5.22.2008

Summer

Well, late spring anyway. It's already started, though: the busy time of year when there's an absence of (teaching) work which leads to an abundance of other activities. We just got back from Omaha, where we saw the Malcom X birthsite (a vacant lot that has some greenspace added), Children's Museum, Henry Doorly Zoo, and the Botanical gardens. Ate at McFoster's Natural Kind cafe and Jane's Market. Omaha isn't a great town, but it's not bad -- at least not as bad as I had imagined. The areas around UNO are pretty nice and despite the lack of recycling, there is a growing bike trail system. So, it's win some, loose some.

Still on deck for this summer: thesis committee & defense (I'm 3rd reader), submit "Toward Sustainable Literacies" (article) to editor, meet with local writing project director, teach my summer section of College Research & Writing, Solon's birthday, camping at Backbone State Park, 3-week level-one course through Iowa Writing Project, finish Comp theory syllabus, locate and revise master's thesis into article (yes -- after 8 years!), research English Department mission statements and organize for first dept. meeting, organize Brown Bag topics for fall semester, meet with Digital Arts Interdisciplinary committee, oh and find some time to write somewhere among all this!

Whew!

5.05.2008

Places, Everybody

I've been thinking about place a lot. Not surprising. My research is all about place. But I've got other thinkers lately, like Ydog. He's got a lot to say about hometowns. And recently while walking through the exhibit hall at 4Cs, I heard someone shout in my direction: "Now there's a man after my own heart!" I looked over and saw a woman looking at me, maybe pointing. The exact details are blurry, but she then said, "Your hat" and I remembered I was wearing my Twins baseball cap. I went over to her and she introduced herself, "Kay Halasek." Turns out she's a big Twins fan, but stranger yet, she's grew up in Owatonna, the small city just down the road from Waseca, where I graduated from high school.

Now, I'm in Iowa, Kay is in Ohio, Jeff in Missouri and generally, at things like 4Cs, we look at and see where someone is now -- who employs them, generally (unless you're a very notable composition scholar who *still* gets the affiliation on his name tag wrong!). This is to say that we often make associations with where folks are for right now. There is, after all a considerable deal of transiency (word?) in our profession and this often tells us very little about that person except that they are able to hold a job at University of X where the scenery/ weather/ shopping is Q, or that are brave/ talented/ lucky enough to self-label as "Professional Independent Scholar." What we don't see is where the person is from. Sure, where they live now has an immediate effect, but so does where they have been. Take Mina Shaughnesy for instance and how much her hometown of Lead, South Dakota has been seen in her use of frontier metaphors. Where are their roots? How might those early years of figuring out this crazy life have situated that person? Like Kay and I, who might be practically neighbors and never even know it? What kind of insights or revisions might this literal choragraphy reveal?

So, I've created a Google Maps page titled "Hometown Composition" that I invite you all to add to. I hope I have the permissions set right. You will need to search the maps for it, but once you do, please add or change the markers. Click on the green colored link "Hometown Composition" below the names that are listed as the main headings. Jeff and Kay, I presumed yours already.

Not always theoretical... not even always academic.. but always written..