Dylan Lewis Named to Andrew W. Mellon Society of Fellows in Critical Bibliography
The prestigious fellowship is a capstone graduate career achievement for the English doctoral candidate.
[A special issue entitled “Versions of the Natural from Antiquity to Early Modernity,” edited by Sarah Kay and Nicolette Zeeman.]
Discussing both benefits and challenges to this pedagogical approach, I advocate for an increase in decolonial methodologies and pedagogies in teaching technical and professional communication and argue for their potential to intervene for equity and justice in both the classroom and the workplace.
Read More about “Masculinity, Vulnerability, and Consulting in Educational Development.”
Read More about “Vicious Pranks: Comedy and Cruelty in Rabelais and Shakespeare”
Three-week residency, Summer 2019
Newton s statement made one year after Stonewall and the same month Newton was released from prison takes the unorthodox step of suggesting the importance of black radical organizations and collectives.
Read More about “Data First: Remodeling the Digital Humanities Center.”
Read More about “Allegorical Consent: The Faerie Queene and the Politics of Erotic Subjection.”