Ronald Strickland

English Department

Illinois State University

Normal, IL 61790-4240

phone: (309) 438-3667

email:

Academic Background:

Ph. D.: Syracuse University, 1987

Dissertation: The Ideological Functions of Renaissance Funeral Elegy

(Directed by Jean E. Howard)

M.A.: SUNY-Cortland, 1980

B. A.: Southwest Missouri State University, 1973

Teaching Experience:

Visiting Professor of Western Languages, Srinakharinwirot University, Summer 2002

Professor of English, ISU, 1998-present

Associate Professor of English, ISU, 1993-1998

Assistant Professor of English, ISU, 1987-1993

Graduate Teaching Assistant, Syracuse University, 1983-1987

Visiting Instructor, Syracuse University London Centre, 1985

Administrative Experience:

Graduate Director, English, Fall 1999; Fall 2000-present

English Department Undergraduate Advisor, 1988

Books:

Growing Up Postmodern: Neoliberalism and the War on the Young (Editor and Introduction). Boulder: Rowman and Littlefield, 2002.

After Political Correctness: New Directions for the Humanities (co-edited with Christopher Newfield). Boulder: Westview Press, 1995.

Articles, Chapters and Reviews:

"Gender, Class and the Humanities in the Corporate University." Genders 34 (Spring 2002)

"Curriculum Mortis: A Manifesto for Structural Change" (reprint). In Henry A. Giroux and Kostas Myrciades, eds., Beyond the Corporate University. Boulder: Rowman and Littlefield, 2001.

"Postmodern Pedagogy and the Death of Civic Humanism" (co-written with Elizabeth Hatmaker, et al) Social Epistemology 12 (Spring, 1998)

"Pedagogy and Public Accountability." In Amitava Kumar, ed., Class Issues: Pedagogy, Cultural Studies and the Public Sphere. New York: New York University Press, 1997, 163-76.

"Every Which Way But Left." Review of Education, Pedagogy and Cultural Studies 17 (Spring, 1995) 35-42.

"Going Public" (with Christopher Newfield). In After Political Correctness: New Directions for the Humanities. Boulder: Westview Press, 1995, 1-20.

"Curriculum Mortis: A Manifesto for Structural Change" (reprint). In After Political Correctness: New Directions for the Humanities. Boulder: Westview Press, 1995, 1-20.

"The Autonomous Individual and the Anonymous Referee." College Literature 21 (October, 1994), 72-8.

"The Campus Climate and the Politics of Change: An Interview with Thomas P. Wallace." (with Thomas P. Wallace). In After Political Correctness: New Directions for the Humanities. Boulder: Westview Press, 1995, 286-96.

"Curriculum Mortis: A Manifesto for Structural Change." College Literature 21 (February 1994), 1-14. This essay was reprinted in After Political Correctness.

"A Response to Maxine Hairston." College Composition and Communication 44 (May, 1993), 191-4.

"Teaching Shakespeare Against the Grain," in James Davis and Ronald Salamone, eds. Teaching Shakespeare Today. Urbana: NCTE, 1993, 168-78.

"Not So Idle Tears: Re-Reading the Renaissance Funeral Elegy." Review 13 (1992), 47-65.

"Are We Being Political Yet?" Mediations 16 (Spring, 1992), 5-11.

"Confrontational Pedagogy and the Introductory Literature Course." In James Cahalan and David Downing, eds., Practicing Theory in Introductory College Literature Courses. Urbana: NCTE, 1992.

"Pageantry and Poetry as Ideological Discourse: The Production of Subjectivity in Sir Philip Sidney's Funeral." ELH (English Literary History) 57 (Spring, 1990), 19-36.

"Confrontational Pedagogy and Traditional Literary Studies." College English 52 (March, 1990), 291-300.

"Review of Paul Smith, Discerning the Subject." Textual Practice 4 (Summer, 1990), 324-9.

"Review of Terry Eagleton, Against the Grain: Essays 1975-1985." Poetics Today 10 (Fall, 1989), 635-7.

"Formalism and Discourse Theory." (Review of John Frow, Marxism and Literary History). Novel: A Forum on Fiction (Winter, 1989), 111-2.

"Review of Laura C. Stevenson, Praise and Paradox: Merchants and Craftsmen in Elizabethan Popular Literature." Shakespeare Quarterly 39 (1988), 124-5.

Awards:

Illinois State University Team Service Excellence Award (with the Border Subjects Conference Organizing Committee), 1998

David A. Strand Diversity Achievement Award, 1997

Illinois State University Outstanding Teacher, 1996

College of Arts and Sciences Teaching Excellence Award (Senior Category), 1994

College of Arts and Sciences Research Initiative Award, 1990

Syracuse University Graduate Fellowship, 1980-1984

Syracuse University Summer Fellowship, 1984

Grants:

"On-line Course Development"(English 401: Introduction to Graduate Studies), Extended University (ISU), Summer 2001 ($5,000)

"On-line Course Development" (English 495: Marxist Theory), Extended University (ISU), Summer 1999 ($6,000)

“Literature and the Modern Experience in Africa,” 1996, Summer Institute at the University of Ghana-Legon, funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities ($5,700)

“Cultural Diversity and Critical Pedagogy,” Consultant and Seminar Director,

Bradley University Center for Teaching Excellence (Lilly Endowment-funded Workshop), 1993-94 ($6,000)

Illinois State University Summer Research Grant, 1992 ($3,000)

Illinois State University Summer Research Grant, 1991 ($3,000)

Newberry Library Institute in English Archival Sciences, 1990: funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities ($3,000)

“Recovering the Discursive Contexts of Renaissance Funeral Poems,” 1990; funded by the Newberry Library Center For Renaissance Studies ($1,500)

Illinois State University Teaching Improvement Program Grant, Seminar on Cultural Diversity, 1990 ($6,000)

Illinois State University Summer Research Grant, 1990 ($3,000)

"The Ideological Functions of Renaissance Funeral Practices," 1989: funded by the American Council of Learned Societies ($3,000)

Illinois State University Teaching Improvement Program Grant, Seminar on Cultural Diversity, 1989 ($6,000)

Illinois State University Summer Research Grant, 1989 ($3,000)

Illinois State University Summer Research Grant, 1988 ($3,000)

Dissertations and Theses Supervised:

Rebecca Webb, Ph. D. dissertation (expected to defend April 2003)

Elizabeth Hatmaker, Ph. D. dissertation (expected to defend May 2003)

Joseph Jeyaraj, Ph. D. dissertation (2001)

Mohomodou Houssouba, Ph. D. dissertation (1998)

Rise Funk, M. A. thesis (1998)

Sue Kuykendall, Ph. D. dissertation (Co-directed with Bill Morgan, 1990)

Internal Service:

Academic Senate, 1988-89; 1993-94; 1996-2000

Academic Senate Rules Committee, 1988-89

Academic Senate Student Affairs Committee, 1996-97

Chair, Academic Senate Budget Committee, 1998-2000

Co-Chair, Border Subjects Conference Organizing Committee, 1996-2001

Academic Senate Ad Hoc Committee on Shared Governance,1996-1997

Minority Professional Opportunities Fellowship Award Committee, 1995-98

Faculty Mentor for Atkin Hall 10th-floor Residents, 1999-2000

Inaugural Speaker in the Diversity Circles Luncheon Series, and Consultant to

the Diversity Circles Planning Committee, 1996-1998

President, ISU Faculty Association 1999-present

External Service:

Editor, Mediations 1991-2000

Editorial Board Member, Works and Days, 1995-Present

Editorial Board Member, Works and Days, 1995-Present