Thursday, March 31, 2016

Visiting Artist Series: Gabriela Jauregui

Visiting Artist Lecture Series, The Dorothy Florence Zaninovich Fund, Todd Madigan Gallery & CSUB Department of Art present Gabriela Jauregui, April 5 Visual Arts Building, Room 103 at 4 p.m.



Gabriela Jauregui is the author of Leash Seeks Lost Bitch (The Song Cave/Sexto Piso, 2015), Controlled Decay (Akashic Books/Black Goat Press, 2008), a short story collection, La memoria de las cosas (Sexto Piso, 2015), and co-author of Taller de taquimecanografía (Tumbona ediciones, 2012). She holds a PhD in Comparative Literature from the University of Southern California, an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of California Riverside, and an MA in Comparative Literature from the University of California, Riverside. Her creative and critical works as well as her translations have been published in journals, magazines and anthologies in the UK the US and Australia, as well as Mexico. She works as a correspondent for various cultural publications including the BBC World Service's Cultural Frontline, Witte de With's Review, Art Forum, Art Review and others. She is a founding member and editor of the sur+ publishing collective.

This event is free and open to the public.
For more information contact: jcaesar@csub.edu or tmgcsub@gmail.com
CSU Bakersfield 9001 Stockdale Highway, Bakersfield, CA 93311

Friday, March 25, 2016

The Passing of Dr. Solomon Iyasere




Dr. Solomon Iyasere spent a distinguished 44-year career at CSUB. He joined the CSUB faculty in the fall of 1972, having just earned a Ph.D. in English from Binghamton University in Binghamton, New York. He earned an MS in Education from SUNY New Paltz, New Paltz, New York in 1968 just one year after earning a BA with honors in English from SUNY. Solomon was hired as an assistant professor to teach Shakespeare and literary criticism at a fledgling, two-year-old “CSB” campus. Two years later in 1974, he received early tenure and promotion to associate professor and became a full professor in 1978. He received the Millie Ablin Excellence Award in Teaching in 1985-86; the Exceptional Merit Award for Excellence in Teaching in numerous years; was a Wang Award nominee; a Professor of the Year award nominee; and was one of 50 professors selected nationwide by the American Association for Higher Education, the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching for extraordinary leadership in teaching, scholarship, and service.

Solomon developed and taught more than 35 different courses here at CSUB. In addition to Shakespeare and literary criticism, his areas of specialization included creative writing, world literature, non-western literature, African literature, and African-American literature. He wrote extensively on the oral tradition in African and African American literature, which encompasses the use of proverbs, folk tales, myths, fables, and repetition. He was widely known as a scholar of African literature, a rhetorical critic, and essayist who distinguished Eurocentric and Afrocentric forms of literary criticism and the importance of employing both, “cultural formalism,” an analytical approach he pioneered, to validly analyze African and African-American literature. Of this need for cultural sensitivity he wrote, “To assess a work by foreign standards leads to a mutilation of the message and robs the communication of its vitality.”

His scholarship included literary critical analyses of Othello and Nobel prize-winning author Toni Morrison’s Beloved and Sula (with his wife, Dr. Marla Iyasere, CSUB’s Founding Dean of the School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Professor of English Emerita). His essay, “Narrative Techniques in Things Fall Apart,” has been reprinted four times and is considered a definitive analysis of the most widely read and studied English language African novel. He was a frequent contributor to the journal Shakespeare in Africa. His conference presentations included “Racial Issues in Shakespeare’s Othello”; “Race Matters: Approaches to Shakespeare’s Othello”; “Teaching Shakespeare’s Othello to a Group of Multi-Racial Students”; and “Pardon Me, Professor, Why Do I have to Read Othello?”

In addition to his teaching and scholarship, Solomon’s record of service to the University is extensive. As the founding Director of Diversity Services (1988-92), he laid the groundwork for inclusive excellence, one of the core values that guides us and a pillar of our vision statement. He collaborated to establish effective diversity policies and strategic guidelines resulting in the hiring of diverse faculty and staff. He helped revise the GE curriculum to include multicultural and international dimensions, and designed the English Single Subject Teacher Preparation program to incorporate multiculturalism. He developed the MA in Teaching of English, which is now the cornerstone for educating community college writing teachers in the CSUB service region. He served as Chair of the Department of English and Communications (1992-97), co-founded the Career Beginnings Program and the Ernest Williams, Jr. Scholarship Fund, and served on numerous departmental and university-wide committees.

Solomon’s legacy includes his founding of Orpheus, the annual student literary journal. Since its establishment in 1973, the journal has published the work of more than 2,500 students, several of whom have become national award-winning writers and playwrights. The journal invites the submission of short stories, poems, paintings, and other creative works for publication in the 2015/2016 edition.

(from President Horace Mitchell's Memorandum to the Campus Community)

Thursday, March 10, 2016

CSUB's Dr. Strangelove

The B-Side, CSUB Communications Department's blog, has a profile of our English Department's own Charles MacQuarrie, also known as--apparently-- Dr. Strangelove.

Thursday, February 18, 2016

2016 Betty Creative Writing Awards

2016 Betty Creative Writing Awards Contest Rules

Through the generosity of Dr. Stafford Betty, the 2016 Betty Creative Writing Awards are presented annually to honor the creative work of students at the undergraduate and graduate levels at California State University, Bakersfield and California State University, Bakersfield – Antelope Valley Campus. Awards in three categories will be presented:

Poetry
1st Place - $500
 2nd Place - $300
3rd Place - $200

Short Story
1st Place - $500
2nd Place - $300
3rd Place - $200

Drama
1st Place - $500
2nd Place - $300
3rd Place - $200

Application Deadline: April 4, 2016

Submission Guidelines
  • Applications must be filled out completely to be considered for an award.
  • Only complete entries received by 5 p.m. on April 4, 2016 will be considered.
  • Submissions should include a completed application, plus three hard copies of the work.
  • Each entry should be given an original title, which must be included on the application and at the top of the first page of the entry.
  • Each of the three hard copies must have the original title of the entry on the first page, but should contain no other identifying information such as author’s name.
  • Submission forms can be found here
  • Submissions must have been written by a student who is an undergraduate or graduate student at CSUB and CSUB-AV during the current school year.
  • Submissions must not have been published previously and must be the original work of the submitter.
  • Only one entry per contestant may be submitted per category.
Eligible categories are:
  • Poetry – Poetry may be one poem or a sequence of poems but must be between 40 and 80 lines in length; entries should be printed in a standard font (Times New Roman 12 point) on white paper.
  • Short Story – Short stories must be a minimum of 8 typed pages and a maximum of 25 typed, double-spaced pages in length and printed in a standard font (Times New Roman 12 point) on white paper.
  • Drama – Drama may be for radio, stage, or screen; entries must be a minimum of 8 typed pages and a maximum of 25 typed, double-spaced pages in length and printed in a standard font (Times New Roman 12 point) on white paper.
Entries that do not conform to these standards will not be considered for an award.
  • Awards will be presented at the Annual Sigma Tau Delta Induction and Awards Ceremony on April 28th, 2016. Award winners do not need to be present to win.
  • There are no entry fees or payments to enter or win the Betty Creative Writing Awards.
  • As a co-sponsor of this contest, Sigma Tau Delta will be responsible for assembling and managing the awards screening committee, which will consist of CSUB faculty and staff.
  • Sigma Tau Delta/The Betty Creative Writing Awards reserves the right not to name a winner in any or all of the categories if insufficient entries are submitted.
Submit directly to –
      Dr. Emerson Case
      Faculty Towers 204B

Or mail to –
     Dr. Emerson Case
     Department of English
     California State University, Bakersfield
     10F
     9001 Stockdale Hwy.
     Bakersfield, CA 93311

Monday, February 15, 2016

Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Writing Color

As part of an interdisciplinary improvisation, Matthew Rich had his art students collaborate with Matthew Woodman's creative writing students to work on the interplay between visual and verbal arts.  Woodman's students wrote poems for Rich's art students to illustrate as blocks of color, and then they reversed the process and had Woodman's students respond to colors Rich's students generated.  The whole endeavour was a worthwhile exercise in inspiration, connotation, and collaboration.  At the end, thanks again to Matthew Rich, a gallery space on campus exhibited the results.