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ACETA at Huntingdon College
in Montgomery
Friday and Saturday, February 20-21, 2009
"Visions of the Historical and the
Personal
in Time and Space"
Link
to The Light, our newsletter
for all conference information
Welcome to ACETA's sixty-first
annual conference, hosted this year on Friday and Saturday,
February 20th and 21st, at Huntingdon College in Montgomery.
Montgomery, Alabama, a city
famous, sometimes infamous, conjures up different images
for different people. In a September 2008 meeting at Samford
University, ACETA's steering committee and several invited
guests reflected on Montgomery's rich, varied history and
culture as they considered themes for the 2009 conference.
When Jackie Trimble, chair of Huntingdon's Department of
Language and Literature, spoke about her students using
the title of Tim O'Brien's story "The Things They Carried"
as a metaphor to center their writing about their own lives,
themes emerged, particularly "in this time, in this
place" and "intersections of the historical and
the personal." To encourage wide participation, the
theme the committee agreed on, "Visions of the Historical
and the Personal in Time and Space," encompasses Montgomery
and the rest of Alabama but also goes past their boundaries.
After all, as Emily Dickinson observes, "The Brain
is wider than . . . Amherst," or something like that.
The schedule of Friday afternoon concurrent sessions (see
page 2 of The Light) suggests that place and time
are alive and well in the theory and practice of college
English in Alabama. The plenary session following these,
featuring Kirk Curnutt, award-winning fiction writer and
chair of Troy Montgomery's Department of Language, Literature,
and Philosophy, will highlight the conference theme as it
relates to one of Montgomery's most famous native daughters:
Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald. Curnutt will be presenting in Huntingdon's
neo-Gothic Ligon Chapel.
Thanks to Dr. Curnutt, who is a member of the board of the
F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald Museum, the Felgar Avenue
home where the Fitzgeralds lived in 1931 will be open from
5:00 until 5:45 for conference attendees to visit.
ACETA's annual dinner will be served at 7:00 at the Embassy
Suites Hotel. For those who desire some libation beyond
tea, coffee, and water, a cash bar will be open from 6:30
until 8:30.
At Huntingdon on Saturday morning, breakfast will be available
before and possibly after the annual business meeting and
reading of award-winning papers. Norman McMillan, winner
of the 2008 Eugene Current-Garcia Award for Distinction
in Literary Scholarship and a former member of ACETA's steering
committee, will give the keynote address, titled "Literary
Dialect and Allusion in Harriet Hassell's Rachel's Children."
For those who can stay in Montgomery after lunch,
a tour of the Rosa Parks Museum will be available from 1:30
until 3:00 for $5.00 a person.
Register for the Conference
The conference registration form is on page 7 of The
Light link above or see the link to the page on this
website.
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Last year
ACETAs 60th Annual Conference
Auburn University
February 7-8, 2008
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Many thanks to ACETAs institutional
members for academic year. Institutional memberships
help ACETA to keep individual membership dues low,
to fund the annual Calvert and Woodall Awards, and
to pay conference expenses that exceed income from
individual dues and registration. They also demonstrate
support for the work of college English teachers everywhere
in Alabama.
ACETA's steering committee thanks the following twenty-seven
institutional members of the 2007-2008 academic year
:
Alabama A & M University
Alabama Humanities Foundation
Alabama State University
Auburn University
Auburn University Montgomery
Calhoun Community College
Gadsden State Community College
Jacksonville State University
Judson College
Lurleen B. Wallace Community College
Miles College
Northeast Alabama Community College
Samford University
Snead State Community College
South University
Southern Union State Community College
Spring Hill College
Troy University
Tuskegee University
University of Alabama
University of Alabama at Birmingham
University of Alabama in Huntsville
University of Montevallo
University of North Alabama
University of West Alabama
Wallace Community College (Dothan)
Wallace State Community College (Hanceville)
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Comments or questions
about The Light? Contact Steve Hubbard, Executive
Secretary; ACETA: Lurleen B.
Wallace Community College; P.O. Box 1418; Andalusia,
AL 36420-1224. E-mail: shubbard@lbwcc.edu. For
updates and additional information, please see ACETAs
website: http://www.samford.edu/groups/aceta/. |
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The directory of college and university English departments in
Alabama is currently under construction. If you are the chair
of an English department, please send your updated faculty list
to Mark Baggett at jmbagget@samford.edu.
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*Our logo was designed by Donna Fitch, web designer
at Samford University's Office of Public Relations. To illustrate
the lighthouse theme for our newsletter, The Light,
Donna used the famous pharos or lighthouse at Alexandria
in Egypt, one of the Seven Wonders of the World in a city
that was the center of learning and culture. |
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For questions about ACETA's website, contact
Mark Baggett at 205-726-2309 or jmbagget@samford.edu |
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Announcements
High school and middle school teachers of English, Social Studies, and
related disciplines are invited to apply for this N.E.H. Institute at
Texas A&M University-Commerce, July 13 to August 13, 2009. The focus
of the Institute is to explore ways in which The Lord of the Rings may
be used to teach students about medieval history, literature, and culture.
Successful applicants will be awarded $3,800.00 for travel and living
expenses for the five weeks. The Institute counts towards continuing
professional development, and there are opportunities for individual
participants to earn graduate credit if they wish.
Further information on the Institute and applications may be found
here:
http://www.tamu-commerce.edu/litlang/NEdetails.asp?itemnum=25&pagename=nedetails
Completed applications should be postmarked no later than March 2,
2009.
Thank you,
Dr. Judy Ann Ford
Chair, History Department
Texas A&M University-Commerce
Commerce, TX 75429
(903) 886-5255
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