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Lindenwood Humanities Faculty: Recent Publications
The Lindenwood University School of Humanities is proud of our faculty, who maintain active research agendas in addition to being recognized for their dedication and excellence in teaching. Here is a list of our faculty’s most recent notable contributions to published scholarship in their respective fields:
Dr. Heather Brown Hudson, French and Women’s and Gender Studies
“A Side of Family, Hold the Mother: Motherless family portraits. Dare Wright and her fictive kin in the Lonely Doll series,” in The Absent Mother in the Cultural Imagination: Missing, Presumed Dead.  Ed. by Berit Astrom. New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2017.
Professor Alex Balogh, Creative Writing
     Poetry: Selections in a book:
“Peruanita” & “Election Day” in Crossing the Divide, Vagabond Press, 2016.
Dr. Geremy Carnes, English
The Papist Represented: Literature and the English Catholic Community, 1688-1791 (monograph, forthcoming from University of Delaware Press in August 2017).
 “One Sad Devil,” review of Lucifer (TV Series), exCommunicated: The Newsletter of the International Society for Heresy Studies 2, no. 2 (2016): 5-7.
Dr. Theodore Cohen, History
“Among Races, Nations, and Diasporas: Genealogies of ‘La bamba’ in Mexico and the United States,” Studies in Latin American Popular Culture 35 (2017): 51-78.
Dr. Benjamin Cooper, English
Veteran Americans: Revolutiuon to Reconstruction, monograph forthcoming in Spring 2018 by University of Massachusetts Press.
“All Your Font are Belong to Us: Gaming in the Late Age of Print.”  Forthcoming in Type Matters.  Eds. Danielle Nicole DeVoss and C.S. Wyatt.
  “Land Mines and Punch Lines.” Rev. of Grunt: The Curious Science of Humans at War, by Mary Roach. The Common Reader (December 2016): ):https://commonreader.wustl.edu/c/land-mines-punch-lines/.
Dr. Melissa Ridley Elmes, English
Edited Collection
(With Misty Urban and Deva Fall Kemmis, co-editors), Melusine’s Footprint: Tracing the Legacy of a Medieval Myth. Leiden: Brill (In production; publication November 2017).
Articles in Refereed Journals
“Conduct and Character: The Overlooked Importance of Feasting in Medieval Robin Hood Texts.” Forthcoming in Medieval Perspectives.  
“He Dreams of Dragons: Alchemical Imagery in the Medieval Dream Visions of King Arthur.” Arthuriana 27.1 (Spring 2017). 73-94. 
Book Chapters
“The Alchemical Transformation of Melusine,” in Melusine’s Footprint: Tracing the Legacy of a Medieval Myth. Ed. Misty Urban, Deva Kemmis, and Melissa Ridley Elmes. (Leiden: Brill, In production; Forthcoming 2017).
Signed Encyclopedia Articles 
“Melusine.” Encyclopedia of Middle English Literature. Robert Rouse and Sian Echard, eds. Wiley Blackwell. August 2017.
Dr. Elizabeth Fleitz, English
Review of Type:Rider [video]. Forthcoming in Kairos 22.1(August 2017):  http://kairos.technorhetoric.net/ 
Review of “I2: Preserving Spaces of Wonder in an Age of Surveillance: Getting Started with Digital Cryptography.” 2017. Sweetland DRC, http://www.digitalrhetoriccollaborative.org/2017/06/26/cw-session-i2-preserving-spaces-of-wonder-in-an-age-of-surveillance-getting-started-with-digital-cryptography/
“Teaching Digital Rhetoric in the Age of Fake News: Media Literacy and Source Evaluation in the First-Year Writing Classroom.” 15 Mar 2017. Blog Carnival 11. Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative. http://www.digitalrhetoriccollaborative.org/2017/03/15/teaching-digital-rhetoric-in-the-age-of-fake-news-media-literacy-and-source-evaluation-in-the-first-year-writing-classroom/ 
Review of “A.04: Reconsidering Professional Credentials of Writing Program Faculty.” Kairos 21(2). http://praxis.technorhetoric.net/tiki-index.php?page=PraxisWiki%3A_%3ACCCC_2016
Review of “B2: Arguing in Type: On the Rhetoricity of Letterforms.” 2016. Sweetland DRC. http://www.digitalrhetoriccollaborative.org/2016/06/28/b2-arguing-in-type-on-the-rhetoricity-of-letterforms/
Professor Tracy Flicek, ESL/EPP
 Review of: Luley, T. (2014, August 24). Review of the book English With an Accent: Language, Ideology, and Discrimination in the United States. Rosina Lippi-Green. TESOL Journal, 5(3), 546-550. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/enhanced/doi/10.1002/tesj.164 
Dr. Stephen Gietschier, History
“How the Burger Court Came to Be” in Samuel O. Regalado and Sarah K. Fields (eds.), Sport and the Law: Historical and Cultural Intersections (Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press, 2014), 43-51.
“History” in Trey Strecker, Steven P. Gietschier, Mitchell Nathanson, John A. Fortunato, and David George Surdam, Understanding Baseball: A Textbook (Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2014, 3-50.
Dr. Shenika Harris, Spanish
Harris, S., Bernales, C., Romero-Ghiretti, G., Dolosic, Liu, H., & Van Bishop, T.  (2016) Readings in L2 Reading: Publications in other venues during 2015-2016. Reading in a Foreign Language. 28(2), 319-366. Web.
Dr. Donald Heidenreich, History
“Adkins v. Children’s Hospital.” Women in the American Political System: An Encyclopedia of Women as Voters, Candidates, and Office Holders. Editor Valerie Hennings Dianne Bystrom. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 2017.
“Sixteenth Amendment.” Women in the American Political System: An Encyclopedia of Women as Voters, Candidates, and Office Holders. Editor Valerie Hennings Dianne Bystrom. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 2017.
“World War II.” SAGE Encyclopedia of War. Editor Paul Joseph. Sage Publishing, 2017, 1883-1887.
“D-Day.” SAGE Encyclopedia of War. Editor Paul Joseph. Sage Publishing, 2017, 450-53.
“The Power to Regulate Land and Naval Forces.” The powers of the U.S. Congress: where constitutional authority begins and ends. Editor Brien Hallett. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 2016, pp 159-170.
Dr. Meredith Marsh, History
Barrons AP Human Geography, 6th Edition (2016).
Dr. Travis McMaken, Religion
Our God Loves Justice: An Introduction to Helmut Gollwitzer (Fortress Press, forthcoming).
“Baptism,” in Adam J. Johnson (ed.), T & T Clark Companion to the Atonement (Bloomsbury, forthcoming).
“Actualism, Dualism, and Onto-Relations: Interrogating Torrance’s Criticism of Barth’s Doctrine of Baptism,” Participatio 6 (2016): 1–31. Web.
Dr. Patrick O’Banion, History
This Happened in My Presence: Moriscos, Old Christians, and the Spanish Inquisition in the Town of Deza, 1569-1611 (University of Toronto Press, 2017).
“‘They will know our hearts’: Practicing the Art of Dissimulation on the Islamic Periphery,” Journal of Early Modern History 20 (2016): 193-217. 
“The Prisoners’ Dilemma: Strategies and Ruses in the Inquisitorial Jails of Early Modern Cuenca,” in Allison Levy, ed., Playthings in Early Modernity: Party Games, Word Games, Mind Games (Medieval Institute Publications, 2017), 277-89.
“Jerome Zanchi: A Life in Exile. Part 2: The Scholar in Exile,” Ad Fontes 1.3 (November 2016).
“Jerome Zanchi: A Life in Exile. Part 1: From Italy to Exile,” Ad Fontes 1.2 (October 2016): 3-4.
Dr. Justine Pas, English
Relaying Lem’s Solaris: The Politics of Relay Translation and Language Hierarchies. In Mohammed Albakry (Ed.), Translations and the Intersections of Texts, Contexts, and Politics: Historical and Socio- Cultural Perspectives. Palgrave Macmillan. 2017. http://www.palgrave.com/gb/book/9783319537474#aboutAuthors
The Other Women’s Lives: Translation Strategies in the Global Feminisms Project. In Olga Castro and Emek Ergun (Ed.), Feminist Translation Studies: Local and Transnational Perspectives. Routledge. 2017. https://www.amazon.com/Feminist-Translation-Studies-Transnational-Perspectives/dp/1138931659
Foreword. We Who Lived: Two Teenagers in World War II Poland. McFarland. 2017. https://www.mcfarlandbooks.com/book-2.php?id=978-1-4766-7008-9
Critical Essay: Eva Hoffman. In Steven G. Kellman (Ed.), Critical Survey of American Literature. Salem Press and Grey House Publishing. 2016. http://www.salempress.com/press_titles.html?book=483
Dr. Gabriela Romero-Ghiretti, Spanish
Harris, Shenika, C. Bernales, Gabriela Romero-Ghiretti, H. Dolosic, H. Liu, and T. Van Bishop. “Readings on L2 reading: Publications in other venues 2015-2016.” Reading in a Foreign Language 28.2 (October 2016): 319-365. Web.
“Representación femenina y canon vanguardista: mirada feminizante en La señorita Etc. de Arqueles Vela”. Chasqui XLIV.2 (November 2015): 258-271. Print.
Dr. Jeffrey Smith, History
“Till Death Do Keep Us Part: Segregation and Social Values in Cemeteries in St. Louis, Missouri,” in Till Death Do Us Part: Ethnic Cemeteries as Borders Uncrossed (Forthcoming, Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2018).
The Rural Cemetery Movement: Places of Paradox in the Nineteenth Century America. Lexington Books, 2017.
“William Clark, Black Hawk, and the Militarization of Indian Removal,” The Confluence, Fall-Winter, 2016.
Dr. Jeanie Thies, Political Science
Thies, Jeanie, Joe Zlatic, Howard Wall, and Michael Stein.  2016. St. Charles Treatment Court Evaluation. Report to the St. Charles County Treatment Court.
Thies, Jeanie, Michael Stein and Callie Johnson. 2016. Evaluation of the Janis Good Mental Health Court. Report to the Missouri Eastern District Federal Probation Office.
Zlatic, Joe and Jeanie Thies.  Fall/Winter 2016-2017. Correctional Reform in Red States. Missouri Policy Journal. Published by Lindenwood University.
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cornellcomm · 7 years
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Prof. Lee Humphreys published a new edited collection! And here's the blurb:
"The age of digital media has given rise to a new social world. It is a world in which the transmission of information from the few to the many is steadily being supplanted by the multi-directional flow of facts, lies, and ideas. It is a world in which hundreds of millions of people are voluntarily depositing large amounts of personal details in publicly accessible databases. It is a world in which interpersonal relationships are increasingly being conducted in the virtual sphere. Above all, this is a world that seems to be veering off in unpredictable ways from the trends of the immediate past. This book is a probing examination of that world, and of the changes that it has ushered into our lives.
In more than thirty essays by a wide range of scholars, this must-have second edition examines the impact of digital media in six areas—information, persuasion, community, gender and sexuality, surveillance and privacy, and cross-cultural communication—and offers an invaluable guide for students and scholars alike. With one exception, all essays are completely new or revised for this volume.”
Congrats, Lee!
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cornellcomm · 7 years
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Associate Professor Jeff Niederdeppe's research was mentioned on Reuters. The article doesn't mention Jeff by name, but it comes out of his recently published article "Local Television News Coverage of the Affordable Care Act: Emphasizing Politics Over Consumer Information."
And if you want to read the article, it's here: http://ajph.aphapublications.org/d…/10.2105/AJPH.2017.303659
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cornellcomm · 7 years
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Congrats to Assistant Professor Brooke Duffy, who just published an article in Social Media and Society: “Facebook for Academics”: The Convergence of Self-Branding and Social Media Logic on Academia.edu." 
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cornellcomm · 7 years
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Prof. Jeff Niederdeppe recently published "Public Perceptions of Arguments Supporting and Opposing Recreational Marijuana Legalization" in the journal Preventative Medicine. You'll find a link to the article and details about the study in The Chronicle.
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cornellcomm · 7 years
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Prof. Brooke Duffy and a former grad student published an article last week in Information, Communication, and Society: "Gender and Self-Enterprise in the Social Media Age: A Digital Double Blind."
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