Many academic projects are born out of naïveté, a not
knowing just how much work an article or book will involve. This was certainly
true of us when we conceived the idea for our recently published collection of
essays: Teaching Medieval and Early Modern Cross-Cultural Encounters (Palgrave Macmillan, December 2014). We’re both literature professors, of
medieval English and early modern Italian, who share an interest in European
literary representations of Christian-Islamic relationships. One evening at
Kalamazoo 2011, we were commiserating on the difficulty of actually teaching our research. Because
cross-cultural encounters involve multiple languages, cultures, geographical
regions, and academic fields, they are challenging to both study and teach.
Wouldn’t it be great, we thought, to put together a volume of essays on these
challenges, a volume that would present the experiences of instructors from a
wide range of disciplines? How hard could it be?
In some ways, it was easy. We received submissions from a
great group of contributors who are passionately invested in teaching, and
whose innovativeness in the classroom, as expressed in their essays,
continually surprised and inspired us. Questions raised by contributors
included: How did nineteenth-century translations of Beowulf for
children shape British imperialism in India? What cultural work motivates the
adaptation of early modern Italian epics featuring Christians and Muslims in
nineteenth- and twentieth-century folk theatre? How might Shakespeare's Othello
help us theorize questions regarding President Obama's religion and
nationality that surfaced in the 2008 campaign? Most broadly, how is our
twenty-first-century study of the medieval and early modern pasts itself a
cross-cultural encounter, and how can we make that encounter relevant to our
students?
So what was the hard part? For many of us, it was the
process of writing about teaching. We
wanted to strike a balance between providing practical in-classroom advice and
theorizing medieval and early modern cross-cultural encounters in higher education
more broadly. This proved to be challenging, even for contributors who had multiple
articles and monographs under their belts. Part of the problem, we realized, is
that we are not trained to write about teaching (in graduate school or beyond).
We’ve all exchanged ideas with colleagues, consulted teaching guides, and tried
new approaches in the classroom, but none of this prepares us to craft an essay
about what teaching our research actually looks like. We went through many,
many drafts, as our incredibly patient contributors figured out how to write
about teaching, and we—equally new to the topic—figured out how to guide them.
And then there was pitching the volume to presses. We soon
learned that to many presses, a volume on pedagogy is neither fish nor fowl.
No, we had to explain, this is not a textbook, nor is it straight-up
medievalist/early modernist research on cross-cultural encounters. Some
colleagues also responded skeptically, opining that a more conventional collected
research volume (or even better, a monograph!) would be more professionally
advantageous. One person tried to stage an intervention on these grounds, an
experience both humorous and disconcerting for us. As we explained time and
again, the whole point of our volume is that while there is loads of research
on early cross-cultural encounters, how to translate this research into the
classroom has not been addressed.
To give these well-meaning skeptics credit, it is true that the
value of scholarship on pedagogy is still viewed as questionable. Part of the
reason we were able to pursue this project is that neither of us needed this
book to count toward tenure: Karina is tenured, and Lynn left a tenure-track
position, a difficult decision but one that freed her to pursue projects that truly
interest her. But the disjunction
between writing about our research, teaching our research, and writing about
our teaching, makes us wonder—as we did throughout the editorial process for
this volume—about our roles as scholars and instructors. If departments want to
hire faculty who think critically about their pedagogical approaches and whose
research agendas match the curricular needs of their students—as evidenced in
job listing requests for statements of teaching philosophy and interview
questions about the mutual enrichment of teaching and research—why do we face
so many institutional obstacles when we attempt to bring our research into the
classroom, and our teaching into our publications?
Of course we knew about the pervasive divide between
academic research and teaching, but working on this volume brought that divide
home to us in ways that we hadn’t foreseen. Yet we don’t want to sound
pessimistic. Although some doubted our project, many others supported it enthusiastically.
We also realize that for regular readers of In
the Middle, many of whom frequently address the intricacies of—and seek
advice about—how to teach a particular research topic in their Facebook posts
and Twitter feeds, we are probably preaching to the converted. Still, this
volume has gotten us thinking—and we hope it will get others thinking, too—about
what precisely we value in academia, and how we can respond to institutional
mandates that don’t necessarily match up with what we personally value as
members of the academic community.
And our final word—we’re really proud of this volume, so
please check it out!
Karina F. Attar
Queens College, CUNY
Lynn Shutters
Colorado State University
Foreword;
Lisa Lampert-Weissig
Introduction; Karina F. Attar and Lynn Shutters
PART I: SYNCHRONIC CROSS-CULTURAL ENCOUNTERS
1. Andalusian Iberias: From Spanish to Iberian Literature; Seth Kimmel
2. Using Feminist Pedagogy to Explore Connectivity in the Medieval Mediterranean; Megan Moore
3. A Journey through the Silk Road in a Cosmopolitan Classroom; Kyunghee Pyun
4. Teaching English Travel Writing from 1500 to the Present; Elizabeth Pentland
5. Stranger than Fiction: Early Modern Travel Narratives and the Antiracist Classroom; Julia Schleck
6. Different Shakespeares: Thinking Globally in an Early Modern Literature Course; Barbara Sebek
PART II: SYNCHRONIC AND DIACHRONIC CROSS-CULTURAL ENCOUNTERS
7. The Moor of America: Approaching the Crisis of Race and Religion in the Renaissance and the Twenty-First Century; Ambereen Dadabhoy
8. 'Real' Bodies? Race, Corporality, and Contradiction in The Arabian Nights and Pier Paolo Pasolini's Il fiore delle mille e una notte (1974); Andrea Mirabile and Lynn Ramey
9. Encountering Saracens in Italian Chivalric Epic and Folk Performance Traditions; Jo Ann Cavallo
10. Beowulf as Hero of Empire; Janice Hawes
PART III: DIACHRONIC CROSS-CULTURAL ENCOUNTERS
11. Resurrecting Callimachus: Pop Music, Puppets, and the Necessity of Performance in Teaching Medieval Drama; Jenna Soleo-Shanks
12. Teaching Chaucer through Convergence Culture: The New Media Middle Ages as Cross-Cultural Encounter; Tison Pugh
Introduction; Karina F. Attar and Lynn Shutters
PART I: SYNCHRONIC CROSS-CULTURAL ENCOUNTERS
1. Andalusian Iberias: From Spanish to Iberian Literature; Seth Kimmel
2. Using Feminist Pedagogy to Explore Connectivity in the Medieval Mediterranean; Megan Moore
3. A Journey through the Silk Road in a Cosmopolitan Classroom; Kyunghee Pyun
4. Teaching English Travel Writing from 1500 to the Present; Elizabeth Pentland
5. Stranger than Fiction: Early Modern Travel Narratives and the Antiracist Classroom; Julia Schleck
6. Different Shakespeares: Thinking Globally in an Early Modern Literature Course; Barbara Sebek
PART II: SYNCHRONIC AND DIACHRONIC CROSS-CULTURAL ENCOUNTERS
7. The Moor of America: Approaching the Crisis of Race and Religion in the Renaissance and the Twenty-First Century; Ambereen Dadabhoy
8. 'Real' Bodies? Race, Corporality, and Contradiction in The Arabian Nights and Pier Paolo Pasolini's Il fiore delle mille e una notte (1974); Andrea Mirabile and Lynn Ramey
9. Encountering Saracens in Italian Chivalric Epic and Folk Performance Traditions; Jo Ann Cavallo
10. Beowulf as Hero of Empire; Janice Hawes
PART III: DIACHRONIC CROSS-CULTURAL ENCOUNTERS
11. Resurrecting Callimachus: Pop Music, Puppets, and the Necessity of Performance in Teaching Medieval Drama; Jenna Soleo-Shanks
12. Teaching Chaucer through Convergence Culture: The New Media Middle Ages as Cross-Cultural Encounter; Tison Pugh
Suggestions
for Further Reading
1 comment:
As y'all know, I love this blog, and I am excited to read this volume. I did wonder a bit about this line: "...it is true that the value of scholarship on pedagogy is still viewed as questionable." By whom is it viewed this way? There is an entire field that exists for the scholarship on Teaching and learning, and it is a vibrant and growing one. I understand the bristling at purely anecdotal work, but much of SoTL would not fall into this camp. There are phenomenal empirical studies, meta-analyses, and research syntheses, though. Also, there are publishers for whom you would not have to work so hard to make the case for pedagogical research. Jossey-Bass and Stylus are the top trade presses, but Harvard UP has a long tradition of teaching books, and West Virginia UP is interested in them too. You'd find both of these presses represented at Kzoo, and there are other university presses that would be interested as well.
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