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  • TACOMA, WASH. (Aug. 10, 2016)- Typically, summer allows college students to take advantage of free time that’s hard to come by during the academic year. But for many Lutes, summer is a time to work hard and continue their vocational endeavors. Students travel, work internships…

    and a community member.” Dela Cruz double majored in history and literature. She also studied away for a January Term in Manchester, England, and a semester in Oaxaca, Mexico. She said she hopes to go to graduate school in a few years to study student affairs. Eventually, she hopes to work at a university in academic advising or leadership, specifically to help students of color and first-generation students. She said he is always thinking about her one wild and precious life, thanks to her time

  • Three distinct stories of multiculturalism in Norway share one common desire: belonging despite difference.

    something. It’s kind of my responsibility.” Magga, who says family trauma is inherited through generations, embraces that task every day in her classes, most recently in her children’s literature course. She spoke up as the only indigenous voice during discussions of their assigned reading, The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, a novel based on experiences of author Sherman Alexie, who is a Spokane-Coeur d’Alene tribal member. Magga says the tale of 14-year-old Junior resonated with her, and

  • ), Theologies of Creation: Creatio Ex Nihilo and Its New Rivals (Routledge, August 2014) and Creating Women’s Theology: A Movement Engaging Process Thought, (St. Louis:  Chalice, 2011). PLU Faculty BioBeverly WallaceHush No More: Constructing an African American Lutheran Womanist EthicPresentation Title: “Hush No More: Constructing an African American Lutheran Womanist Ethic” Who: Rev. Dr. Beverly Wallace, Assistant Professor of Pastoral Care and Counseling at Shaw University Divinity School in Raleigh

  • Barbara Temple-Thurston Professor of English Email: templeba@plu.edu Professional Education Ph.D., Southern Illinois University, 1985 M.A., Southern Illinois University, 1979 B.A., University of Witwatersrand-Johannesburg, 1971 Areas of Emphasis or Expertise Post-Colonial Literature Caribbean Literature African Literature Books Nadine Gordimer Revisited (Twayne's World Authors Series, No. 881) (Twayne 1999) : View Book

  • January 24, 2014 PLU concert celebrates Black History Month Pacific Lutheran University pays tribute to the artistic entrepreneurship of African Americans with a Black History Month Concert that celebrates a lasting legacy of music, literature and art. Covering a rich tapestry of gospel, blues, jazz and concert works, along with recitations from classic African-American literature, the concert will feature PLU student ensembles—including the University Symphony Orchestra, Wind Ensemble, Jazz

  • African American National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2008 and available through Oxford’s online African American Studies Center.  Recent journal articles include “Are We There Yet, Driver? Searching for the Automotive Human,”  Midwest Quarterly 48 (2007), and “It’s About Time Somebody Out Here Wrote the Truth: Betty Bard MacDonald and North/Western Regionalism,” Western American Literature 40 and “The Unquiet Death of Guglielmo Olivotto,” Peace & Change 30 (2005).

    Contact Information
  • Chuck Bergman Professor of English Phone: 253-535-7490 Email: bergman@plu.edu Website: http://www.charlesbergman.com/ Curriculum Vitae: View my CV Professional Video Education Ph.D., English, University of Minnesota, 1977 M.A., English, University of Minnesota, 1973 B.A., English, University of Washington, 1970 B.A., Economics, University of Washington, 1969 Areas of Emphasis or Expertise Environmental Writing Environmental Literature Freelance Writing Shakespeare Selected Publications Jane

  • of the Ohlone-Costanoan Esselen Nation of California.  As John Lucian Smith Jr. Professor of English at Washington and Lee University, Deborah teaches Creative Writing (poetry and memoir), composition, and literature of the margins (Native American, Chicana/o, LGBTQ, African American, Asian American, mixed-genre, experimental).

  • First FloorLibrary circulation and reference desk. IT Help Desk. Lute Lending Library. Center for Student Success. Academic Assistance. Digital Media Center. Reference collection. Microfilm machines. Study rooms.   Second FloorBooks and journals in Political Science, Law, Education, Music, Art, Languages and Literature, Science, Medicine, Technology, Military Science, Library Science. Music scores. Curriculum collection. Juvenile collection. African Art Collection. Instructional Technologies

  • and just communities built in the future? Dr. Alison Mandaville Dr. Alison Mandavile Dr.  Mandaville is an Associate Professor of English at California State University, Fresno. She has been teaching and writing about comics and graphic novels for nearly 20 years. After earning her B.A. in Peace and Conflict Studies from UC Berkeley and her MFA in Creative Writing and PhD in Literature from the University of Washington. Before her work at Fresno State, she taught writing, literature and pedagogy