Accents on English - Spring 2013 | Volume 16, Issue 2
[Note: these stories are being added daily. Keep an eye on this page for the full issue ... eventually.]
chair's cornerBeing Thankful to Those Who Give Back [M. Goggin / B. Sturges] giving back, giving forwardSpotlight on L2 Writing: New Award for Outstanding Paper [S. Luna] Creative Writers Supported by Rodriguez, Lyon Awards [C. Campbell] In Her Own Words: A Portrait of Maxine Marshall [C. Hogue] Simon Ortiz Donates Archive to Labriola Center, ASU Libraries [P. Masek] ian fletcher rememberedA Department Pays Tribute [H. Hoyt]
research & engagementWorld Englishes in the Multilingual World [C. Wells] Funny HaHa or Funny Hmmm: Humor Conference Spans Disciplines, Spurs Laughter, Ideas [S. Luna] Assistant Professor Sally Ball: A Four Way Mentor [J. Kelly] word lovers' cornerSpring 2013 Crossword: Giving Back—Books, Movies, Songs, and People [A. Ríos] Secret ASU [A. Ríos] | student storiesContributing Expertise Creates Town-Gown Bridge: PhD Candidate Sarah Grieve—Model Citizen [Editors] For Film Students, Opportunity Knocks Outside the Classroom [H. Vandevoorde] In Defense of Digital Humanities: Staffer Bruce Matsunaga Earns PhD [Editors] gained in translationOn the Importance of Being Untranslatable [C. Hogue] 'To Bend that Language': Elizabeth Horan on Translating Mistral [K. LaRue] the teaching zoneFor Love of the Book: English Education's James Blasingame [J. Parkinson] Alumna Named U.S. Professor of the Year [C. Hogue] A Linguistics Professor Looks Back [S. Berry] On Prison Teaching [Editors] new staffAnthony Trifiro in memoriamThelma Shinn Richard [A. Ríos] Kenneth Donelson [A. Nilsen] |
Accents on English 2.0 is produced by the Department of English at Arizona State University.
Executive Editors: Cynthia Hogue, Kristen LaRue | Photographer: Bruce Matsunaga
Newsletter Committee: Cynthia Hogue (Chair), Shavawn M. Berry, Daniel Cutrara, Heather Hoyt, Jan Kelly, Kristen LaRue, Sheila Luna, Jane Parkinson, Alberto Ríos, Cornelia Wells
Cherry blossoms (image at top) can symbolize "a good education." See Language of Flowers, illustrated by Kate Greenway (Routledge, 1900)