Monday, November 25, 2019

Sigma Tau Delta Welcomes New Members

Sigma Tau Delta 2019 Induction Ceremony was held on 11/19 in Ronk Lecture Hall in SCOE
Sigma Tau Delta, the international English Honorary inducted new members to its Ashland University chapter. Family and friends joined the students for the event.



Pictured left to right: New inductees Ellissa Chambliss, Skylar Roberts, Jaion Harris, Andreas Cook, Noah Gore, Stephanie Sorrell, Kourtney Kisling, Julia Swanson-Hines




Pictured left to right second image: Sigma Tau Delta advisor Dr. Maura Grady, Sigma Tau Delta Co-Advisors Rachel Barkley ('20) Sara Ludwig ('20)
The students of Sigma Tau Delta nominated Dr. Kelly Sundberg as their guest speaker.



Third image: Dr. Kelly Sundberg

Sigma Tau Delta is an international honor society for students of English at four-year colleges and universities who are within the top 30% of their class and have a 3.5 GPA or higher. It presently has over 850 chapters in the United States and abroad.
Congrats to all the new members! 🎉

Sunday, November 24, 2019

Award-Winning Poet and Ashland Alum Logan Fry Visits Campus

Visiting Writer: English and Creative Writing Major Logan Fry

Written by Noah C Gore on November 23rd, 2019

Since graduating in 2010, Logan Fry went on to receive his MFA in poetry from the University of Texas - Austin. He later became a lecturer at Texas State University, teaching writing. When Fry isn’t working on grading papers, he runs and edits the online literary journal, Flag + Void; this online journal publishes experimental poetry.

On November 15th, Logan Fry came and visited his stomping grounds of Ashland University where he received his bachelor’s in English and Creative Writing. During his visit, he attended Dr. Deborah Fleming’s Poetry Workshop class, where he answered questions posed by the students. There was a lot to learn from him, such as information about his personal life, the road to publication, and how he found his niche. Fry also made it a point to note that poetry was not always his first choice; he originally wanted to write fiction, but that all changed when a visiting professor told him he spoke like a poet. This awakening helped push him to where he is now.

At 4:00 pm the same day, Fry gave a reading of selected poems from his Omnidawn Award-winning book, Harpo Before the Opus. Among those read were “Center Furby,” “Because It Faces In,” and “Hooray For Hollywood.” Each of these poems has its own, interesting way of phrasing and structuring everyday ideas and concepts. Fry’s inspiration for “Center Furby” was YouTube / viral video culture. “Because It Faces In” is a great example of Fry experimenting with line spacing and minimalism. “Hooray For Hollywood,” as you may have guessed, is a critique of the celebrity / elitist society and the toxicity that surrounds it; it also looks back to what most people think of as the idealized Hollywood and all the tropes that came with it.

Published earlier this year through Omnidawn Publishing in Oakland, California, Harpo Before the Opus is Fry’s first major publication to date. Karen Garthe, author of The Banjo Clock, described his work as, “a delirium of language feverish, passionate; an abstract pitched and wounded critique.” Harpo Before the Opus is an experimental collection of absurdist, post-performative poetry filled with whimsical insights and criticisms of pop-culture, capitalism, and generational differences.

Ashland University is proud to have Logan Fry as one of its alumni and wishes the best of luck to him in future endeavors.

Fry's book can be ordered here: https://www.omnidawn.com/product/harpo-before-the-opus-logan-fry/, from Amazon, or from other book retailers.


Monday, November 18, 2019

Student Reaction to Poet Maggie Smith Reading at Ashland University (10/23/19)



Student Reaction to Poet Maggie Smith Reading at Ashland University (10/23/19)

By Melan White

Poems packed with grace, pain, power, and nostalgia stuck with audience members long after they were read aloud on a Wednesday afternoon. On October 23, 2019 English department students, university professors, staff, and community members gathered to hear Maggie Smith read her work. Smith’s poems carry us from the corn fields of Ohio to the depths of the blue skies, and are packed with universal truths and the thoughts of a young Midwesterner. Smith writes from her own lived experience-- she writes as a mother, as an Ohian, and tries not to write as an editor (even though she is one). Smith is well known for her poem “Good Bones,” but it is just a sampling of the breadth of her work. The final lines of Smith’s poems leave readers in awe, wonderment, and a simultaneous deep understanding and deep questioning of the world around us.

As a junior, a Creative Writing and Mathematics double major, and a student athlete, it can be hard to find time to attend events on campus like this one. I was grateful to be able to attend, I felt both honored and inspired to listen to Maggie Smith read her work. Towards the end of the reading when Smith was reading her poem “Let’s Not Begin,” I had this moment of deja vu. I focused in on Smith’s words and realized that I had heard her work before. I was a member of a writing community in my hometown and we would open our writing time with Smith’s poems. It was such a great moment to be able to put a face to the words that had moved me so many times before.


What Can You Do With an English Major?


Thursday, November 14, 2019

Alumni Update: Alyssa Ferrell (2019)

Alumni Update! 
Alyssa Ferrell, a 2019 graduate of Ashland University, has shared what she has been up to since graduation! "Since graduation, I've made quite a few big leaps into adulthood. I moved to Ashland permanently, renovated my first home, got a teaching job at a great district, and I am preparing to get married on September 21st! It's been a busy summer! I am now working as an 11th and 12th grade English teacher at Crestview High School. I did my student teaching through Ashland University at Crestview in the spring, so I really owe my job to AU! I love teaching American and British literature to these kids, but my favorite subject that I teach is Journalism. We only have four kids in the class, but they are all excited to make their voices heard through school publications. I'm really looking forward to getting to know all of my students and creating an engaging Literature program with some of my favorite texts. Teaching my students how to close read is a large part of my curriculum, and I owe my own abilities with close reading to my professors at AU. I hope we can have stimulating discussions in my class like we did during my time at AU!"
- Alyssa Ferrell




Pictured: Alyssa [standing, second from the right] at the Crestview High School's first football game of the season

Dr. Kelly Sundberg's New Publications

Dr. Kelly Sundberg, Asst. Prof. of English has several new publications this month. 
Dr. Sundberg has published a memoir from Harper Collins, Goodbye, Sweet Girl, numerous essays and other works.  These articles are in popular media publications because, as Dr. Sundberg tells us, "I try to keep one foot in the commercial publishing world" as well as continuing to do more academic creative writing work. The first is an interview with The Healthy, which is part of the Reader's Digest family: https://www.thehealthy.com/family/relationships/survivors-stories-domestic-violence/.f

The second is one that she is very excited about. The Stylist, which is the UKs leading women's magazine had their 10 year anniversary this year, and to celebrate, they had 10 issues guest edited by 10 women. The current guest editor is Roxane Gay (the last editors were Chelsea and Hillary Clinton), and Roxane Gay asked Sundberg to write the column for the issue. The first link describes the issue (which Sundberg comments "is amazing and features Elizabeth Warren"), and the second link is Dr. Sundberg's piece.


Congratulations to Dr. Sundberg on the publication of these pieces!