Friday, April 24, 2020

Paul Hughes Creative Writing Award Winners and Finalists


The Department of English and Languages presents the Winners and Finalists of the 2020 Paul Hughes Memorial Writing Award, an annual creative writing competition open to all East Central University students.  Any form of creative writing, including poetry, fiction, drama, teleplay, screenplay, and creative nonfiction, is eligible for consideration.

First Prize $250
Kara Hodo "The Marionette." This excerpt consisted of the first three chapters of her middle grade horror novel, which she has completed. Although the novel is aimed at younger readers, it demonstrates high levels of skill and artistry in every facet of storytelling. This is one of the most accomplished works ever submitted for a Paul Hughes Award.

Second Prize $150
Taylor Johnson "Bait"  This short story demonstrates excellent narrative skill, character development, and scene development. The dialogue is amazingly effective. Most years, this story would have claimed top prize. 

Third Prize $100
Mitchell Potts "Glass"  This story offers a new take on an old theme: a character stuck in a small town he cannot escape. This character-driven story is rendered with marvelous sentences and imagery. 

Finalists 
* Kate Carlin "Witness Statement"  This is the first time this author has submitted work for the award, and it is amazingly ambitious and skillful. She renders a police woman's experience with a young woman who is being abused yet is more deceptive than any of the other characters involved. Most years, this story would have received one of the three prizes. 

* Jill Taylor "Symphony"  This story blends narrative skill with philosophical theories in a stylish and provocative manner. 

* Bryce Clark "Trajectory"  This story uses a slice of life scene set in the future wherein a motorist stuck in traffic watches an ad on a video screen that depicts horrific explosions involving children, all in the name of societal motivation. 

Saturday, April 11, 2020

Three More Senior Salutes: Ray Alkire, Carly Heitland, and Ginger Johnson!

Sharayah (Ray) Alkire
I’m an English Education Major

* I chose ECU because I heard they had one of the best teaching programs in the state!

* I have so many great memories at ECU it’s hard to choose. But one time during Dr. Grasso’s class he threw a piece of chalk behind his back and it perfectly landed on the chalkboard. Everyone in the class went crazy lol. 

* One of the most memorable texts I read at ECU has to be The Hate You Give by Angie Thomas, I read this in Dr. Dorsey’s class. It resonated with me deeply and gave life to many of my current philosophies.

* I worked on a couple of huge assignments while at ECU but my favorite was a paper from Dr. Nicholson-Weirs class that I turned into an honors essay titled Black Queens Making Moves. I worked so hard on this and I’m still extremely passionate about it.

* I became a member of Sigma Tau Delta

* I’m proud of the multiple honors projects and presentations I’ve done. I’m also proud to have gotten not one, but TWO works published in the time I have attended ECU.

* I hope to become a middle school teacher soon, then eventually go back for a Doctorates in African American Literature where I can write and teach at a university.


* My advice for incoming freshman would be to keep pushing on no matter how tough things get. Your goals wouldn’t feel as good when you achieve them if there were no obstacles in your way.

Carly Heitland 
Major: English (Teacher Certification)/ Minor: Political Science

* I read so many memorable texts during the last four years! Perhaps the one that sticks with me the most is Albert Camus's The Stranger. I think I was struck by how the story could be so simple and so complex simultaneously. Still, with that text as with all of the texts I read in college, the class discussions were what reall made the text memorable.

* I am definitely most proud of my thesis. Completing a year-long project was a completely different process than any other paper or project I had worked on before. I was extremely grateful to have the faculty support that I did during the process (thanks, Dr. Dorsey)! 

* I participated in a lot of extracurriculars. My favorite was the Honors Student Association. I can not speak highly enough of the program!

* I was very honored to be selected as a George Nigh finalist this semester. I have known and looked up to many of the Nigh finalists from past years, so I was proud to be in their company. Next year, I will be teaching high school English, and I could not be more excited!

* I would advise incoming freshmen to focus on what is important to them. There are so many options available in college, it can be difficult to know what to choose (and even more difficult to try and do them all)! If you keep your personal goals in mind, everything will fall into place eventually. 


Ginger Johnson

- Major / Minor
Double Major Math and English

- I chose ECU among many colleges due to the low class size, involved Honors program, and scholarships.

- As a freshman, I went to the Great Plains Honors Conference with some other students in Honors.  Two of them are now my closest friends.  If it wasn't for a night spent quoting John Mulaney bits, we might not have become as close!  My boyfriend also danced with me on the stage in Wintersmith Park one random night to "The Pina Colada Song."

- Quicksand by Nella Larsen stands out as one of my favorites.  The writing was so engaging that I forgot it was for class and would read ahead.  It resonated with me in many areas, especially for mental health issues, and I think it's a book most should read.

-I'm proud of completing my Honors Thesis over representation of young adult women from book to screen. It took a lot of work, and there were times that no end was in sight, but it was very rewarding.  I'm also proud of a creative writing realistic fiction piece I wrote for the English capstone over impostor's syndrome.

I was in the Honors Program, Sigma Tau Delta, Alpha Chi, Pi Mu Epsilon, Mock Trial, and ECU Screens.

- I'm proud that I'm on track to finish with a 4.0 and honors.  For English specifically, I am proud to be featured in Originals and other school creative journals.  Creative writing was one of the main reasons I became an English major, and I think I've improved greatly.

- I'm going to pursue a Computer Science PhD at University of Tulsa.  My interests are in cyber and information security. Beyond that is unclear, but I will figure it out along the way.  I also plan to keep writing and, hopefully, publish a novel (even if it's just self published).

- What I wish I had known coming in was to not stretch yourself thin.  You should be involved, but you don't have to say yes to everything to please others.  It's okay to make your mental well being a priority.  

Thursday, April 9, 2020

Call for Submissions: The Covid Chronicles


An important announcement/opportunity from our chair, Dr. Peters:

Dear Students,

We find ourselves in an historic moment, experiencing a global pandemic and its effects on our public and private lives. Writers play a crucial role in recording and reflecting on shared human experience, and we hope you will contribute to that effort today. The Department of English and Languages calls for responses to the COVID-19 pandemic in the form of essays, poetry, diaries, and stories to be collected in a regularly updated blog. Later these writings will be preserved with the digital archives of Originals literary magazine for future generations of the ECU community.

Please send submissions to Sarah Peters at speters@ecok.edu by Thursday, April 23.

Wednesday, April 8, 2020

Senior Salutes: Ashley Gregory and Abby Nance

Ashley Gregory
• English Education Major
• I chose ECU because of the reputation of their education department.
• I think one of my favorite memories ever was in one of Dr. Grasso’s classes, and he got so excited about what he was saying that he jumped on a podium!
• I’ve read so many books here...but probably my favorite is Dracula or Frankenstein! I can’t decide which one though! I just love gothic literature!
• The project I’m most proud of is the memoir I wrote for my capstone project. It was this amazingly therapeutic and healing thing to write, and I’m so proud of myself for being able to write it.
• I was in a few organizations, but I never participated, which I’m not happy with myself about. I was so focused on getting the grades that I didn’t open up and have a little fun until last semester!
• Despite missing out on a little bit of fun for it, I’m super proud of my ability to maintain high grades in college, but probably my biggest accomplishment was making friends and talking to people for once! I’m so shy and afraid to make friends and be vulnerable that it felt like a massive accomplishment to form friendships with some of my amazing English education people!
• My future plans are to get my teaching certification and stay in a public school somewhere forever! I love kids, and I just have this immense passion for the education system and my students! I do intend to keep a blog in order to keep working on my writing though because I absolutely love writing!
• My advice would be to branch out. Do things you might be afraid to do! Take risks, make memories, and please...talk to people! College can be so fun!


Abby Nance
* English Education
* My favorite memory of ECU is presenting my thesis in December 2019!
* I think the most memorable text I read at ECU was “Fire in Beulah” by Rilla Askew. I’ve read so many amazing things, but that is the one that I recommend to everyone I meet. It’s also about a piece of Oklahoma history that is so important and overlooked, and I think everyone should read it.
* The project I’ve worked on that I am most proud of has to be my thesis. It’s something I always wanted to do, but I never really thought I would. Without the help of my AMAZING professors (shoutout to you, Dr. Grasso), I never would have been able to achieve that goal!
* I plan on going to grad school in the future. I would love to be an English professor one day!
* To incoming freshmen I only have one thing to say: you’ve made a great decision in coming to ECU! Enjoy every minute of it because it goes by so fast.

My thesis is called “How Jane Austen Rewrote Gothic Literature” and it’s about the influence Gothic literature had on her writing. I focused mostly on Northanger Abbey, but I went through her other major works as well! I also talked about several of the most popular gothic novels and the history of the gothic novel itself. 
Here’s the abstract if that helps:
Abstract
From its beginning in the 1700s, there have been many examples of authors who participated in the writing of Gothic novels, and there is one author in particular who contributed greatly to the Gothic movement: Jane Austen. Austen is one of the most influential writers in the literary world, and she is mostly known for writing novels such as Pride and Prejudice and Sense and Sensibility, but she also wrote a more explicitly Gothic novel called Northanger Abbey. Based on my research into Gothic literature and into Jane Austen’s works, I have determined that Jane Austen used Gothic themes throughout most, if not all, of her writing, and not only in those works that are explicitly Gothic. Not only is Jane Austen’s work heavily influenced by Gothic themes, but it is her rewriting of these themes that make her works something uniquely different from other Gothic novels. Austen is able to use these themes to create a familiarity in her stories, while also changing them to create something new. This rewriting of the Gothic is something we still do in our culture today, and Jane Austen is one of the biggest proponents of this movement through her many works.

Monday, April 6, 2020

Fall 2020 Enrollment Begins This Week!

Even though we're not on campus, enrollment for Fall 2020 continues apace!  The summer and fall schedules are on MyECU and enrollment will begin this week. Please take a look at the schedule and your required courses and communicate with your advisor to be cleared for enrollment. For those of you who want a quick peek at the English and Humanities offerings, here's a list below:

ENG COURSES 
Eng 2433: American Lit Since 1865, MWF 10-10:50, Hada
Eng 2513: Intro to Literary Study, MW 11-11:15, McMahon
Eng 3183.Secs.1-2: Technical and Professional Writing, Web Donelson
Eng 3193: Persuasive Writing and Logic, TR 2-3:15, Dorsey
Eng 3373: Creative Writing: Novel Writing, Web, Walling
Eng 3923: World Literature Since 1700, MWF 9-9:50, Grasso
Eng 4013: Grammar and Linguistics, TR 9:30-10:45, Benton
Eng 4723: Teaching Grammar and Composition, Secondary School, TR 12:30-1:45, Dorsey
Eng 4883: Publication and Portfolio Capstone, TR 11-12:15, Peters

Eng 4983/5983: SEM—Adv Activism and Advocacy, T 6-7:15, Murphy

HUM COURSES 
Hum 2113: General Humanities I, MWF 10-10:50 Grasso
Hum 2313, Sec 1: Multicultural American Lit: Web, Nicholson-Weir
Hum 2313, Sec 2: Multicultural American Lit: MWF 11-11:50, Hada
Hum 2323, Global Literatures, TR 11-12:15, Hughes
Hum 2413: Responding to Literature, TR 9:30-10:45, Hughes
Hum 2613, Intro to Philosophy, TR 12:30-1:45, McMahon
Hum 2633, World Religion and Thought, TR 2-3:15, McMahon
Hum 2813, Interpreting Film, Web, Walling 

ALSO: Dr. Peters has created a Remind group of English majors to help connect advisors with advisees while we're all off campus. This will enable the department communicate with you as a group and for you to text questions to us directly. We hope this will help you if you're having trouble and make it easier for you to solve problems. To join this group, follow this link https://www.remind.com/join/fa66cha or text @fa66cha to 81010.  

So contact your advisors or contact any professor with questions and concerns!