Category Archives: Blog

Teaching Mod Women: Winter Plans

The TMWWE blog will be on a bit of a hiatus until January, but we will certainly be busy behind the scenes.  Preliminary review of proposals begins this week, and contributors can expect decisions and feedback in mid-January.  In the meantime, I’ll be at MLA in Austin and would love to chat about this project, so look me up!

Watch this space in the spring for progress reports on the development of the prospectus, as well as reflections and resources from our contributors.  Readers will be invited to share thoughts and feedback on the prospectus as we’re drafting it; we’ll want to hear from you.

 

The Deadline Approaches!

Tomorrow, December 1, is the deadline for abstracts for “Teaching Modernist Women’s Writing in English.”  A number of intriguing proposals have come in so far, and I’m looking forward to more.

I’m still happy to field any inquiries, and wouldn’t mind extending the deadline by a few days for anyone who asks — so if you’re still chewing on an idea or feeling the pinch of the end of the semester, do get in touch and we can chat about what might work.

The month of January will find me reading submissions and starting to think about the table of contents.  I’ll be using this space throughout the spring to try out ideas for the prospectus, share the emerging contents, and continue to offer interesting and useful resources for teaching modernist studies.  Let me know what you’d like to see in the volume as the project develops.

MSA 17: Teaching Modernist Women and Thinking Back through Our Mothers

This year’s MSA annual meeting in Boston was a rejuvenating experience.  I got to have many exciting conversations with scholars and teachers interested in TMWWE, and I learned more about what readers might be hoping for from the volume.  I was really humbled by the brilliant ideas suggested at sessions and during coffee breaks by those teaching modernist women’s writing.

One high point was attending a seminar held in honor of the life and work of Jane Marcus.  In the seminar “Thinking Back Through Our Mothers,” led by Ashley Foster and Linda Camarasana, I got helpful feedback on a draft introduction for this prospectus, as well as some new ideas on the work that the introduction might do.  I felt really fortunate to be in a room with former students of Jane’s, because they shared insights, remembrances, and reflections on her teaching and mentoring.  This was a hospitable place in which to consider pedagogy, and the place of modernist women’s writing in the classroom.

Some questions and thoughts from participants:

  • why this book, and why now?
  • has feminism altered our understanding of modernism, and how?
  • what are the implications of feminist pedagogy for our practice?
  • is this really all about canon, or are the stakes higher?
  • how can teaching modernist women’s writing help us mentor, and help us stage interventions into some of the pressing issues facing our world vis a vis sexism, racism, homophobia, hatred, violence?

I’ll be thinking about these questions as I work on the prospectus after the December 1 deadline — and I’d welcome any thoughts in the comments.

LIVE Broadcast on #teachingmodwomen

So…not live anymore — but I did do an Ask Me Anything on Periscope, chatting for about 10 minutes about TMWWE, its inspiration, the kinds of queries I’ve been receiving, tips on teaching and feminist pedagogy, and things I’m thinking about as I turn the prospectus over in my mind.

You can still watch!  Click here.

If you’d like to chat in person, find me at MSA — I’ve submitted my seminar paper to “Thinking Back Through Our Mothers:  Feminist Revolutions in Modernism,” a draft version of the introductory essay to TMWWE.

Interested in #teachingmodwomen? Ask Me Anything!

On Monday, October 26th at 12pm EST, I’ll be hosting an Ask Me Anything live on Periscope.  Interested in…

  • contributing a proposal?
  • getting some feedback on your ideas?
  • sharing teaching resources?
  • hearing from potential readers about what they’d like from the volume?
  • getting more details on the prospectus and the vision for the book?

Join me!  Tweet, text, DM, or email your questions about “Teaching Modernist Women’s Writing in English,” and I’ll answer them live.  See you then!

Social Networks and Writing in Public

A recent post on the blog associated with Academe, the magazine for the AAUP, discusses the value of social networks for virtual workshopping (mentioning Academia.edu and Mendeley specifically).  The idea of opening up our work for peer review, for feedback — essentially workshopping the products of our scholarship in the digital space — is not new; Kathleen Fitzpatrick, of course, did exactly this in her work on Planned Obsolescence (which was then published by NYU Press), and a number of digital scholars have followed suit.

But the post reminded me of the value of using our networks for soliciting feedback on scholarly production:  not only in service of producing better work, but to stimulate conversation, to uncover possibilities for collaboration, to grow audience and engage with potential readers.  I think this is what we’re trying to do here with the MLA Commons site devoted to the development of Teaching Modernist Women’s Writing.

So, I would encourage anyone interested in potentially contributing to the volume to consider sharing his or her work here.  Potential contributors might take the opportunity afforded by this space to reach (hopefully) future readers, find interesting directions to take as the essays develop, and help shape a cohesive volume through conversation.

Welcome to Teaching Modernist Women’s Writing in English

It is my pleasure to welcome teacher-scholars interested in the work of modernist women writers in English to this site:  the online hub for developing a potential volume for the MLA Options for Teaching series.  Here you will find resources related to the teaching of modernism, reflections from hopeful contributors, and an opportunity to contribute to the making of a collection that you yourself might find useful.

I encourage you to peruse the site and join the conversation.  How might you use a collection of essays dedicated to the teaching of modernist women writers in English?  How might you contribute?  What do you need for your own professional development as a teacher of modernist women writers?  What have you been thinking about based on your own practice?  Where do you see the field headed?

I look forward to hearing from potential contributors and readers:  in the comments, and in the contribution of proposals.  I also welcome any correspondence from interested authors who might like to share ideas as their abstracts take shape.