Create a Reading List and include this title. Select Add to Reading List on the right.
FRONT MATTER
Editors’ Introduction - Jennifer L. Holberg and Marcy Taylor
COMMENTARY
English Program Assessment and the Institutional Context - John M. Ulrich
ARTICLE
Liminal Spaces and Research Identity: The Construction of Introductory Composition Students as Researchers - James P. Purdy and Joyce R. Walker
CLUSTER ON MULTIDISCIPLINARY APPROACHES TO TEACHING DANTE'S COMMEDIA
Introduction - Kirilka Stavreva and Christopher Kleinhenz
Medieval Rhetoric and the Commedia - Michelle Bolduc
Using Dante to Teach the Middle Ages: Examples from Medieval Southern Italian History - Joanna H. Drell
Teaching the Divine Comedy’s Understanding of Philosophy - Jason Aleksander
Suffering in Hell: The Psychology of Emotions in Dante’s Inferno - John Alcorn
The Triple Cord: Teaching Dante’s Divine Comedy and Creativity - Kirilka Stavreva
Dante in the Italian Renaissance of Art - Lisa Bixenstine Safford
Teaching Dante as a Visionary Prophet - Anne L. Clark
Virtual Cities: GIS as a Tool for the Analysis of Dante’s Commedia - Louis I. Hamilton
Lighting Their Own Path: Student-Created Wikis in the Commedia Classroom - Elizabeth Dolly Weber
Introducing Undergraduates to Books in the Age of Dante—in Twenty Minutes or Less - Melissa Conway
FROM THE CLASSROOM
Teaching Literature like a Foreign Language; or, What I Learned When I Switched Departments - Catherine Mainland
Pedagogical Approaches to Diversity in the English Classroom: A Case Study of Global Feminist Literature - Julie M. Barst
Discourses on the Vietnam War: Teaching from Many Perspectives - Bunkong Tuon
REVIEWS
Occupy U: The Timely Call of Henry A. Giroux’s On Critical Pedagogy - Michael Sutcliffe
On Critical Pedagogy. Henry A. Giroux. New York: Continuum International Publishing Group, 2011.
Everything Old Is New Again - Yvonne Bruce
The Evolution of College English: Literacy Studies from the Puritans to the Postmoderns. Thomas P. Miller. Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2011.
Notes from Post–9/11 Classrooms: Parsing Representation and Reality - Beth Stickney
Teaching the Literature of Today’s Middle East. Allen Webb, David Alvarez, Blain H. Auer, Monica Mona Eraqi, Jeffrey A. Patterson, Vivan Steemers. New York: Routledge, 2012.
CONTRIBUTORS
If you are requesting permission to photocopy material for classroom use, please contact the Copyright Clearance Center at copyright.com;
If the Copyright Clearance Center cannot grant permission, you may request permission from our Copyrights & Permissions Manager (use Contact Information listed below).
If you are requesting permission to reprint DUP material (journal or book selection) in another book or in any other format, contact our Copyrights & Permissions Manager (use Contact Information listed below).
Many images/art used in material copyrighted by Duke University Press are controlled, not by the Press, but by the owner of the image. Please check the credit line adjacent to the illustration, as well as the front and back matter of the book for a list of credits. You must obtain permission directly from the owner of the image. Occasionally, Duke University Press controls the rights to maps or other drawings. Please direct permission requests for these images to permissions@dukeupress.edu.
For book covers to accompany reviews, please contact the publicity department.
If you're interested in a Duke University Press book for subsidiary rights/translations, please contact permissions@dukeupress.edu. Include the book title/author, rights sought, and estimated print run.
Instructions for requesting an electronic text on behalf of a student with disabilities are available here.