News – English /english Thu, 30 Oct 2025 19:44:15 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 English Club Recruitment /english/2025/02/19/english-club-recruitment/ /english/2025/02/19/english-club-recruitment/#respond Wed, 19 Feb 2025 15:26:34 +0000 /english/?p=209553 The is looking for new members! We produce one season of The and publish one issue of the Alumni Newsletter every semester. If you’d like to get involved in a podcast or journalism, check out what we do!

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Roctogenarians: University Professor Looks at Late-in-Life Achievers in New Book /english/2024/09/17/roctogenarians-university-professor-looks-at-late-in-life-achievers-in-new-book/ /english/2024/09/17/roctogenarians-university-professor-looks-at-late-in-life-achievers-in-new-book/#respond Tue, 17 Sep 2024 15:21:05 +0000 /english/?p=209467 Not everyone is an early starter. Although many people may become famous, build thriving businesses or make ground-breaking discoveries at a young age, there have always been late-in-life achievers who are just getting going when most of us are planning our retirements.

vlog English Professor Jonathan Greenberg and correspondent have come out with a new book titled , which is a collection of stories that feature the inspiring lives and achievements of some of these exceptional elders who made their mark late in life.

Profiling people like Colonel Sanders, who was in his 60s when he founded the restaurant chain Kentucky Fried Chicken, or Mary Church Terrell, who at 86 helped lead sit-ins at segregated Washington, D.C., lunch counters in the 1950s, the book is a celebration of those who live life to the fullest.

Here are some highlights from Roctogenarians, Late in Life Debuts, Comebacks, and Triumphs and Greenberg’s thoughts…

…On Roctogenarians and what makes them special

It’s not just advanced years that make a person a Roctogenarian, Greenberg says, but an outlook on life – a certain mindset.

“A Roctogenarian is a person who rejects the basic cultural narrative that age is necessarily a story of decline and diminishing powers, and instead sees every new phase of life as a chance for new opportunities, a return to forgotten or neglected dreams and ambitions, or just a chance to build further on things that they already have accomplished,” explains Greenberg.

Going against the cultural norms of what older people should be and do is also very Roctogenarian, Greenberg notes. “We’re looking at a culture that says by the time you round into maybe your third act of life, it’s time to start packing it in, and here we’re saying, “Here are dozens of stories of people, famous and not famous, who have done just the opposite.’”

…On a few Roctogenarians featured in the book – famous and not

The lives and achievements of Mel Brooks, Laura Ingalls Wilder, Diana Nyad, Clara Peller, Peter Mark Roget and many others, some with household names, some without, are featured in Roctogenarians. Here are three that Greenberg highlights:

  • – After working a lifetime in different jobs – including a roadside chicken and biscuit eatery in Georgia – at age 65, starting with nothing but a couple pressure cookers, a bag of seasoning, his $105 Social Security check and his ambition, Harland David Sanders set out and founded and turned it into a worldwide franchise empire. He is a good example of someone who took an idea and did something brand new, becoming a pioneer in franchising.
  • – A hugely talented artist, Tyrus Wong exhibited his paintings and also worked for numerous companies, most notably Disney, for which he was the lead production illustrator for the 1942 classic animated film, . He revolutionized the Disney look but wasn’t officially recognized for it until 2001, when he was inducted as a at age 91. Wong continued to create art and receive awards until his death at 106.
  • – One of the great French artists of the 20th century, Henri Matisse was successful and celebrated throughout his life but a series of struggles when he was in his 70s – including divorce, World War II, cancer and the resulting surgeries – left him unable to paint. Instead of giving up art, he turned to a new medium, cut-outs or cut paper collages. With help from his assistants, he would cut shapes out of sheets of colored paper and arrange them to form compositions. It became an entirely new and celebrated phase of his career that continued until his death nearly 15 years later.

…On what Roctogenarians have in common – 3 shared attributes

Although no two individuals are entirely alike, Greenberg speaks of three attributes or qualities that are common in Roctogenarians and shared by most of them:

  • Freedom. As people get older, they tend to stop caring as much about what other people think – a kind of freedom from needing the approval of others.
  • Awareness. Awareness of time becomes more acute for many Roctogenarians and they may become aware of their own mortality in a new way, resulting in a “now-or-never” attitude. One such person was , who wrote as a first-time author at 65, saying “If I hadn’t finished it, I would’ve died howling with despair.”
  • Drive. There are certain people who just don’t want to stop and was one of them. He had already enjoyed a remarkable career when, at age 76, he was approached to design a museum for New York City. He didn’t have to do it; his legacy was already ensured, but he took on the challenge and spent the next 15 years working on the .

…On how anyone can become a Roctogenarian

Greenberg has some suggestions for anyone who wants to make the most of their later years and become a Roctogenarian.

“Sometimes it’s as simple as going back to what you loved doing at 16, 25 or 30,” he says. “My cowriter, Mo Rocca, did a bit on WNYC public radio in New York and people were calling in and saying ‘I’m a Roctogenarian!’ and telling their stories. For some people, it’s the artistic side of themselves, for some people it’s even athletics.”

Greenberg says another mini-narrative in the book is about people who had basically dropped their dreams or ambitions and later returned to pick them back up. An example from the book is the guitarist of the rock band .

“Brian May, when he joined Queen with , was working on a PhD in astrophysics in London,” Greenberg relates. “Obviously, he couldn’t do both so he gave up the astrophysics and became a rock star. When he was nearing 60, he mentioned it in an interview and the chairman of his old department wrote to him and asked ‘Do you want to pick up your old research?’ May went back and completed his PhD in astrophysics at 60 and became a consulting expert in the field of .”

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Heterogeneous Ireland /english/2024/08/13/heterogeneous-ireland-symposium/ /english/2024/08/13/heterogeneous-ireland-symposium/#respond Tue, 13 Aug 2024 19:54:46 +0000 /english/?p=209403 On May 9th, 2024, the international symposium Heterogeneous Ireland took place on the vlog campus.  Scholars from Ireland, Northern Ireland, the UK, Bangladesh, and the U.S. gathered to discuss the various ethnicities and forms of social difference in modern Ireland. Montclair graduate Ashim Dutta ’13 MA, Associate Professor of English at the University of Dhaka, Bangladesh, spoke on the relationship between the Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore and the Irish poet W. B. Yeats. Using photos of her African, Irish, and Irish-American ancestors, poet and scholar Harryette Mullen of UCLA explained her background in conversation with Denise O’Shea, Associate Dean for Collections and Discovery in the Sprague Library Administration.  Participants in a session on the Irish border discussed the role of partition in creating complex hyphenated ethnic terminologies (Eve Patten)and analyzing (as Geraldine Higgins put it) “how border crossings, borderlines, and the partition of Ireland disrupt Irish writing and generate sites of heterogeneity.” Mary Burke examined the ethnically distinct Irish-American populations.   Other speakers discussed Jewish-Irish and Caribbean-Irish identities (Nicholas Grene, Maria McGarrity), Northern Irish poetry (Edna Longley, Matthew Campbell), sexualities (Adrian Frazier), and heterogenous archives (Lucy Collins).  Irish Studies faculty from NYU’s Glucksman Ireland House and Seton Hall University chaired the sessions. The symposium was organized by Lucy McDiarmid, Marie Frazee Baldassarre Professor of English.  Most of the speakers stayed over the weekend, enjoying a reading by Northern Irish poet Michael Longley, a visit to the Cloisters, and bird-watching in Central Park.

Images from May 2024 Heterogeneous Ireland Symposium.

Poet and Professor Harryette Mullen of UCLA

Poet and Professor Harryette Mullen of UCLA

Denise O'Shea of Sprague Library and Ellen Flanagan, Vice Consul General of the Consulate General of Ireland, New York

Denise O’Shea of Sprague Library and Ellen Flanagan, Vice Consul General of the Consulate General of Ireland, New York

photo of Ashim Dutta on zoom

Ashim Dutta ’13, Associate Professor of English, Dhaka University, Bangladesh (M.A. , vlog)

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David Galef OpEd on Accommodations Featured in Inside Higher Ed /english/2024/06/14/david-galef-oped-on-accommodations-featured-in-inside-higher-ed/ /english/2024/06/14/david-galef-oped-on-accommodations-featured-in-inside-higher-ed/#respond Fri, 14 Jun 2024 16:46:27 +0000 /english/?p=209360 David Galef, English Professor and Creative Writing Program Coordinator, recently published an OpEd in Inside Higher Ed titled,

In his piece, Dr. Galef spotlights an often overlooked and undiscussed element when implementing accommodations for students, which is the sustainability of such practices and the effects they have on the accommodators themselves.

“But giving in isn’t the same as accommodating,” says Galef.

With an enlightening redirection of focus, “How Accommodating Can (Should) I Be?” begs the question of to what extent do extreme accommodations pose as a mutual disservice to both student and professor.

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Fawzia Afzal-Khan honored in Pakistan; keynote in Thailand; key talks and publications during her sabbatical /english/2023/04/17/fawzia-afzal-khan-honored-in-pakistan-keynote-in-thailand-key-talks-and-publications-during-her-sabbatical/ /english/2023/04/17/fawzia-afzal-khan-honored-in-pakistan-keynote-in-thailand-key-talks-and-publications-during-her-sabbatical/#respond Mon, 17 Apr 2023 14:54:21 +0000 /english/?p=208953 Fawzia Afzal-Khan was honored recently in Lahore, Pakistan, by receiving invitations to speak at the 3 leading universities and colleges in her native city of Lahore. Her undergraduate alma mater, Kinnaird College for Women, dedicated a day to her, and she was interviewed for the archives of the International Center for Pakistani Writing in English (ICPWE). The titles of the talks she delivered at Kinnaird, Govt College University, and the Lahore University of Management Sciences, were titled respectively: “Patriarchy is Not the Only Problem: Neoliberalism, Rentier Capitalism and Religious Extremism in South Asia” and “Queer in/g Pakistan” the latter being her sabbatical research in progress. Fawzia was also honored at the annual South Asian Literary Association conference (affiliated with MLA), by having a panel dedicated to discussion of her book, Siren Song: Understanding Pakistan Through its Women Singers (OUP, 2020).

She will be delivering the keynote address for the in Bangkok, Thailand on May 10th, 2023. During her sabbatical year, she was also named as Contributing Editor of (circulation .5-1 million readers per week), where her recent essay on her travels and research has been published; two other essays were published earlier in Counterpunch, one on her travels through Karachi and the other about Shahzia Sikander’s public art in NYC which has been written about extensively in the New York Times, Hyperallergic etc.

Recent Articles by Fawzia Afzal-Khan:

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New Publication from Professor Michael Robbins /english/2020/12/16/new-publication-from-professor-michael-robbins/ /english/2020/12/16/new-publication-from-professor-michael-robbins/#respond Wed, 16 Dec 2020 21:09:26 +0000 http://www.montclair.edu/english/?p=208152 Michael Robbins, professor in the English Department, will have his third poetry collection, , published by Penguin Books in June 2021 under the Penguin Poets imprint. Professor Robbins’s first two collections, Alien vs. Predator and The Second Sex, were each published to widespread acclaim.
The New York Times has praised Robbins’s poetry for its “sky-blue originality of utterance” and N+1 has described his work as having “perfect a style at once immediately recognizable, socially resonant, and impossible to imitate.” Professor Robinson has published poems and essays in such notable periodicals as The New Yorker, Poetry, The Paris Review, and The Nation as well as a book of essays, Equipment for Living: On Poetry and Pop Music.
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Kathy Curto’s Book Earns Spot on Bestseller List /english/2019/10/08/kathy-curtos-book-earns-spot-on-bestseller-list/ /english/2019/10/08/kathy-curtos-book-earns-spot-on-bestseller-list/#respond Tue, 08 Oct 2019 15:19:16 +0000 http://www.montclair.edu/english/?p=207647 Kathy Curto’s book, Not for Nothing: Glimpses into a Jersey Girlhood, made the Nonfiction Bestseller list for July-September 2019. An adjunct professor in the Writing Studies and English Departments, Curto announced the publication of Not for Nothing, her first book, in December 2018.

Visit to learn more about the book.

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English M.A. students and Prof. Patricia Matthew in conference presentations /english/2019/04/09/english-m-a-students-and-prof-patricia-matthew-in-conference-presentations/ /english/2019/04/09/english-m-a-students-and-prof-patricia-matthew-in-conference-presentations/#respond Tue, 09 Apr 2019 20:46:30 +0000 http://www.montclair.edu/english/?p=207490 Kimberly Plaksin and Greg Riggio delivered papers at St. John’s University Graduate English Conference, Saturday April 6th. The conference theme this year was “Forms of Justice” and featured original research by 30 graduate students. Plaksin’s paper, “‘Civilized Industry’ and Joint-Matriarchy in the Short Stories of Charlotte Perkins Gilman,”examined the ways that Perkins Gilman’s short stories reflect the feminist ideals she outlines in her social treatise The Home.” In his essay “Fighting Dismemberment: Moonlight as Protest Literature,” Riggio measured the film Moonlight against James Baldwin’s strict criteria for protest literature. Approximately 60 faculty, students, and community members were in attendance. The conference was hosted by the graduate students of St. John’s Queens campus. Plaksin’s essay started as a paper for Prof. Monika Elbert’s Research Methods course. Riggio’s essay was originally written for Prof. Adam Rzepka’s Critical Theory class. Professor Patricia Matthew delivered the keynote address.

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