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Tenured Faculty Selections

Each spring when Stark Campus faculty earn tenure from Kent State University, they are asked to select a book that influenced them personally or professionally. The library purchases two copies of the book. One is available for use and placed in the general collection and the other is signed by the recently tenured faculty member and placed in the library's archives for posterity. In addition, the faculty are asked to provide a brief statement on why the book was important to them. The following is a list of the books selected by faculty along with their statements (click on the title to see more information about the book in KentLINK).

Tenured 2011

Collected Works. Flannery O'Connor
New York : Published by The Library of America, 1988.

"I remember reading the stories of Flannery O’Connor, and about the life of Flannery O’Connor when I was an enthusiastic and impressionable young graduate student. For me, she created a powerful first impression because she is the quirky “peacock lady,” brilliant in her gothic southern storytelling, and shocking in her exploration of the gradations of the dark side of all of our human natures. More important to me, however, as an avid reader of O’Connor, is the way her stories and characters stay with me long after reading. From Joy/Hulga, to the Misfit, to Tom Shiftlet, to many, many others, her characters remain in my mind as vibrant, all-too-humanly flawed explorations of the challenges of human existence. These characters are often caricatures, yes. Their stories are frequently grotesque and sometimes offensive, yes. But they communicate piercing truths about human experience and prejudice, the close relationship between good and evil, and the universal search to attach purpose to one’s life. Once read, O’Connor’s stories reverberate and multiply connections in the mind in deep and meaningful ways; indeed, their echoes are more strong for me than those of the texts of any other writer I have encountered."

... Mary Rooks (English)

Tenured 2010

Their eyes were watching God. Zora Neale Hurston.
New York : Published by Harper Perennial Modern Classics, 2006.

"The book that has probably had the greatest influence on me is Their Eyes Were Watching God, by Zora Neale Hurston. I read it for the first time as an undergraduate; and on a personal level, I connected with Hurston's protagonist, Janie Crawford, a young African American woman pursuing life and love on her own terms and struggling to establish her place within the community as an autonomous, competent and fully-developed individual. Professionally, the opportunity to read, study and share my knowledge about literature of this caliber reinforced my childhood goal to be an English teacher."

... Brenda R. Smith (English)

Tenured 2009

Physics for entertainment. Ya. Perelman.
New York : Published by Hyperion Books, 2008.

"I read this book long ago in Russian. It inspired me so much that my first choice of profession was Physics. I have a BS degree in Physics from Yerevan State University. After graduation in Physics I changed my profession to Mathematics because I figured out that I like mathematical explanation of physics more than physics by itself."

... Gro Hovhannisyan (Math)

Our Bodies, Ourselves. The Boston Women's Health Book Collective.
New York : Simon & Schuster, 2005.

I would like to live in a world where everyone has access to this book. My sister gave me it to me in my first year of college, and from there on, it has continuously proved to be an endless source of healing and productive knowledge. A woman knowing her body is a radical act, and this book continues to be revolutionary."

... Carey McDougall (Art)

Tenured 2008

Loose Sugar, Brenda Hillman.
Hanover, NH : Published by University Press of New England [for] Wesleyan University Press, c1997.

"I came to study English as a poet, because of poetry, and so I chose a collection of poems to remind me of how I began this journey.  I chose Brenda Hillman’s Loose Sugar because Brenda is one of my favorite living U.S. poets, and she is also a generous and supportive voice from within the world of poetry.  This collection marks her most daring break from traditional lyricism.  She embraced an experimental poetics that has launched her into exciting and unknown territory as a writer.  Her new journey parallels the one that I embark upon now."

... Andrea Adolph (English)

Fundamentals of Musical Composition, Arnold Schoenberg.
London : Faber and Faber, 1970.

"I picked this book because, while Schoenberg represents avant-garde creative expression, he was a traditional teacher who believed in engaging students through the study of the masters."

... Sebastian Birch (Music)

The Language of the Muses : the Dialogue Between Roman and Greek Sculpture, Miranda Marvin.
Los Angeles : J. Paul Getty Museum, c2008.

"The Language of the Muses:  The Dialogue Between Roman and Greek Sculpture, by Miranda Marvin, published this year, goes right to a question that vexes historians of ancient Roman art.  To what extent does Roman art “copy” the art of Athens in the fifth century BCE?  Marvin’s book takes the tack that Roman art ‘dialogues’ with classical art-copying ‘yes’ but more importantly using Greek art as a springboard to new imagery that speaks to Roman interests, tastes, and subjects.

Marvin’s book includes chapters on the dialogue between ancient art and the great collectors of the Renaissance through the 19c and the ways in which modern collectors and, yes, the 18c art historians assumed the superiority of classical service over the derivative Romans.  This misconception continues to the present day, although among historians of Roman art and museum curators, focus is on the innovations of Roman art and the ironic and playful ways in which the Romans used and abused their Greek models, creating a rich dialogue which engages Marvin and readers of her book."

... Molly Lindner (Art)

The Bhagavad Gita, translated with a general introduction by Eknath Easwaran, with a chapter by Diana Morrison.
Petaluma, CA : Nilgiri Press, c1985.

"This book, The Bhagavad Gita, one of the most important Hindu writings, has been significant in my life in many ways.  Its messages affected my personal life, my musical compositions, my teaching, and my relationships.  The Gita came into my life when I had to teach it in the fall of 1997.  At first, it was just a book.  That following summer, I read it while walking and I “heard” it for the first time.  Indeed, the title means “Song of the Great Lord” and, like a song, it cannot be explained.  One can cite its passages, but they only have meaning as part of the whole.  Its perspectives led me to begin the yogic healing of my body and spirit, and to discover many other wonderful Indian traditions and stories.  It also provided a bridge between my life interest in religion and my research in the field of rhetoric, embodied in my latest publication concerning Nyaya, an Indian method of argumentation.  Most of all, however, it helped me to perceive myself and my students as expressions of the very essence of life.  There can be no greater gift than this."

... Keith Lloyd (English)