AMANDA GOLDEN
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Digital Woolf and Global Digital Modernisms Included in Teaching Modernist Women Writers Resources

7/29/2015

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Links to sites, syllabi, and assignments for my Global Digital Modernisms and Digital Woolf courses have been included on the Teaching Modernist Women's Writing in English resources page. The site accompanies the proposed MLA Teaching Modernist Women's Writing in English collection edited by Janine Utell. 


Here is a CFP for the volume:


Essay proposals are invited for a volume entitled Teaching Modernist Women’s Writing in English, to appear in the Options for Teaching series published by the Modern Language Association. The purpose of the volume is to meet the needs of instructors seeking pedagogical strategies for teaching modernist women’s writing in English and the ways in which women were vital creators and participants in the works and networks of modernism. The volume aims to capture the multiplicity of artistic, political, and social networks of which women writers were a part, crossing gender, class, and national boundaries, and to share ways to teach these connections and concepts from a wide range of contributors who work from different critical orientations and in different types of institutions and classroom settings. The volume will include material relevant for specialists and generalists who are teaching at the undergraduate and graduate levels, as well as in alternative classroom and institutional situations. The teaching resources to be shared will include current scholarship, readings, and digital tools.

Essays responding to four general areas through the lens of pedagogical theory and practice are sought: teaching modernism or modernist studies, thematic concerns, genre or form, and theoretical or methodological approaches. Contributions might cover topics related to issues and definitions in modernist studies, particularly as relevant to the study of women writers. These essays might focus on contexts and conceptual questions important to modernism and highlight the importance of women writers therein. Some essays might take up the teaching of a specific theme (e.g., trauma, colonialism, globalization, race, class, sexuality) or topic (e.g., suffrage, war, empire, socialism, communism, fascism, the workplace, little magazines, the literary marketplace). Other essays might look at the ways women writers used particular forms and genres (fiction, documentary, journalism, life writing, poetry, pamphlets or manifestos, “the middlebrow,” genre fiction, working-class writing, film, drama); these might consider teaching the tension between tradition and the avant-garde or the noteworthy contributions that women made to the avant-garde. Finally, essays might describe and exemplify teaching informed by particular critical or methodological approaches, such as theoretical perspectives (postcolonial studies, queer studies, narrative theory), interdisciplinary work (art, music, dance, science, technology) or intertextuality, the digital humanities, and the teaching of writing or multimodal pedagogy. A balance is sought among writers from the United States and the United Kingdom, as well as writers working in English from other regions of the world (e.g., the Caribbean, India).

Proposals should mention and define specific terms, concepts, techniques, and classroom contexts as appropriate. They should describe the intended topic, particularly the pedagogical approach taken to teaching modernist women’s writing, including methodology, evidence, theoretical or critical framework, and significance for those teaching in the field. The proposal should indicate the value of the intended topic to a broad range of instructors and should maintain a clear focus on teaching. Please note that any quotations from student papers will require written permission from the students.

Proposals of 500 words (for potential completed essays of 3,000–3,500 words) should be sent to Janine Utell (janine.utell@gmail.com) by 1 December 2015 via e-mail or in the message box below. Submissions in the message box will be sent to the editor and will remain private.

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Victorian Technology and Art Included in Studies in the Novel's Teaching Tools

7/22/2015

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Studies in the Novel
has launched a Teaching Tools page on their affiliate website. It includes my course website for Victorian Technology and Art at Georgia Tech in the spring of 2015.

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    Amanda Golden is an Associate Professor of English at New York Institute of Technology. She is the author of Annotating Modernism: Marginalia and Pedagogy from Virginia Woolf to the Confessional Poets (Routledge, 2020) and editor of This Business of Words: Reassessing Anne Sexton​ (UP of Florida, 2016). Her research and teaching interests include American and British literature from the nineteenth century to the present, modernism, poetry and poetics, literary archives, composition, and the digital humanities.

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  • Home
  • Teaching
    • African American Literature from the Harlem Renaissance to the Digital Present
    • Digital Woolf
    • Victorian Technology and Art
    • Global Digital Modernisms
    • FCWR 101: College in the Digital World
    • ICLT 331: Women, Technology, and Art
    • FCWR 101: Apple and Microsoft: 1975 to the Present
    • FCWR 151: Writing New York
    • ICLT 330 Global Literature and Digital Culture
    • Reading New York
  • Research
    • Annotating Modernism: Marginalia and Pedagogy from Virginia Woolf to the Confessional Poets
    • This Business of Words: Reassessing Anne Sexton
    • Sylvia Plath Map of Northampton
    • Sylvia Plath's Library
  • Curriculum Vitae
  • News and Events