Alison Sainsbury, Ph.D.Associate Professor of English
Education:
Ph.D. Cornell University, 1995 M.A. Cornell University, 1989 M.A. University of Colorado, 1982 B.A. University of Colorado, 1976 Courses Frequently Taught: Gateway: Understanding Comix Gateway: Living in a Land Community English 170: Third World Women Speak English 170: Radioactive English 206: Creative Nonfiction English 220: Thinking Like a Mountain: Literature and Environmental Consciousness English 220: American Ground Zero English 249: Writing in the Third World English 301: Seminar in Creative Writing: The Lyric Essay English 346: Victorian Literature English 370: A Whole New Way of Being British English 480: Senior Seminar Selected Honors and Awards: Finalist, Bakeless Literary Prize, for memoir Lost River, 2010 CIC-CAORC-Dept. of State, Seminar Program, in Jordan, “Teaching about Islam and Middle Eastern Culture” Dec. 2006-Jan. 2007. Rockefeller Foundation Grant, Course Development in Environmental Studies, 2000, 2002 U.S. Dept. of Education Grant, Course Development in International Studies, 1992, 1993 Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society, 2000 1998 IWU Artistic and Scholarly Development Grant, travel to South Africa. 1996 National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Seminar for College Teachers, Literature and Culture in Contemporary South Africa, 1948-1994, in South Africa. Junior Faculty Leave, Illinois Wesleyan University, 1995 Selected Publications and Presentations: ___ “’Not Yet, Not There’: Breaking the Bonds of Marriage in E.M. Forster’s A Passage to India.” Critical Survey, Volume 21, No. 1, 2009, 59-73. Invited Contributor. ___ “Married to the Empire: the Anglo-Indian Domestic Novel” in Writing India 1757-1990, edited by B.J. Moore-Gilbert, Manchester University Press, 1996, 163-187. Reprinted in Forster’s A Passage to India: An Anthology of Recent Criticism, ed. G.K. Das and C.R. Devadaswson, Pencraft international (Delhi), 2005 ___ “The Marriage of India and England: Gender and Imperialism in the Work of Maud Diver” Property, Commodity, Culture: Cultural Studies Symposium, March 1997. ___”The Problem of Madness in A Question of Power” Bessie Head Conference, National University of Singapore, October 1996. Faculty Status: Tenured, on the faculty at IWU since 1991; next sabbatical, 2012-2013 Chair, English Department, 2004-2008 Director, Women’s Studies Program, 1996-2003 Professional and Personal: I am a Westerner, born in Alaska, raised in California and Colorado. My most recent work is a book-length family memoir, Lost River, a meditation on loss and the consolation of place. I find peace here in Illinois in a kayak on the waters of a nearby reservoir. |
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| asainsb@iwu.edu | 309-556-3165 | English House, Office 301 Illinois Wesleyan University Bloomington, IL 61701 |
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| Office Hours |
Fall 2011 |
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| Monday | 3:30-4:30 p.m. | |
| Tuesday | 11:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. | |
| Wednesday | 3:30-4:30 p.m. | |
| Thursday | 11:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. | |
| Friday | None | |