to Activism, part of the Restorative Justice in Heritage Studies and Archaeology book series (Routledge Press, 2025) and “Jimmy Carter’s Day-to-Day Life as President: The White House Diary,” in The Literary Legacy of Jimmy Carter:  Essays on the President’s Books (Rowman & Littlefield, 2025).  On Jan. 5, at the annual meeting of the American Historical Association Burton presented a paper at a session on “Historians and the Courts.”  On Jan 13, he spoke on “Lincoln, Liberty, Reconstruction, and the Constitution” to a group at the Clemson University Emeritus College; on Jan. 23, at the Charleston Library Society, he moderated a discussion on Professor Ben Parten’s new book, Somewhere Toward Freedom; and on Jan. 15 he spoke at the 10th anniversary celebration of the Modjeska Simkins School in Columbia.

ENGLISH – Assistant Professor Su Cho was one of 35 writers selected to receive a 2025 Creative Writing Fellowship of $25,000 from the National Endowment for the Arts. This year’s fellowships are in poetry and enable the recipients to set aside time for writing, research, travel, and general career development. Fellows are selected through an anonymous review process and are judged on the basis of artistic excellence of the work sample they provided. These fellowships are highly competitive, with more than 2,000 eligible applications received for FY 2025.

ENGLISH – Assistant Professor of English and World Cinema Maziyar Faridi presented an article at the “Thinking Out of the Box” symposium in Paris in December 2024. Commemorating the 35th anniversary of the Paris Program in Critical Theory, the symposium gathered a group of affiliated theorists and philosophers to reflect on the future of critical theory. Maziyar presented parts of his film-essay on “Khora” and memory. 

PHILOSOPHY – On Jan. 15 Assistant Professor Quinn Hiroshi Gibson gave a talk entitled “Foundation and Conceptual Issues in Medicine and Mind Science” in the Clemson University School of Health Research (CUSHR) Clemson Health Advancement Talk (CHAT) series. In the talk, he outlined three major strands in my research program: foundational questions in philosophy of medicine, the modelling of disordered psychological conditions, and the bioethics and political philosophy of medicalized conditions. 

PERFORMING ARTS – Lillian Utsey Harder, Brooks Center director emerita and artistic director of the Utsey Chamber Music Series, secured five broadcasts on American Public Media’s Performance Today: Goldstein-Peled-Fiterstein Trio’s broadcast of Joachim Stutschewsky’ s Hassidic Fantasy on December 26 from their concert on February 9, 2023; guitarist Jason Vieaux’s broadcast on December 27 of Agustin Barrios’ Waltz in G Major, Op. 8, No. 3 from his concert on September 14, 2024; Sphinx Virtuosi’s broadcast on January 1 of Michael Dudley’s Prayer for our Times from their concert on March 30, 2023; pianist Maxim Lando’s broadcast on January 9 of Nikolai Kapustin’s Variations, Op. 41 from his concert on September 15, 2022; and Lincoln Center Chamber Music Society’s broadcast on January 14 of Howard Ferguson’s Octet for Winds and Strings, Op. 4 from their concert on October 18, 2021.

PHILOSOPHY – Professor Charlie Kurth published a review of Debra Hawhee’s, A Sense of Urgency: How the Climate Crisis is Changing Rhetoric, in the journal Metascience. Drawing on his experiences living in Asheville, NC through Hurricane Helene and its aftermath, he argues that Hawhee’s book projects a misplaced optimism.

LANGUAGES –  Three faculty members of the Department of Languages  presented in panels related to American Sign Language (ASL) and Deaf Studies at the 2025 Modern Languages Association conference in New Orleans. Professor Joseph Mai and Associate Professor Stephen Fitzmaurice co-presented on a discussion panel related to Disability and Hiring: Access, Accommodation, Belonging, and Retention titled “Moving (Slowly) Forward: Reshaping Campus Accessibility for the ASL Community.” Associate Professor Jody Cripps co-presented with Pamela Witcher, Vancouver Community College, and JB Begue, Towson University, on a discussion panel related to Deaf Performance, Language, and Art addressing “Signed Music and its Applications.”

ENGLISH – Professor Lee Morrissey was invited to publish a blog post for the Cambridge University Press about his new book, Milton’s Ireland, which the press published in December 2024.