I just got an e-mail from Claudia McQuistion, an English Major who graduated last May. Some of you may remember her as the first-place finisher in last spring's Poetry Contest, and it seems appropriate to pass on this news just as the entries for this year's competition have piled up in the English Office. One of the prize-winning poems--"Jakarta Office Hit By Blast"--along with another, "Seeking Passion," has been accepted for publication by the bi-annual literary magazine Fifth Wednesday Journal. (Link here) Quite a coup for our McQuistion! I'll let you know when the journal hits the newsstands. She's living in Seattle now, and promises to send me more information about her doin's later. I'll ask her if I can add the text of "Jarkata" later.
--Jay
Saturday, February 16, 2008
Friday, February 15, 2008
The View from Chawton
[Lisa Kasmer, currently on sabbatical, is a Visiting Fellow at Chawton House Library, U.K.]
I am writing as your foreign correspondent from Chawton, U.K., where I'm completing research for my book project on British women writing history in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The collection at Chawton House Library focuses on early editions, many of which are rare, of women's writing from 1600-1830. At the library, I'm carrying out a survey of historical fiction by women in the nineteenth century, a genre that was exceptionally popular. My reading here so far has brought some insights and real surprises--this is what I love most about this kind of research: Who knew that Ann Yearsley, a Romantic poet, wrote a historical play, which is really quite radical both politically and generically?
In addition to its collection, Chawton House offers an unusual "textual experience." The building in which the collection is housed is part of an estate that was once owned by Charles Knight, Jane Austen's brother. In actually working in this historical home, I am often viscerally reminded of moments in an eighteenth- or nineteenth-century novel. Each weekday, I come up the path of the estate's spacious grounds with shire horses grazing. I then walk up the massive main staircase and through narrow passageways to the main reading room, a stately drawing room with bookshelves holding some of the main collection. Throughout my day, I may remember descriptions of Clarissa's troubling imprisonment; Lizzy Bennet's breathtaking visit to Pemberley; or Jane Eyre's secret rambles through Thornfield Hall.
Friday, February 8, 2008
For All You Sports Enthusiasts. . . .
As a change of pace, I'd like to introduce you to Bill Cobb's latest venture, the clark sports blog. He and his writers post some fine stories about the latest Cougar ventures in various venues. Check it out if you're interested. . . .
--Jay
--Jay
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