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Research & Innovation

Research in the arts and humanities represents a range of disciplines and distinctive modes of knowledge and methods that result in articles and books, ideas, exhibitions, performances, artifacts and more. This deliberate and dedicated work generates deep insights into the multi-faceted people and cultures of the world, past and present.
Whether individual or collaborative, funded or unfunded, our faculty are leading national networks and conferences, providing research frameworks, engaging students, traversing international archives and making significant contributions to UMD's research enterprise.
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The Middle Ages at Work: Practicing Labor in Late Medieval England

New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. Co-edited with with Michael Uebel.

English

Author/Lead: Kellie Robertson
Dates:

This timely volume examines the commitments of historicism in the wake of New Historicism. It contributes to the construction of a materialist historicism while, at the same time, proposing that discussions of work need not be limited to the clash between labor and capital. To this end, the essays offer more than a strictly historical view of the complex terms, social and literary, within which labor was treated in the medieval period. Several of the essays strive to reformulate the very critical language we use to think about the categories of labor and work through a continually doubled engagement with modern theories of labor and medieval theories and practices of labor.

Poet Laureate of Maryland

The Poet Laureate of Maryland is an honorary State position in which the individual selected will serve at the discretion of the Governor for up to a four-year term renewable by the Governor’s consent.

English

Author/Lead: Michael Collier
Dates:
The Poet Laureate will provide public readings for the citizens of Maryland, ensuring that people in all geographic regions of the State have access to at least one reading during the term of service.

Media advocates, Latino citizens and niche cable The limits of ‘no limits’ TV

In Shot in America, Chon Noriega calls for the study of media activism’s work ‘within the system’ of state institutions and for analysis of the relationships between media activism, the television industry and government policies.

English

Author/Lead: Scott Wible
Dates:
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
This article uses a cultural policy studies focus to answer this call and map the deregulated terrain upon which media advocacy groups must now operate. Liberal governance demands that media advocates find means other than state-directed appeals to advance their agendas. As such, this essay examines the efforts of several Latino advocacy groups to garner viewer support for a Latino-themed cable television show, Resurrection Boulevard, and to use the series as a vehicle for increased Latino participation in the television industry.

Latticework

This collection of poems, inspired by Judith Skillman's collaboration with textile artist Erika Carter, was selected by Contemporary Quilt Arts "Visual Verse Project" for a five year traveling display of quilts and poems.

English

Dates:
Publisher: Wordtech Communications
PLACE HOLDER TEXT

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Selected Letters, Orations, and Rhetorical Dialogues of Madeleine de Scudery

The Other Voice in Early Modern Europe Madeleine de Scudéry (1607-1701) was the most popular novelist in her time, read in French in volume installments all over Europe and translated into English, German, Italian, and even Arabic.

English

Author/Lead: Jane Donawerth
Dates:
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Edited and Translated by Jane Donawerth and Julie Strongson
200 pages | 5 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2004

Madeleine de Scudéry (1607-1701) was the most popular novelist in her time, read in French in volume installments all over Europe and translated into English, German, Italian, and even Arabic. But she was also a charismatic figure in French salon culture, a woman who supported herself through her writing and defended women's education. She was the first woman to be honored by the French Academy, and she earned a pension from Louis XIV for her writing.

Selected Letters, Orations, and Rhetorical Dialogues is a careful selection of Scudéry's shorter writings, emphasizing her abilities as a rhetorical theorist, orator, essayist, and letter writer. It provides the first English translations of some of Scudéry's Amorous Letters, only recently identified as her work, as well as selections from her Famous Women, or Heroic Speeches, and her series of Conversations. The book will be of great interest to scholars of the history of rhetoric, French literature, and women's studies.

Winner of the "Best Translation of 2004" award from the Society for the Study of Early Modern Women.

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The Housing

In beautiful and mysterious poems, many-layered and intricate like the anatomical drawings of Vesalius, A.V. Christie creates the housing for a metaphysical realm pulled back from some far-off dream.

English, Center for Literary and Comparative Studies

Dates:
Publisher: Ashland Poetry Press
PLACE HOLDER TEXT

F. Scott Fitzgerald: New Perspectives

This collection of essays presents fresh insights into F. Scott Fitzgerald’s writing, discussing neglected texts and approaching familiar works from new perspectives.

English

Author/Lead: Jackson Bryer
Dates:
Publisher: University of Georgia Press

Years after his death, F. Scott Fitzgerald continues to captivate both the popular and the critical imagination. This collection of essays presents fresh insights into his writing, discussing neglected texts and approaching familiar works from new perspectives.

Seventeen scholarly articles deal not only with Fitzgerald's novels but with his stories and essays as well, considering such topics as the Roman Catholic background of The Beautiful and Damned and the influence of Mark Twain on Fitzgerald's work and self-conception. The volume also features four personal essays by Fitzgerald's friends Budd Schulberg, Frances Kroll Ring, publisher Charles Scribner III, and writer George Garrett that shed new light on his personal and professional lives. Together these contributions demonstrate the continued vitality of Fitzgerald's work and establish new directions for ongoing discussions of his life and writing.

The Portable Henry James

Henry James wrote with an imperial elegance of style, whether his subjects were American innocents or European sophisticates, incandescent women or their vigorous suitors.

English

Author/Lead: John Auchard
Dates:
Publisher: Penguin Classics

Henry James wrote with an imperial elegance of style, whether his subjects were American innocents or European sophisticates, incandescent women or their vigorous suitors. His omniscient eye took in the surfaces of cities, the nuances of speech, dress, and manner, and, above all, the microscopic interactions, hesitancies, betrayals, and self-betrayals that are the true substance of relationships. The entirely new Portable Henry James provides an unparalleled range of this great body of work: seven major tales, including Daisy Miller, The Turn of the Screw, "The Beast in the Jungle," and "The Jolly Corner"; a sampling of revisions James made to some of his most famous work; travel writing; literary criticism; correspondences; autobiography; descriptions of the major novels; and parodies by famous contemporaries, including T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, Virginia Woolf, and Graham Greene.

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Unchained Voices: An Anthology of Black Authors in the English-Speaking World of the Eighteenth Century

Carretta has assembled the most comprehensive anthology ever published of writings by eighteenth-century people of African descent

English

Author/Lead: Vincent Carretta
Dates:
Publisher: University Press of Kentucky

Carretta has assembled the most comprehensive anthology ever published of writings by eighteenth-century people of African descent, capturing the surprisingly diverse experiences of blacks on both sides of the Atlantic -- America, Britain, the West Indies, and Africa -- between 1760 and 1798.   

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Argument & Song: Sources and Silences in Poetry

This volume collects fifteen of Plumly's previously published essays on poetry and art, including the seminal "Chapter and Verse," "Sentimental Forms," and "The Abrupt Edge."

English

Author/Lead: Stanley Plumly
Dates:
Publisher: Handsel

This volume collects fifteen of Plumly's previously published essays on poetry and art, including the seminal "Chapter and Verse," "Sentimental Forms," and "The Abrupt Edge." Meditating on poems by Keats, Stevens, James Wright, Plath, and Matthews, on Emily Brontë's prose, and paintings by Whistler, Plumly returns again and again to essential matters: the impulses, occasions, and places of which art arises and the forms by which imagination gives it shape.

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