Three career academics discuss the current and future role of humanities in higher education.
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Twitter and Academia with Manu Chander and Gena Zuroski
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On this episode, Geoff digs into academic social media and Twitter with Manu Chander and Gina (lastname). What purpose does Twitter serve for academics as a social outlet or a space for activism and the sharing of ideas? What are some ways that the “shorthand” of Twitter (GIFs, etc.) can help or hinder the rigor of academic conversation? How do Twi…
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The Qualities of Mercy Project - Part Two
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50:42
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In this episode, Geoff talks with another group of collaborators from the Qualities of Mercy Project about how they felt about the process and the end results of the work they did with their students and The Merchant of Venice in production. What were some of the challenges of production/quality? What impact did the region/cultural milieu of the st…
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The Qualities of Mercy Project - Part One
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In our latest episode, Geoff talks with some of his co-participants in The Qualities of Mercy Project, an initiative among Shakespeare instructors who collaborated to bring The Merchant of Venice to college campuses nationwide and to discuss what "mercy" means in a regional sense. Our guests discuss the ways their students responded to the plays no…
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Life IRL (off the tenure-track) with Colleen Kennedy of the Shakespeare Theater Company
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This week, Remixing the Humanities sits down for a brief chat with Colleen Kennedy, the publicist for Washington D.C.'s Shakespeare Theater Company and talks about the road from academia to the "alt-ac," or, as Colleen calls it, "IRL jobs." She talks about how she tailored her job materials for a position off the tenure-track, and how she feels gra…
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Academia from the Margins: Mary Rambaran-Olm and Adam Miyashiro Discuss White Supremacy, Racism, and the Academy
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Mary Rambaran-Olm and Adam Miyashiro are no strangers to discussions of race and racism in medieval and Anglo-Saxon studies. Within the past few years, they helped found the organization Medievalists of Color, which aims to create a space for scholars who find themselves marginalized in a field with pernicious strains of white supremacy and Euro-ex…
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Jenn Stewart, Diversity, and the First-Year Composition Classroom
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Join us this week as Devori talks with Dr. Jenn Stewart, the director of composition and assistant professor of English at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. Jenn tells Devori about her research with first-year composition courses and texts that focus on issues surrounding diversity. They talk about how important it is that humanities cour…
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Disability, Embodiment, and Scholarly Spaces with Jason Farr and Travis Lau
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On our first episode of our third season, we’re joined by Jason Farr and Travis Lau. Jason and Travis talk with us about disability/queer studies and how those areas of interest intersect with issues of embodiment. We also talk about how social media is a problematic but potentially fruitful space for public-facing engagement that moves us out of t…
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Hello, listeners! We're back for season three of Remixing the Humanities! In this short preview episode, we tease some of our upcoming content, as well as solicit some more participants for both our "Remixing Teaching" and "Humanities from the Margins" series. If you're interested, or know someone who's really remixing humanities education in resea…
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Academia from the Margins - Teaching to the Margins with Brooke Carlson
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This time Geoff and Michael talk to Brooke Carlson of Chaminade University in Hawaii about what it means to teach in the margins. Talking about non-traditional student populations, what does it mean to adapt a more traditional humanities model to get at what we think is important? We talk about what it means to try to foster a lifetime love of lear…
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Conferences can be scary for anyone. But they can be really scary for early career researchers and those who already feel marginalized in academia. Geoff talks with his colleagues Kathryn V. Santos, Nedda Mehdizadeh, and David Sterling Brown about their new initiative, SAAllies, to be launched at this year's meeting of the Shakespeare Association o…
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Academia from the Margins - Re: Accommodating with JSA Lowe
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This week, we continue our "Academia from the Margins" series with JSA Lowe. Lowe speaks with us about her experience as a disabled faculty member/scholar. We also discuss what it means to be generous with students in response to accommodation requests, and how we can learn to be better allies by "speaking a turning word." CW: suicide, mental illne…
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Remixing Teaching - Decolonizing the Syllabus with Yvette DeChavez
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We're thrilled to be talking with the "Decolonize Your Syllabus" founder Yvette DeChavez! Yvette talks to us about her background as a Latinx student in academia, and how that impacted choices she made as an instructor when it came to de-centralizing whiteness in her curriculum. We also talk about the difference between "diversify" and "decolonize,…
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Remixing Teaching - Contract Grading with Ande Davis
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This week, we continue our Remixing Teaching series with Ande Davis, who chats with us to shed light on the mystery that is contract grading. We talk about contract grading from the practical to the ideological, and what it can bring to the composition classroom and beyond. Please look for us at humanitiesremix on Facebook and Twitter, and we can b…
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Remixing Teaching - Saying F**k with the Hurly Burly Shakespeare Show
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In our first interview looking at remixing teaching, we get down and dirty talking about Shakespeare, podcasting, and grad school cohorts with the women behind the Hurly Burly Shakespeare Show (https://hurlyburlyshakespeareshow.com/). Join us talking to Jess and Aubrey about how making Shakespeare accessible is tailor-made for podcasting, and how t…
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Join Geoff, Michael, and Devori for a super-short, super-informal, but informational episode as we look forward to the podcast's future in 2019! We discuss some exciting upcoming series of episodes, as well as other projects we've been busy with behind the scenes. Please remember to like, share, rate, review, subscribe - and reach out to us on Twit…
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Generosity and Academia Part 1 - Scandal, Reckoning, and What It Means to be "Generous."
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Given the recent spate of scandals in academia, Geoff, Devori, and Michael touch on what these things mean in connection to another academic trend: generosity. What does it mean to be a generous colleague and instructor? What damage do we do to our academic ethos and our colleagues when we act in ways that are less-than-generous?…
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Remixing Graduate School #2 - Bad Grad School Advice
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Geoff, Michael, and Devori solicited their listeners for their best bad grad school advice, and folks did not disappoint. In this episode, we discuss the dos and don'ts of graduate school - including to go or not to go?; self care; financials; publication; and everything in between. Please remember to like, share, rate, and subscribe. Find us on Tw…
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Remixing Graduate School #1 - The Dissertation with Dr. Sara Saylor
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Geoff, Michael, and Devori chat with Dr. Sara Saylor about the crazy project that is the dissertation. What can you expect from this process in the ever-changing university? How should you get the help you need to continue and finish this important part of the process? What are some key elements that will make writing the dissertation as easy as po…
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Join Geoff as he talks precarity and the alt-ac path with Dr. Nora Williams (@noraj_williams). She shares her thoughts about how her PhD prepared her for a life off the TT, and how she’s able to keep up with her own research agenda. She also talks about the struggles of wanting to keep active as a scholar when there is significant bias against thos…
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In this episode, Michael, Geoff and Devori discuss the reality of precarity with their own stories about academia, as well as some listener submissions. What does it mean to be precarious? How does it impact you when precarity and identity are so closely commingled? Please listen, share, rate, subscribe! We're on Twitter @humanitiesremix, and Faceb…
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Precarity Part 2: Precarity and the Digital in HE
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42:24
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In this second part of our series on precarity, to what extent is the digitization of education increasing or augmenting precarity? Is the digital classroom fixing precarity, or somehow making it worse? Please remember to like, share, rate and subscribe! Check us out on Twitter at @humanitiesremix and on Facebook at the same handle.…
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What does it mean to be “precarious?” Is it political, economic, or ontological? Geoff, Devori, and Michael have a spirited discussion as they try to define “precarity” as it relates to the current state of the world and academia. How does precarity impact academics? What do precarity its underpinning ideologies cost academia in the long run?…
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What Do We Mean By "Remix?": Defining Our Terms and Our New Format!
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28:51
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We're back with a new format on Remixing the Humanities! Listen as we discuss how we define "remixing" and why it's important to our goal as podcasters/educators. Also, we cover some new information for our upcoming series on precarity. As always, be sure to like, share, rate, and subscribe! Look for us on Twitter and Facebook!…
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SAA Digital Exhibits Interview # 6 - Shawn Moore and the Digital Cavendish Project
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In this final minisode from SAA in March of 2018, we talk to Shawn Moore of Florida Southwestern State College about the Digital Cavendish Project, curation of digital humanities, and what it means to work with Cavendish's texts. You can find more information by following the DCP on Twitter @digicavendish, or visiting the website at http://digitalc…
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SAA Digital Exhibits Interview #5 - Paddy Fulmerton and Carl Stahmer and the English Broadside Ballad Initiative
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We've got another noisy, vibrant minisode for you this week from SAA in LA. In this episode, Geoff, Michael, and Devori talk with Paddy Fulmerton and Carl Stahmer of the English Broadside Ballad Initiative about why mass-produced fare from the early modern period gets the least scholarly attention. Also, Michael wants to make broadside ballad karao…
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SAA Digital Exhibits Interview #4 - Jonathan Burton and Social Media as a Tool to Teach Close Reading in the Classroom
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In this interview from the Digital Exhibits at SAA 2018, Michael and Geoff talk to Jonathan Burton of Whittier College about how he uses social media to help his students grapple with close reading of Shakespearean texts. To find out more about the software Jonathan uses for video annotation, go to https://ant.umn.edu. As always, like, share, rate,…
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SAA Digital Exhibits Interview #3 - Laura Estill and the World Shakespeare Bibliography
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In this minisode, we have a bonus interview with Laura Estill of Texas A&M talking about her work with the World Shakespeare Bibliography. For more information, you can reach out to Dr. Estill on Twitter at @Laura_Estill, as well as at www.worldshakesbib.org. You can also check out Dr. Estill's 2014 article on the project in Scholarly Research and …
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SAA Digital Exhibits Interview #2 - Whitney Trettien and Visualizing Used Books
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9:25
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Here's the second interview from the Digital Exhibits hall at Shakespeare Association of America early this month. Whitney Trettien of the University of Pennsylvania talks to Michael, Devori, and Geoff about her work with digital humanities, and the way that we collaborate and make our work accessible to the public. As always, please like, share, r…
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SAA Digital Exhibits Interview #1 - Kristen Bennett and The Kit Marlowe Project
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In this episode, Geoff, Michael, and Devori sit down with Stonehill College's Kristen Bennett and talk about The Kit Marlowe Project - an interactive project she started to get her students invested in research about the early modern figure. How did she start the project, and how does she keep it up and running? What are the perks and perils of ope…
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By Kimbro, Noschka and Way
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SAA Live #bardcast #2 - Rebecca L. Fall and Danielle Rosvally
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By Kimbro, Noschka and Way
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SAA Live #bardcast #1 - Ayanna Thompson and Carol Mejia LaPerle
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We talk with Ayanna Thompson about the future of SAA!By Kimbro, Noschka and Way
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Shakespeare, Relevance, and Teaching (Part 2 of 2)
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After our discussion of the role of Shakespeare in the academy from a scholarly angle, what do we make of his place in the classroom? Geoff, Michael, and Devori discuss the role Shakespeare plays in teaching, both in Shakespeare/early modern classes, and in others? How do we “use” Shakespeare as a tool? To what extent does the teaching of Shakespea…
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Shakespeare and Relevance (Part 1 of 2)
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Your fearless PhDs are back with another installment, this time exploring the relationship of Shakespeare to the current state of the humanities. Is he a pillar of the language and the field that must be protected at all costs, or are we due for a little iconoclasm? How necessary is studying the Bard of Avon to those pursuing an English Renaissance…
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Episode 2: The State of the Humanities
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It's our second super-sized episode! In this discussion, Geoff, Michael, and Devori take on the state of the humanities in our nation's HE institutions. Is there a crisis in the humanities, and does it look like we think it does? Why does the commodification of education seem to strike the humanities particularly hard? Are digital humanities the sa…
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Episode 1: The State of the University
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Join our new podcast as we discuss the intricacies of working in the humanities in an ever-changing academic culture. How does the university view "the humanities?" What is the role of a humanities instructor in the business-ified world of higher education? Please follow us on Twitter at @humanitiesremix, and for further conversation join us on Fac…
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