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    <title>SyndicateMizzou Video Podcast</title>
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    <pubDate>Mon, 13 Oct 2008 13:34:51 GMT</pubDate>
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    <description>Connecting you with the University of Missouri’s innovative research and creative activity</description>
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      <title>SyndicateMizzou Podcast: Michael  Ugarte - Exile and Spanish Literature</title>
      <link>http://syndicatemizzou.org/resources/ugarte/ipod/clip1historyexile.m4v</link>
      <category>Education</category>
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      <description>Making connections between his intellectual work and his political work, Ugarte has explored how being in exile has had a significant impact on important Spanish writers.</description>
      <duration>3</duration>
      <pubDate>Fri, 12 May 2006 17:00:46 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>SyndicateMizzou Podcast: Michael  Ugarte - Madrid in 1900</title>
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      <category>Education</category>
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      <description>Madrid in 1900: How the city became so central to the work of so many Spanish authors.</description>
      <duration>3</duration>
      <pubDate>Fri, 12 May 2006 17:01:01 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>SyndicateMizzou Podcast: Michael  Ugarte - Cultural Studies</title>
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      <category>Education</category>
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      <description>Ugarte talks about the study of culture as found in literature, film, and the press.  </description>
      <duration>3</duration>
      <pubDate>Wed, 17 May 2006 19:29:21 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>SyndicateMizzou Podcast: Timothy   Langen - How Langen was first drawn to Russian studies</title>
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      <category>Education</category>
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      <description>A language requirement in college caught Langen at a crossroads where he decided to give Russian a try. He soon discovered that he enjoyed studying the language and decided to major in Russian history and literature, a combination that allowed him to make connections between a scholarly field and other things he cared about.</description>
      <duration>3</duration>
      <pubDate>Fri, 27 Apr 2007 15:37:05 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>SyndicateMizzou Podcast: Bea  Gallimore - Francophone novelist Jean-Marie Adiaffi</title>
      <link>http://syndicatemizzou.org/resources/gallimore/ipod/gallimore01.m4v</link>
      <category>Education</category>
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      <description>Gallimore’s early research addressed how African Francophone writers subvert the French canon by drawing from their culture’s oral tradition to create different levels of meaning. In Gallimore’s first book, _L’oeuvre romanesque de Jean-Marie Adiaffi. Le mariage du mythe et de l’histoire: fondement d’un récit pluriel_ (1996), Gallimore examines author Jean-Marie Adiaffi, particularly the novel _La Carte d’Identité_ (1995).  The main character in the book, who was a prince before colonization, loses his I.D. card.  In the system imposed by the colonial French government, the loss of this I.D. card results in the loss of the man’s name and identity, so it becomes an allegory for the impact of colonization on the identity of the colonized.  </description>
      <duration>3</duration>
      <pubDate>Fri, 26 Oct 2007 16:52:52 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>SyndicateMizzou Podcast: Bea  Gallimore - Why Gallimore is drawn to Beyala’s novels</title>
      <link>http://syndicatemizzou.org/resources/gallimore/ipod/gallimore03.m4v</link>
      <category>Education</category>
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      <description>Gallimore has been drawn to Beyala’s novels because of their powerful realism, which deeply resonates with her own experience of growing up in the Congo. “When I first read her book, I was amazed. I was looking at things I had seen myself.  It was a reality in Africa we cannot deny; you maybe don’t want it in writing, but it’s a reality for women.  Those are the things women have to endure to survive.”</description>
      <duration>3</duration>
      <pubDate>Fri, 26 Oct 2007 16:54:14 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>SyndicateMizzou Podcast: Bea  Gallimore - Taft Research Fellow</title>
      <link>http://syndicatemizzou.org/resources/gallimore/ipod/gallimore07.m4v</link>
      <category>Education</category>
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      <description>Within the Romance Languages Department, Gallimore has been teaching French composition, French literature and drama, and Francophone studies. During the Winter 2008 semester, Gallimore served as a Taft Visiting Research Fellow in a seminar about racism in French and Francophone literature. “Your research gives you insight for teaching,” she says, as she develops a new course on Afro-Persian writers and a new graduate seminar on testimonial writing. </description>
      <duration>3</duration>
      <pubDate>Fri, 26 Oct 2007 16:56:03 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>SyndicateMizzou Podcast: Daniel  Hooley - An accidental journey</title>
      <link>http://syndicatemizzou.org/resources/hooley/ipod/hooley01.m4v</link>
      <category>Education</category>
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      <description>Dan Hooley first became interested in studying the classics through an “accidental journey,” studying the western classics as an English and Humanities graduate student at the University of Minnesota where he focused his studies on modernism and wrote his dissertation on how Latin poetry was translated by American modernists such as Ezra Pound or T.S. Eliot.</description>
      <duration>3</duration>
      <pubDate>Wed, 22 Aug 2007 20:21:41 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>SyndicateMizzou Podcast: Daniel  Hooley - How the classics have influenced our culture</title>
      <link>http://syndicatemizzou.org/resources/hooley/ipod/hooley02.m4v</link>
      <category>Education</category>
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      <description>For a long time the classics were thought of as foundational texts of western culture. Hooley sees the role of classics now as “one body of relatively coherent, related texts that constitute a tradition in themselves.” He says they have become the intellectual currency of our culture and are “great to think with.”</description>
      <duration>3</duration>
      <pubDate>Wed, 22 Aug 2007 20:21:58 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>SyndicateMizzou Podcast: Daniel  Hooley - Theories of translation</title>
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      <category>Education</category>
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      <description>Hooley talks about his first book, _The Classics in Paraphrase: Ezra Pound and Modern Translators of Latin Poetry,_ and how it opened a door for him to begin studying the various theories of translation. </description>
      <duration>3</duration>
      <pubDate>Wed, 22 Aug 2007 13:22:39 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>SyndicateMizzou Podcast: Daniel  Hooley - “Funnily critical, or critically funny?”</title>
      <link>http://syndicatemizzou.org/resources/hooley/ipod/hooley05.m4v</link>
      <category>Education</category>
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      <description>Most recently, Hooley has completed an introductory book on Roman satire. It covers the historical development of satire, explaining the genre as inherently human: “It’s in our blood; it’s hardwired into our brains.” Satire carries a very broad definition: it is partly a reaction to power and a way of expressing resistance, but at other times it provides a vehicle to poke fun at things. </description>
      <duration>3</duration>
      <pubDate>Fri, 14 Sep 2007 21:22:22 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>SyndicateMizzou Podcast: Daniel  Hooley - Hooley’s personal philosophy about studying the classics</title>
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      <category>Education</category>
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      <description>Through Hooley’s work in classical studies he has developed a philosophy about why one should study the classics: “Classics is just good material. The historical distance makes it more refreshing because you see the difference and how we’re the same animals. These texts don’t dictate our ethics and laws, but help our imaginations, which I think is a good reason to study them.”</description>
      <duration>3</duration>
      <pubDate>Wed, 22 Aug 2007 20:25:14 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>SyndicateMizzou Podcast: Sharon  Welch - &lt;em&gt;A Feminist Ethic of Risk&lt;/em&gt; </title>
      <link>http://syndicatemizzou.org/resources/welch/ipod/Welch09.m4v</link>
      <category>Education</category>
      <guid>http://syndicatemizzou.org/resources/welch/ipod/Welch09.m4v</guid>
      <description>As her first foray into comparative ethics, Welch recounts the origins of her book _A Feminist Ethic of Risk_ (2000, 2nd edition): “I wrote it because one of the things I noticed, as a graduate student and then teaching at Harvard University, was how easily white middle-class people give up. At first people wouldn’t want to take a stand on an issue, whether apartheid or nuclear weapons, because they thought they didn’t know enough about it. Once they learned more about the issue, they were still unable to act, but now for a different reason—they thought the problem was too big to do anything about. I saw this as a phenomenon of cultured despair, being aware of large issues and arguing against the futility of partial efforts.”  By contrast Welch learned from the work of the ethicist Katie Cannon about a type of “moral wisdom in the black women’s literary tradition,” an ethic of resisting over the long-haul in spite of seemingly overwhelming oppression, and the “confluence of spirituality and aesthetics” that sustained their activism over time.</description>
      <duration>3</duration>
      <pubDate>Tue, 25 Sep 2007 20:54:42 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>SyndicateMizzou Podcast: M. Heather   Carver  - Teaching theatre at Mizzou</title>
      <link>http://syndicatemizzou.org/resources/carver/ipod/Carver01.m4v</link>
      <category>Education</category>
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      <description>Heather Carver describes herself as “a performance studies artist/scholar,” someone who investigates an issue through performance—“so we study autobiography, and we do autobiographical performance.” Carver teaches several kinds of creative writing, at both the undergraduate and graduate level, in adaptation and performance of literature for theatre and the screen.  She also co-directs the Writing for Performance Program, which helps students adapt different kinds of writing for the stage or screen, including poetry, short stories, autobiography, or ethnography.  And Carver serves as creator and artistic director of the Life and Literature Performance series to showcase original and adapted work by MU students for the stage. </description>
      <duration>3</duration>
      <pubDate>Wed, 28 Nov 2007 01:56:49 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>SyndicateMizzou Podcast: Nancy M.  West - Looking at the Visual in Victorian Studies</title>
      <link>http://syndicatemizzou.org/resources/west/ipod/West02.m4v</link>
      <category>Education</category>
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      <description>West also works in the field of Victorian Studies, yet even in this regard her work still revolves around visual culture.  Recently West researched how Charles Dickens’ novel _Great Expectations_ was serialized in the American magazine _Harper’s Weekly_ from 1860-1861.  Specifically interested in some of the trans-Atlantic issues involved, West considered how an American audience might have read the novel differently from a British audience and how an American illustrator drew decidedly American scenes for the British story. West argues that scholars need to pay more attention “to the places where novels were originally serialized…to look at how the stories were illustrated by different artists, and pay serious attention to those artists as collaborators on the work of the fiction.”</description>
      <duration>3</duration>
      <pubDate>Wed, 13 Feb 2008 21:27:32 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>SyndicateMizzou Podcast: Nancy M.  West - &lt;em&gt;From Celluloid to Tabloid&lt;/em&gt;—West’s current book project</title>
      <link>http://syndicatemizzou.org/resources/west/ipod/West03.m4v</link>
      <category>Education</category>
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      <description>West is currently finishing a book, _From Celluloid to Tabloid_, in collaboration with Penelope Pelizzon (University of Connecticut), on Hollywood crime films and tabloid journalism from the 1920s through the 1940s.  Unlike the tabloids of today, which West decries as “pretty trashy scandal magazines and newspapers…often designed to expose and ruin people’s careers,” the tabloids of the earlier era contain much more liveliness and inventiveness.  “Although the cliché is that the tabloids have always been pitched to the uneducated, these early ones from the 1920s are surprisingly literary, replete with metaphorical word play, allusions, wit, and irony.”  Tabloid writers often went on to become celebrated novelists and screenwriters for Hollywood. Beyond their literary value, these tabloids also teach us about urban culture and modernity, especially about New York in the 1920s and 1930s. West and Pelizzon refer to these tabloids as “adaptation-ready sites,” because they know how to spin information so quickly from one source.</description>
      <duration>3</duration>
      <pubDate>Wed, 13 Feb 2008 21:28:07 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>SyndicateMizzou Podcast: Nancy M.  West - Teaching at Mizzou</title>
      <link>http://syndicatemizzou.org/resources/west/ipod/West07.m4v</link>
      <category>Education</category>
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      <description>West teaches both undergraduate and graduate courses in the English Department on subjects bridging—like her research—the literary with the visual.  She offers courses, for example, on British literature, film history, crime films, film adaptation of novels, novel illustration, and photography. </description>
      <duration>3</duration>
      <pubDate>Wed, 13 Feb 2008 21:30:13 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>SyndicateMizzou Podcast: Nancy M.  West - West’s teaching philosophy</title>
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      <category>Education</category>
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      <description>The teaching honors awarded to West bear witness to her pedagogical skills, including the Gold Chalk Award (1999, 2005), the William T. Kemper Fellowship for Excellence in Teaching (2004), and the English Graduate Student Association’s inaugural award for Outstanding Graduate Faculty Member (2005).  Reflecting on her teaching, West states: “I really believe in interdisciplinary work—not just to present students with a reference every once in a while to an artistic or scientific movement, but to really see things from _inside_ those disciplines. I think there are very rich connections to be made, and so I try to get students thinking in interdisciplinary ways.”</description>
      <duration>3</duration>
      <pubDate>Wed, 13 Feb 2008 21:30:33 GMT</pubDate>
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