Sam Kasner and Sam Amos lead UMW Orientation.
Fearless Thinker
Alumni Fitz Maro travels to the Cannes Festival of Creativity.
UMW alumna to provide Starbucks market research insights as ‘graduate-in-residence’ (The Free Lance-Star)
Poem-A-Day – ‘Daughter’ by Jon Pineda (The Spectrum)
University of Mary Washington welcomes nearly 1,400 students (Washington Post)
UMW, AT&T Focus on Driving Dangers
The UMW community will be able to experience firsthand the dangers of distracted driving on Wednesday, Aug. 26. The University has teamed up with AT&T and DRIVE SMART Virginia to bring the “It Can Wait” virtual reality driving simulator to Ball Circle on the Fredericksburg campus. The simulator will be set up in front of the new University Center between 9 a.m. and 7 p.m. To find out more, go to http://www.umw.edu/news/2015/08/20/umw-att-focus-on-driving-dangers.
Cooperman Featured in U.S. News & World Report’s Debate Club
Rosalyn Cooperman, associate professor of political science, authored an analysis of the Aug. 6 Republican presidential nominees’ debate for U.S. News and World Report’s Debate Club. Professor Cooperman’s piece may be accessed here: http://www.usnews.com/debate-club/who-did-the-best-at-the-gops-first-debate.
Foss Publishes Article on Indian English-Language Poetry and the Irish Question
This summer, Professor of English Chris Foss published an article entitled “Fin-de-Siècle Indian English-Language Poetry: British Imperialism, India, and the Irish Question” in English Literature in Transition, 1880-1920. Now in its 58th year, ELT is one of the most established venues for scholarly work on literature from the late Victorian, Edwardian, and early Modernist periods.
In this article, Foss details how three Indian English-language poets living and publishing in India during the 1890s—Avadh Behari Lall, Aurobindo Ghose, and Romesh Chunder Dutt—wrote in support of Irish Home Rule, and how their work meaningfully counters the orientalist assumption/insistence that Indian English-language poetry limit itself to exclusively Indian contexts/foci. Such an international scope, while complementary to the more properly local focus of most Indian anti-imperialist agendas, significantly reveals the extent to which their poetry contained a cosmopolitan component that ultimately cannot be reduced to some sort of partial engagement with Irish nationalism merely as a means of covertly commenting on India. Their work suggests the global reach of Indian English-language poetry, displaying a broad range of responses to the Irish Question while offering truly penetrating individual insights into the nature of imperial rule and the politics of British imperialism beyond the “borders” of the Indian subcontinent.
Farnsworth Speaks to International Media Group
Stephen Farnsworth, professor of political science and director of the University’s Center for Leadership and Media Studies, recently gave a lecture entitled, “Evaluating Public Opinion Polls: A Brief Introduction to Survey Research,” in Washington for the Macedonia Media Leaders Program (MMLP), an international journalism initiative sponsored by the International Research & Exchanges Board.
Pineda’s Recent Poems Featured Over Summer
Jon Pineda, assistant professor of English and acting coordinator of the concentration in creative writing, has had four poems recently featured in high-profile venues of publication. “Translation” was one of the featured “Father’s Day” poems on The Poetry Foundation’s “Poetry Off The Shelf” podcast: http://www.poetryfoundation.org/features/audioitem/5250. “Cinque Terre” and “The Muse, or Stars Out on Interstate 81 South” were featured on The Poetry Foundation’s “Poem of the Day” for August 11, 2015: http://www.poetryfoundation.org/features/audioitem/5330 and http://www.poetryfoundation.org/features/audioitem/5332.
Finally, “Daughter” was featured as part of the Academy of American Poets’ “Poem-A-Day” program on August 21: http://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poet/jon-pineda.