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Critical Storytelling in 2020: Issues, Elections and Beyond
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Critical Storytelling in 2020: Issues, Elections, and Beyond embraces the fierce urgency of the year 2020. This collection features timely research, critical stories, and engaging poetry written by...
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07 May 2020

Critical Storytelling in 2020: Issues, Elections, and Beyond embraces the fierce urgency of the year 2020. This collection features timely research, critical stories, and engaging poetry written by undergraduate students, Master’s and Ph.D. students, recently-graduated students, and faculty. The authors hail from fields of Communication Studies, Education, Journalism, Media Arts & Studies, Creative Writing, Criminal Justice, Law, and Business/Organizational Communication. For those that share personal narratives and poems, we are drawn to witness how the personal is often political and the individual is often collective. For those that share more social-scientific papers (literature reviews, some with narrative sections), we are drawn to witness how the political is often personal and the collective is often individual. The year 2020 clearly is a year that highlights our complex reality of politics, personal and collective issues, and futures influenced by the present. This volume, in both direct and deviant ways, speaks to issues of pivotal import in the U.S. in a year that will see a crucial census, a historic election, and the momentous, yet-to-be-seen movement birthed from contested change and courageous critical storytellers. The authors herein dare to share their voices in written form and bravely offer their perspectives to us—their stories ring out beyond the written page.
Contributors are: Bowen Dong, Aurora Gross, Nicholas D. Hartlep, Brandon O. Hensley, Phelan Johnson, Miles Kinsman, Karen Chava Knox, Sarah Kominek, Emmitt Lewis, Sarita McKenney, Kelsey Mesmer, Taylor Nondorf, Julie M. Novak, Christopher Saleh, Daniel Socha, Ashley Teffer, and Kimberly Tracey.
Contributors are: Bowen Dong, Aurora Gross, Nicholas D. Hartlep, Brandon O. Hensley, Phelan Johnson, Miles Kinsman, Karen Chava Knox, Sarah Kominek, Emmitt Lewis, Sarita McKenney, Kelsey Mesmer, Taylor Nondorf, Julie M. Novak, Christopher Saleh, Daniel Socha, Ashley Teffer, and Kimberly Tracey.
Price: $51.00
Pages: 142
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Critical Storytelling
Publication Date:
07 May 2020
ISBN: 9789004432741
Format: Paperback
Brandon O. Hensley is a Lecturer, Graduate Faculty member and College Assessment Coordinator at Wayne State University in the Department of Communication, where he oversees assessment for the College of Fine, Performing, & Communication Arts, teaches courses in Communication Studies, and continues his passions in pedagogy, research and writing. Hensley is a nominee for the 2020 President’s Award for Excellence in Teaching at Wayne State University. His most recent single-authored work is a public speaking textbook titled Building Your Voice: Powerful Public Speaking in the 21st Century (Great River Learning, 2018).
Nicholas D. Hartlep is the Robert Charles Billings Endowed Chair in Education at Berea College where he chairs the Department of Education Studies. Dr. Hartlep has published 23 books, the most recent being Racial Battle Fatigue in Faculty: Perspectives and Lessons from Higher Education (Routledge, 2020). In 2020 he was named an Emerging Scholar by Diverse: Issues in Higher Education.
Julie M. Novak is an Associate Professor of Communication at Wayne State University. Her research interests combine health and crisis communication with a qualitative research approach. She has shared her research in numerous journal articles, book chapters, and academic presentations. Her background documents a commitment to “generalist” learning and creating actionable knowledge, working hard to foster learning—meaningful, constructive, and collaborative—among graduate and undergraduate students within a context of reflection and compassion.
Nicholas D. Hartlep is the Robert Charles Billings Endowed Chair in Education at Berea College where he chairs the Department of Education Studies. Dr. Hartlep has published 23 books, the most recent being Racial Battle Fatigue in Faculty: Perspectives and Lessons from Higher Education (Routledge, 2020). In 2020 he was named an Emerging Scholar by Diverse: Issues in Higher Education.
Julie M. Novak is an Associate Professor of Communication at Wayne State University. Her research interests combine health and crisis communication with a qualitative research approach. She has shared her research in numerous journal articles, book chapters, and academic presentations. Her background documents a commitment to “generalist” learning and creating actionable knowledge, working hard to foster learning—meaningful, constructive, and collaborative—among graduate and undergraduate students within a context of reflection and compassion.