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College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences

AHSS Welcomes 3 New Chairs


UALR’s College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences (CAHSS) will open the fall semester Aug. 20 with three new department chairs.

 

They are Karen Bryan, chair of the Department of Music; Jeffrey Nash, chair of the Department of Sociology and Anthropology; and Trey Philpotts, chair of the Department of English.

 

All three came aboard July 1 and replaced chairs who had retired.

 

Before taking over UALR’s Music Department, Bryan was the associate director of the School of Music at Arizona State University in Phoenix and was a member of the musicology faculty.

 

Her research includes African-American opera companies, performers of the mid 20th century, the influence of labor unions on performing organizations in the 1930s and 1940s and 19th century Italian opera.

 

“When I visited UALR, I was impressed by the quality of the students and faculty and by the enthusiasm they all showed for the department and for the study and performance of music,” said Bryan.

 

Bryan co-edited Moors, Militants, and Minstrels: Representing Blackness on the Operatic Stage slated for publication in 2010. She is currently completing a book on performer Mary Cardwell Dawson who founded the National Negro Opera Company in 1941.

 

She received a master of arts in musicology from the University of Georgia and a Ph.D. in musicology from Indiana University. Bryan will teach a course in American music in the spring 2010 semester.

 

Nash, new chair of sociology and anthropology, came to Little Rock from Springfield, Mo., where he was teaching at Missouri State University. He previously taught at Macalester University in St. Paul, Minn., and at the University of Tulsa.

 

“I research public life in urban settings,” said Nash. “I have written about a wide range of activities from sports to leisure time activities to race relationships. My recent research publication is a comparison of the way portrayals of race have changed on popular television programs. I compared All in the Family with Curb Your Enthusiasm.”

 

In the fall, Nash is teaching a class using the situation comedy Seinfeld to illustrate sociological concepts. Nash received a master of arts in sociology from Louisiana State University and a Ph.D. in sociology from Washington State University.

 

Trey Philpotts took over as chair of the English department after teaching at Arkansas Tech University in Russellville since 1993. While at ATU, he received faculty excellence awards for both scholarship and teaching.

 

“I moved to UALR because of its excellent academic reputation,” said Philpotts. “I also welcome the change to a more metropolitan area, one with many cultural opportunities.”

 

His research includes Victorian literature, specifically the works of Charles Dickens. In addition to authoring companion volumes to Dickens’s works Little Dorrit and Dombey and Son, Philpotts is the Review Editor for Dickens Quarterly and has recently contributed a chapter titled “Dickens and Technology”  to  the book A Companion to Charles Dickens, published in 2008.

 

In the fall, Philpotts will teach an interdisciplinary seminar examining the literature, arts and popular culture of the Victorian period.

 

Philpotts received a master of arts in English from the University of Virginia in Charlottesville and a Ph.D. in English from the University of Delaware in Newark.

 

Contact information for the chairs is as follows: Bryan (501) 569-3295 or at kmbryan@ualr.edu; Nash, (501) 569-3173 or at jenash@ualr.edu; and Philpotts (501) 569-3161 or at hlphilpotts@ualr.edu.

 

UALR’s College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences houses 11 departments: art, English, history, international and second language studies, music, philosophy and liberal studies, political science, psychology, rhetoric and writing, sociology and anthropology and theatre arts and dance. For more information about the college, contact (501) 569-3296.

Updated 8.25.2009

The Age of Aquarius: UALR Classes Focus on the 1960s

It is almost 40 years to the day when the mud-soaked event at Max Yasgur’s farm gave birth to the Woodstock Nation. Now, three courses being offered by UALR this fall will examine aspects of the 1960s, the tumultuous decade when the Baby Boomers came of age challenging all that was conventional.

“We’re far enough removed from the era to begin to look at it as history,” Dr. James D. Ross, associate professor of history who will teach the “Understanding the United States in the 1960s: Right, Left, and Center.”

“The Sixties, broadly conceived as a period spanning from the mid-1950s to the early 1970s, continue to exhilarate and threaten many,” Ross said. “The changes that occurred what some historians call “long Sixties” are still evident today from national politics and foreign policy to social norms and values to culture and fashion.”

Ross, who earned a Ph.D. from Auburn University and is beginning his third year teaching at UALR, is a specialist in the interaction of race, class, and religion in 20th century United States history.

He said the class will examine a variety of New Left movements – the rise of the hippies, college campus mass protest movements, the rise of movements to empower women, blacks, and gays, and opposition to the war in Vietnam. The class will also study how the movements split from liberal to radical after 1968 and, new research shows, that some say resulted in the rise of the Right in the mid-1970s. “I argue that radical and conservative movements arose at the same time and competed to define what America could be,” he said.

“I argue that radical, liberal, and conservative options are struggling to define America in the 1960s from the very beginning,” he said. “I do not buy the theory that there was a conservative backlash after 1968.”

The semester will examine the era from the post-war economic abundance and the development of the Cold War through civil rights, changes in American culture, identity politics, assassinations and campus revolts through  the Nixon years and Watergate.

In another classroom this fall, English Professor R. Paul Yoder and his students will analyze the poetry Bob Dylan, the uncontested poet laureate of the rock and roll era considered the pre-eminent singer-songwriter of his time.

In the class “Bob Dylan: Lyric Poetry,” Yoder, the winner of UALR’s Faculty Excellence Award for Teaching this year, will ask students in the senior-level class to pick a Dylan album and make that student become the expert on that phase of the poet’s work.

“It’s great that Jim Ross is doing his history class at the same semester,” Yoder said. “So many of Dylan’s songs tie into history of the ‘60s. We are planning to team switch classes or team teach as the lyrics and history meet during the semester.”

Dylan re-energized the folk music genre in the early 1960s and married it to rock and roll at mid-decade, then bridged it to country music. A renegade throughout his career, Dylan defined the mood of the generation. Consider his anthem that defined the Generation Gap:

Come mothers and fathers throughout the land

And don’t criticize what you can’t understand.

Your sons and your daughters are beyond your command

Your old road is rapidly aging.

Please get out of the new one if you can’t lend your hand.

For the Times,They are A’Changin’

A third class offered at UALR this fall will focus on another critical piece of 1960s history – the Vietnam War.

Dr. Jacek Lubecki, assistant professor of political science at UALR, will teach Military History, a senior-level class.

The course will examine the Vietnam war from 1964 to 1975, and how the conflict that split the nation and cost Lyndon Johnson a second term as president has affected in America’s 21st century wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

“This military history class will be a practical one asking ‘what are the lessons of Vietnam and how can we apply them to situations in the 21st century such as Iraq and Afghanistan’,” Lubecki said. “Because cultural and political aspects of a country in which counter-insurgencies are waged are all important, a lot of the class will cover Mao Tse Tung’s insurgency theory, Vietnamese culture and society, Iraqi culture and society, and so forth. And we will talk at length about the failures of U.S. military institution to absorb the lessons of counter-insurgency in Iraq until General Petraeus took over in 2006. That was a game-changer.”

Ross, who was born in 1965, said some of his older colleagues in the History Department who are members of a generation that considers themselves Forever Young, were a bit taken aback that the era of their youth is now considered history.

“Some of my older colleagues in the department were flabbergasted that it’s now considered history,” Ross said. “But I think 40 years is long enough for historians who have no memory of the era to start examining it dispassionately.”

It may shock the sensibilities of many a former hippie, yippie, and flower child. But – as Dylan said – “…something is happening here but you don’t know what it is. Do you, Mr. Jones?

Updated 8.5.2009

UALR Launches Arkansas’s First Professional Dance Program

UALR’s Department of Theatre Arts and Dance will begin in the fall offering a bachelor of fine arts degree in dance - the only one of its kind in Arkansas. 

Jay Raphael, chair of the theatre arts and dance department, said there was an urgent need for a BFA in dance.

“A statewide survey of graduates, potential students, and teachers in the large network of studios throughout Arkansas indicated strong support for the development of a dance BFA at UALR,” he said. “Donor interest and students lining up to enroll before the degree was approved reached numbers comparable to those of fully established programs in peer institutions.”

The new degree will emphasize contemporary techniques, but students will learn techniques at every level in ballet, modern, jazz, and tap. The BFA is an open enrollment major; admission is based on acceptance to the University.

“Technique levels in all areas will be assessed every semester in order to develop a growth program for each individual dancer. Overall, the goal is to train graduates who can dance,” Raphael said.

The 83-credit major will also offer courses in kinesiology, dance history, choreography, pedagogy design and production, and prepare students for a number of potential career options.

“As students participate in a department of both dance and theatre, it is our aim to integrate the disciplines and aesthetics in order for all of our students to benefit from mutual influences and to develop patterns of collaboration and creation,” Raphael said.

Dance students will participate in a full production program and the activities of the American College Dance Festival; will be exposed to professional guest artists on a regular basis; and receive instruction in the use of cutting edge production technology and videography.

Earlier this year, UALR established the Joel Ruminer Endowed Scholarship for dance majors. Proceeds for the endowment were raised at a benefit performance honoring Ruminer’s career as a dancer and a nationally-renowned teacher.

For information about the BFA in dance, contact Raphael at (501) 569-8350 or at jeraphael@ualr.edu.