Christopher participates in HERS Leadership Institute | Christopher participates in HERS Leadership Institute | ;ecb; | 8/4/2023 4:00:00 AM | | <p><strong>Emerald Christopher</strong>, associate professor of women and gender
studies, was among 77 emerging higher education leaders from across the
United States to participate in the July 2023 cohort of the HERS
Leadership Institute, hosted by the University of Denver. Higher
Education Resources Services (HERS) hosts three cohorts of the HERS
Leadership Institute each year, including two summer intensive cohorts
and a weekend immersion cohort hosted throughout the academic year.
During the institute, participants share their vision of leadership and
what they hope to contribute to their respective institutions and are
then challenged to develop the skills to actualize their professional
vision.<br></p> | | Uncropped Vertical | | GP0|#d586cffd-ad4b-45b9-8581-f6a2bbf70d87;L0|#0d586cffd-ad4b-45b9-8581-f6a2bbf70d87|Presentations;GTSet|#0a3b6244-764a-4413-b2f1-4b4c15da868c | 2023.00000000000 | https://publish.cas.udel.edu/Lists/ForTheRecord/DispForm.aspx?ID=336 | |
Stetz publishes in "Kaleidoscope" | Stetz publishes in "Kaleidoscope" | ;stetz; | 8/4/2023 4:00:00 AM | | <p><strong>Margaret D. Stetz</strong>, Mae and Robert Carter Professor of Women's
Studies and professor of humanities, is the author of poetry that has
been published recently in print and online journals. Two of her poems —
"Accident" and "Physical Therapy" — are in the current issue of <em>Kaleidoscope</em> (Issue 87, Summer 2023), which is a publication of United Disability Services (Akron, OH). Another poem, "<a href="https://www.immigrationdiaries.org/post/generations">Generations</a>," was published on July 10, in the online literary journal <em>Immigration Diaries</em>. Also, her haiku titled "Seventeen Years' Sleep" is included in <em>To Live Here: A Haiku Anthology</em>,
edited by Giorgia DiPancrazio and Katherine E. Winnick (Wee Sparrow
Poetry Press, 2023). In addition, she has had a letter published in the
Aug. 4 issue of the <em>Times Literary Supplement, UK</em>. Her letter
(under the title "Virginia Woolf Distracted") concerns the
correspondence between Virginia Woolf and Max Beerbohm (1872–1956), the
British artist and writer, and concludes with an announcement that the
letters they exchanged will be on display at the New York Public Library
(Oct. 20, 2023 through Feb. 4, 2024) in the exhibition "Max Beerbohm:
The Price of Celebrity," which is being curated by Stetz and by <strong>Mark Samuels Lasner</strong>, Senior Research Fellow, University of Delaware Library, Museums and Press. </p> | | Uncropped Vertical | | GP0|#e59b718f-f2f3-4654-8986-5eea60d4f90b;L0|#0e59b718f-f2f3-4654-8986-5eea60d4f90b|Publications;GTSet|#0a3b6244-764a-4413-b2f1-4b4c15da868c | 2023.00000000000 | https://publish.cas.udel.edu/Lists/ForTheRecord/DispForm.aspx?ID=337 | |
Stetz writes about the history of human rights in Asia | Stetz writes about the history of human rights in Asia | ;stetz; | 7/21/2023 4:00:00 AM | | <p><strong>Margaret D. Stetz</strong>, Mae and Robert Carter Professor of Women's
Studies and professor of humanities, is the author of a chapter titled
"New Genres, New Audiences: Retelling the Story of Japan's Military
Sexual Slavery," which has just been published in <em>New Ways of Solidarity with Korean Comfort Women</em>,
edited by Ñusta Carranza Ko. This volume is part of Palgrave
Macmillan's series, "Studies in Human Rights in Asia." Stetz's chapter
discusses how graphic memoirs, dystopian fantasy fiction, and poetry are
currently being used to engage readers — especially younger ones — and
inform them about the history of the military sexual exploitation of
women and underage girls during World War II. It also suggests ways of
bringing this history into undergraduate classrooms, such as through the
writing of poetry, and it ends with examples of three poems written by
Stetz herself: "Dirt"; "Disbelieved''; and "Redivivus," all related to
issues involving what are sometimes euphemistically called "comfort
women."<br></p> | | Uncropped Vertical | | GP0|#e59b718f-f2f3-4654-8986-5eea60d4f90b;L0|#0e59b718f-f2f3-4654-8986-5eea60d4f90b|Publications;GTSet|#0a3b6244-764a-4413-b2f1-4b4c15da868c | 2023.00000000000 | https://publish.cas.udel.edu/Lists/ForTheRecord/DispForm.aspx?ID=332 | |
Stetz poetry published | Stetz poetry published | ;stetz; | 7/7/2023 4:00:00 AM | | <p><strong>Margaret Stetz</strong>, Mae and Robert Carter Professor of Women's
Studies and professor of humanities, continues to publish poetry and
creative prose both related and unrelated to her scholarly interests.
The Spring 2023 issue of <em>Blue House Journal</em>, for instance, contains a poem of hers ("<a href="https://www.bluehousejournal.com/issue-6#The-Damage" target="_blank">The Damage</a>") inspired by the topic of gender-based violence.. Another poem, <a href="https://writtentales.substack.com/p/lionized?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email" target="_blank">"Lionized,"</a> appears in <em>Written Tales Magazine</em>. Her poem <a href="https://www.full-bleed.org/immersion" target="_blank">"Immersion — after Jae Ko's Untitled, 2012,</a>" which was read aloud in May at an event at the Phillips Collection in Washington, D C., is now in print in <em>Full Bleed: A Journal of Art and Literature</em>, Issue 6 (2023). p. 38, and is also accessible online. In addition, <a href="https://littleoldladycomedy.com/2023/06/05/dont-stop-and-smell-the-roses/" target="_blank">"Don't Stop and Smell the Roses,"</a> a short, comic autobiographical reflection, was published online in June by <em>LOL Comedy</em>.</p> | | Uncropped Vertical | | GP0|#e59b718f-f2f3-4654-8986-5eea60d4f90b;L0|#0e59b718f-f2f3-4654-8986-5eea60d4f90b|Publications;GTSet|#0a3b6244-764a-4413-b2f1-4b4c15da868c | 2023.00000000000 | https://publish.cas.udel.edu/Lists/ForTheRecord/DispForm.aspx?ID=326 | |
Smith and Hattery publish paper | Smith and Hattery publish paper | ;smithea;hatterya; | 6/30/2023 4:00:00 AM | | <p><strong>Earl Smith</strong> and <strong>Angela Hattery</strong>, both of whom are professors of women and gender studies, recently published a <a href="https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/00219347231177389" target="_blank">paper</a> in the <em>Journal of Black Studies</em>. "Re-Conceptualizing Kaepernick’s Kneeling Protests and His Banishment From the NFL as an Infringement on His “Right to Work.” <br></p> | | Uncropped Vertical | | GP0|#e59b718f-f2f3-4654-8986-5eea60d4f90b;L0|#0e59b718f-f2f3-4654-8986-5eea60d4f90b|Publications;GTSet|#0a3b6244-764a-4413-b2f1-4b4c15da868c | 2023.00000000000 | https://publish.cas.udel.edu/Lists/ForTheRecord/DispForm.aspx?ID=322 | |
Stetz participates in research seminar | Stetz participates in research seminar | ;stetz; | 6/16/2023 4:00:00 AM | | <p>On June 1, 2023, Margaret Stetz, Mae and Robert Carter Professor of
Women's Studies and professor of humanities, was an invited participant
in an online research seminar, "Early Twentieth-Century LGBTQ+ History
Beyond the Human," sponsored by "READ (Research at Durham)," a project
of the Department of English Studies at Durham University in the UK. It
focused on research by Heike Bauer (Birkbeck, University of London)
regarding the importance to queer writers such as Radclyffe Hall and to
visual artists such as Lotte Laserstein of dogs, cats, and other pets.</p> | | Uncropped Vertical | | GP0|#d586cffd-ad4b-45b9-8581-f6a2bbf70d87;L0|#0d586cffd-ad4b-45b9-8581-f6a2bbf70d87|Presentations;GTSet|#0a3b6244-764a-4413-b2f1-4b4c15da868c | 2023.00000000000 | https://publish.cas.udel.edu/Lists/ForTheRecord/DispForm.aspx?ID=320 | |
Stetz writes about works by Linda Grant | Stetz writes about works by Linda Grant | ;stetz; | 6/9/2023 4:00:00 AM | | <p>Margaret Stetz, Mae and Robert Carter Professor of Women's
Studies and professor of humanities, is the author of a chapter titled
"British Jewish Identity: Linda Grant as a Flâneuse and ‘Thoughtful
Dresser’" in Fashioning the Self: Identity and Style in British Culture,
edited by Emily Priscott (Vernon Press, 2023), pp. 137-161. Her essay
examines literary work related to fashion and to the history of Jewish
life in twentieth-century Britain by the novelist, journalist, and
critic Linda Grant, as well as the concept of the flâneur — i.e.,
an observer and interpreter of urban experience — that is usually
associated solely with men. Stetz is also co-author, with Emily
Priscott, of the same volume's "Introduction" (pp. xi-xxiv). In
addition, she continues to have a variety of poems published in literary
journals, including "Idle Trains," in Blithe Spirit: Journal of the British Haiku Society, Vol. 33, No. 2 (May 2023), and "Identity Crisis" in the online journal Writing in a Woman's Voice ( https://writinginawomansvoice.blogspot.com/ ), under "Tuesday, 16 May 2023."<br></p> | | Uncropped Vertical | | GP0|#e59b718f-f2f3-4654-8986-5eea60d4f90b;L0|#0e59b718f-f2f3-4654-8986-5eea60d4f90b|Publications;GTSet|#0a3b6244-764a-4413-b2f1-4b4c15da868c | 2023.00000000000 | https://publish.cas.udel.edu/Lists/ForTheRecord/DispForm.aspx?ID=315 | |
Stetz is winner in writing competition | Stetz is winner in writing competition | ;stetz; | 6/9/2023 4:00:00 AM | | <p><strong>Margaret Stetz</strong>, Mae and Robert Carter Professor of Women's
Studies and professor of humanities, was one of the winners of a writing
competition that connected poetry with art works on display in an
exhibition titled Pour, Tear, Carve at the Phillips Collection,
Washington, DC (March 18–May 14, 2023). The competition was organized by
the Maryland Institute College of Art and its sponsored publication,
Full Bleed: A Journal of Art and Design. Stetz's poem, “Immersion: for
Jae Ko’s Untitled," was read aloud at the Phillips Collection at an
event held on May 4th. Also read to the audience on that evening was her
poem "Two," a meditation on the art of the painter Frida Kahlo, which
has been accepted for publication in the Lonely No More Anthology
sponsored by the Center for 21st C. Studies, University of
Wisconsin-Milwaukee.<br></p> | | Uncropped Vertical | | GP0|#99d961eb-8936-415c-9024-28a13cec289a;L0|#099d961eb-8936-415c-9024-28a13cec289a|Awards and Honors;GTSet|#0a3b6244-764a-4413-b2f1-4b4c15da868c | 2023.00000000000 | https://publish.cas.udel.edu/Lists/ForTheRecord/DispForm.aspx?ID=319 | |
Stetz continues to publish | Stetz continues to publish | ;stetz; | 5/12/2023 4:00:00 AM | | <p>Poetry by <strong>Margaret Stetz</strong>, Mae and Robert Carter Professor of
Women’s Studies and professor of humanities, has continued to be
published in digital literary journals and also in print anthologies.
Her poem “Zofi,” which originally appeared online in the journal <em>JMWW</em> in January 2021, has now been reprinted in <em>The Poem Is Part of the Eye, </em>edited by David Erdos (London: Bite-Sized Books, 2023), pp. 179-180. In addition, two new poems have been published online: <a href="https://www.streetlit.xyz/poetry/little-bride-blue" target="_blank">“Little Bride Blue</a>” in the April 2023 issue of <em>StreetLit Journal</em> and <a href="https://kairoslit.com/2023/05/03/magic-lamp/" target="_blank">“Magic Lamp”</a> in <em>Kairos Literary Magazine</em>,
Vol. 7 (2022-2023). Meanwhile, her short article titled “Aubrey
Beardsley, 150 Years Young,” about the 2022 Grolier Club exhibition that
she curated with <strong>Mark Samuels Lasner</strong>, senior research fellow, UD
Library, Museums and Press, and about the resulting catalogue, which is
distributed by the University of Chicago Press, may be found in the
Spring 2023 issue of <em>Useful & Beautiful</em>, a publication of the William Morris Society in the United States.<br></p> | | Uncropped Vertical | | GP0|#e59b718f-f2f3-4654-8986-5eea60d4f90b;L0|#0e59b718f-f2f3-4654-8986-5eea60d4f90b|Publications;GTSet|#0a3b6244-764a-4413-b2f1-4b4c15da868c | 2023.00000000000 | https://publish.cas.udel.edu/Lists/ForTheRecord/DispForm.aspx?ID=310 | |
Sloan-White receives fellowship | Sloan-White receives fellowship | ;pswhite; | 5/5/2023 4:00:00 AM | | <p><strong>Patricia Sloane-White</strong>, professor of anthropology and chair of the
Department of Women and Gender Studies, has been awarded a fully funded
visiting fellowship at the Center for Southeast Asian Studies at Kyoto
University for the month of July, where she will focus on anthropology
of marriage and gender, socio-legal studies, and Islamic law and
economics. Since its inception in 1963, Kyoto University’s Center for
Southeast Asian Studies (CSEAS) has been working to become the world’s
center for Southeast Asian regional studies. CSEAS brings together
researchers who specialize in Southeast Asian studies across various
fields ranging from the humanities studies and social sciences to the
natural sciences including the life sciences to work on key issues in
the region.</p> | | Uncropped Vertical | | GP0|#99d961eb-8936-415c-9024-28a13cec289a;L0|#099d961eb-8936-415c-9024-28a13cec289a|Awards and Honors;GTSet|#0a3b6244-764a-4413-b2f1-4b4c15da868c | 2023.00000000000 | https://publish.cas.udel.edu/Lists/ForTheRecord/DispForm.aspx?ID=307 | |