Fond Farewells

by Lysa Rivera

Erica Dean-Crawford

As we close this academic year, I would like to take a moment here to honor someone whose impact on our graduate program cannot be overstated — our incredible Graduate Program Coordinator, Erica Dean-Crawford. From managing application cycles to mentoring students and fielding endless questions with kindness and good humor, Erica has been the steadfast heart of our graduate program since 2014. I had the good fortune of working closely with Erica as Director of Graduate Studies, and during those two years I would often hear students refer to her as their “lifeline” and their “the go-to” for pretty much everything. From September to June, it was Erica who was there, ensuring that every student knew where to be and when. Although most of what she does happens behind the scenes, the impacts of her work run deep. It is her insight, tireless support, and strong organization that keeps this large program running smoothly. As Chair, I continue to appreciate Erica’s essential role in department, and I have come to regard her as a deeply caring, thoughtful, and witty woman. It was always Erica who would remind me of a birthday, who would have the forethought to buy cards, and who would lovingly craft homemade gifts for the staff, myself included, on holidays — and sometimes just because. The staff jokingly refer to Erica as “Ms. HGTV” on account of her boundless energy when it comes to decorating our shared spaces. Many folks probably don’t know this, but it was Erica’s tenacity that finally got the College to give the department a manageable bid for what will eventually become a new faculty and staff lounge. And, yes, the lounge shall be named in her honor — placard, epithet, and all. You will be deeply missed, Erica! 

Pam Hardman

This year our department also bids farewell to Pam Hardman, an invaluable member of the faculty who has served this department since 1993 when she was hired to provide instructional support for the English Education courses in our curriculum. During her time with us, she also taught a range of courses outside of this area, including a very popular course on 19th Century Women Writers, and courses in Literary Theory, Young Adult Literature, and Linguistics. Prior to writing this, I did some research and learned that during her time here, Pam often taught the same three courses for several consecutive years. For many faculty, this type of repetition can be difficult and stifling: it can lead to burnout. Recalling her teaching evaluations from her previous review, and just knowing what I do from years of anecdotal evidence, it is no secret that Pam is one of our department’s most beloved and respected teachers. I have had dozens of mutual students with Pam and the narrative they share with me is always the same:  Students overwhelmingly find her to be an attentive, brilliant, and exceedingly supportive educator. Our English Ed program would not be where it is today without Pam’s dedication, hard work, and capacity to meet students where they are in their learning. Make no mistake about it, though. Pam’s capacity to inspire and teach extends far beyond the classroom. One of four very close siblings, Pam is from Tennessee – and that large family vibe and Southern hospitality shows: she sees herself as one among many and in that capacity she always struck me as someone who put others before herself. She raised her beautiful daughter Alice on her own and, of course, she is the most devoted dog lover I know. Pam has always been a source of inspiration to me: her models of motherhood and mentoring have left their mark on me, and I will forever be grateful and feel fortunate that I got to call her a colleague for all these years. Thank you, Pam! You too will be deeply missed. 

“MUTTER COURAGE” Reading Series

J.D. Pleucker performing in February 2025

This past November, English Department professor Stefania Heim and Fairhaven College professor Yanara Friedland relaunched the MUTTER COURAGE Reading Series at the Geheim Gallery in downtown Bellingham. Originally founded at Bruna Press and Archive in 2018, the free and occasional reading series and conversation space showcases writers engaging with poetic, embodied, and intersectional practices. MUTTER COURAGE references Berthold Brecht’s eponymous play, which unfolds in expressions of courage in voice. 

With free readings featuring acclaimed writers from all around the country, MUTTER COURAGE is making a vital contribution to Bellingham’s cultural community. The series presented four events this year, featuring writers, translators, editors, and multi-media artists from Colorado, Texas, and North Carolina. We hosted poupeh missaghi, JD Pluecker, Stalina Emmanuelle Villarreal, Brandon Shimoda, and Lightsey Darst, reading alongside local writers Caitlin Roach, Kiik Araki-Kawaguchi, and Emgee Dufresne. Each event draws in a lively crowd — creating meaningful exchanges between visiting writers and engaged local audiences. Stefania and Yanara are already working on next year’s schedule—inviting more incredible writers and thinking about even deeper ways to involve students at WWU. 

Meet Ablaye Diakité, Coordinator for the English Department’s Senegal Program

Ablaye (“Laye”) Diakité has been Program Coordinator for the English Department’s Global Learning Program in Senegal since 2019. During that time, he has gotten to know more than 75 of our students, to whom he has introduced to Senegalese culture and literature. Laye did his graduate work in Linguistics at Université Gaston Berger in Saint Louis, Senegal. He is also the Coordinator of the Endangered Archives Project at Boston University to preserve Ajami literatures in Africa, i.e. African language literatures that are alphabetized with an Arabic script, including Woolf, Mandé, Soninke, Pulaar, and other languages.

What is the nature of your literary research? Briefly describe what you do with Boston University for an audience who is unfamiliar with this kind of research.

I am a linguist, translator and researcher on West African languages. I am currently working with Boston University on EAP (Endangered Archives Preservation) in Fouta Djallon in the Republic of Guinea. It consists of digitizing fifty thousand pages of endangered archives written in Arabic and Fula Ajami. I first met Professor Wise in 2008 when he visited his colleague Professor Fallou Ngom who was teaching at Gaston Berger University in Saint Louis, Senegal as a Fullbright Scholar. It was during his stay that they (Professor Wise and Professor Ngom) first visited Alwaar as part of Professor Wise’s research on El Hadji Oumar Tall.

What have you enjoyed most about working with WWU students? How are WWU students different from students in Senegal? Are there other programs like the WWU Program in Senegal?

I have the most enjoyed WWU students’ desire to learn more about African culture in general and Senegalese culture in particular, their open-mindedness, their sense of adaptation to Senegalese culture during the program. There is no big difference between WWU students and Senegalese students. The only difference is that WWU students have the chance to have a program which helps them to spend three weeks in a foreign country in order to learn a different culture and meet people. There are other study abroad programs held at WARC (West African Research Center) in Dakar. But WWU’s program is the best because it combines African literature, history and religion, and students visit many areas.

What are some of the most memorable experiences you’ve had coordinating the program?

The most memorable experience experiences I have had coordinating the program are our visit in Alwaar, the cultural event in Tareeji near Podor on Fula fishermen tradition, and the presentation on Senghor in his home village in Djilor among others.

2025 Welcome New Faculty!

Eddy Troy Interview

Where did you live/work before coming to Western?

I did my PhD work in Southern California at the University of California, Riverside (2010-2017). After that, I moved to South Carolina and was a Senior Lecturer in the English Department at Clemson University, where I taught courses in film, writing, and literature. 

What is your area of specialty?

Most of my work focuses on the intersections of film, philosophy, and literature. My training is largely in comparative literature, so my research interests are somewhat eclectic by design. For example, I am currently finalizing an article that explores the connections between existentialism and the work of Senegalese filmmaker Djibril Diop Mambéty. My larger book project similarly addresses philosophical approaches to transnational Francophone cinema.

What do you like so far about being at Western?

Working with students who genuinely care about what we’re reading and discussing in the classroom. This may seem like a small thing, but I think it’s part of what makes Western special.

What stirs joy within you outside of your work?

Cooking, the occasional game of pickup basketball—and, of course, my kids!

What is your secret “superpower”? Tell us something that others may not know about you.

I went to WWU for my undergraduate and master’s degrees. I was a first-gen student who worked through college. I like to think this gives me some insight into students’ experiences—though calling it a superpower is undoubtedly a stretch!


Jamie Rogers Interview

Where did you live/work before coming to Western?
Before coming to Western, I was a Visiting Assistant Professor and lecturer at Clemson University in South Carolina. Before that, I went to graduate school at the University of California, Irvine. And before THAT, I was actually here at Western. I had the great pleasure of receiving my masters in English Studies here, and I couldn’t be happier to be back.

What is your area of specialty?

My focus is on Black film, feminist studies, and cinemas of social justice. I am starting to work on a project involving geographies of cinema and race, so that is a new specialization I’m also moving into. 

What do you like so far about being at Western?

I love the students here. Western students seem to have a genuine interest in learning and engaging with thought, while also not taking themselves too seriously, which is a lot of fun to be around. My colleagues here at Western are also wonderful — encouraging, challenging, smart, and like the students, fun to be around. And last, I love the beauty of the campus and the beauty of Whatcom County. I try to take advantage of all the outdoor opportunities as much as possible.

What stirs joy within you outside of your work?

Being outside! I love hiking, camping and gardening. 

What is your secret “superpower”? Tell us something that others may not know about you.

I’m a really good listener when folks need someone to vent to, bounce ideas off, or get something off their chest. I don’t think I give particularly good advice, but I’m great at hearing you out! 


Sean Golden Interview

Where did you live/work before coming to Western?

I grew up in Southern California on the Pacific Coast, in between Long Beach and Seal Beach. At 18 I moved to Southern Minnesota to play college tennis. Upon graduating some friends and I decided to explore Minneapolis a bit. That exploration lasted ten years! After 14 years in the midwest I needed to migrate back home to the west coast. I know the bay is technically not the ocean, but I’m excited to get to become familiar with this pocket of the Pacific.   

What is your area of specialty?

My doctorate is in curriculum and instruction, specifically young adult literature and fugitive pedagogy. In the Studies of Young Adult Literature course my students and I dig into the social construction of the adolescent and the big life moments an young person encounters. 

What do you like so far about being at Western?

Western is such a beautiful place! I think my favorite part is my walk to and from work through Connelly Creek! It is such a great space to reflect on the day to come and what has just passed. 

What stirs joy within you outside of your work?

I am a descendant of travelers, and that gene to see and explore did not skip me. I love travelling, connecting and collaborating, and being present in new cultures. Urban hikes and mountain hikes thrill me. Sitting on a paddleboard in quiet water is so peaceful. Yoga in the morning and tennis at night is invigorating. (Honestly, I just like to be on the move, why sit still when there are playgrounds all over?) 

What is your secret “superpower”? Tell us something that others may not know about you.

I always had an inkling about this superpower, but it was confirmed one summer at the Chakra Shack in Laguna Beach. I have an orange and green aura which means I’m a connector. Specifically with animals, especially with dogs; 9 out of 10 dogs want to be my best friend. 


Melissa Guardrón Interview

Where did you live/work before coming to Western?

I’m originally from Upstate New York, but I spent the last six years in Ohio, studying and teaching at Ohio State University. I’ve also lived in South Korea, where I worked as an English teacher. 

What is your area of specialty?

My area of specialty is rhetoric of health and medicine (RHM)–I combine rhetoric, technical and professional communication, and disability studies to study how humans navigate unpredictable health-related situations. Much of my work is site-based and community-oriented, and I’ve also begun exploring the use of AI in healthcare. 

What do you like so far about being at Western?

I love the location. Ohio was so flat. It’s nice to be sandwiched between Bellingham Bay and the Sehome Hill Arboretum. 

What stirs joy within you outside of your work?

I love recipe testing and being outdoors. 

What is your secret “superpower”? Tell us something that others may not know about you.

I have a terrific memory for terrible songs but I can only recall the lyrics when the songs are playing.


Dennin Ellis Interview

Where did you live/work before coming to Western?

I lived in Columbus, OH for five years as I completed my Ph.D program at Ohio State University.

What is your area of specialty?

My area of specialty is literary theory, with an emphasis on critical theory, cultural studies, media studies, and narrative theory, but I’m one of those people who reads theory books for fun because I feel like a Pokémon player when it comes to theoretical approaches – gotta catch ’em all!

What do you like so far about being at Western?

I like the arboretum; getting to walk through the woods on my way to/from the classroom is a great way to zone in on whatever I’ll be teaching, and then decompress afterwards. I also like my students a lot, especially the English majors in the upper-level classes I’ve taught; they’re weird and goofy in the best way.

What stirs joy within you outside of your work?

I like to play guitar; I like to work in my garden; I like to spend time with my wife, dog and cat; I like to read (see above answer) and write.

What is your secret “superpower”? Tell us something that others may not know about you.

Some people might call me a ‘supercrip’ – a concept from disability studies suggesting that certain people with disabilities have some other ability to compensate for the disability. For me, the issues I encounter from being autistic (sensory issues, social difficulties) are ‘compensated for’ by my ability to work/concentrate for hours and hours on a single task, and my ability to cultivate encyclopedic knowledge on my special interests, whatever they happen to be (comics, rock music, theory). I’m not sure if this counts, but it’s also been great to identify and connect with my neurodivergent students and hopefully make them feel more comfortable in the classroom.

Faculty News 2025

Nicole Brown enjoyed teaching courses in the Professional Writing and Rhetoric minor and continues to evolve her course projects around making meaning with others and staying human. She presented at the Popular Culture Association conference in New Orleans on rhetorics of entanglement and old growth forests in the PNW as vibrant matter. She is excited about completing two book chapters which will come out in 2026 on new materialism and more-than-human communication beyond the anthro. One of the collections is titled Sacred Culture and is being published by DeGruyter/Brill. Through this chapter, she has the privilege of collaborating and co-authoring with Dr. Marcelo Zaiduni, a traditional Aymara doctor living a teaching in Bolivia. Marcelo is a social communicator with a PhD in epistemology and semiology specializing in ancestral knowledge and indigenous peoples.

Felicia Cosey presented her paper titled “From Personal Trauma to Ecological Grief: Seeking Transformation in the Shimmer of Annihilation,”—which she is in the process of turning into a book chapter for Bloomsbury’s Environment and Society Series —at the LACK V Conference in March.  She also presented a paper titled “Transatlantic Tensions: Black British Actors, Hollywood, and the Perception of Racial Excess” at the 83rd Annual College Language Association Convention in April.  Additionally, her video essay titled “Jouissance at the Margins: Revisiting Bersani’s ‘Is the Rectum a Grave?’ through the Lens of Swallowed” was published in Monstrum journal in January. 

Carol Guess published a book entitled Infodemic with Black Lawrence Press (2024). Her book focuses on contemporary queer life during the COVID-19 pandemic and the aftermath of Trump’s presidency. Beginning with the memory of a thwarted kidnapping attempt and ending with musings on life after death, Guess engages philosophical questions about spirituality, ethics, and politics, incorporating prose narratives with lineated poems, and capturing the humor and interconnectedness of the author’s queer chosen family. Infodemic was published by Black Lawrence Press in 2024. 

Kiik Araki-Kawaguchi published his debut poetry collection in May 2025 entitled Disintegration Made Plain and Easy with Pizama Press. Surreal, absurd, dreamspeak poems full of humor, autobiographical mistruths, pop culture references, and heartfelt abstractions. Complete with line art illustrations from Gautam Rangan. See this link.

Geri Forsberg was elected as co-president of the International Jacques Ellul Society (IJES). Jacques Ellul (1912-1994) was a French philosopher, sociologist, lay theologian, and communication theorist, known for writing over 60 books and more than a thousand articles. He is well known for his books: The Technological Society and Propaganda

During spring break, Geri visited Wheaton College with her former student, Moriah Pitts, and project manager Raeef Barsoum. They spent an entire week in the archives at Wheaton, where they scanned nearly 500 documents related to Ellul. These documents will need to be translated from French to English, and this translation project will continue over the next year. 

After their time at Wheaton, Geri and Moriah traveled to the University of Notre Dame to prepare for a conference scheduled for July 2026. The theme of the IJES conference will be “The Word Humiliated,” based on Ellul’s book The Humiliation of the Word. The main question guiding the conference discussions will be: How is language changing in our social media, AI, and propaganda culture? Geri is also working on peer-reviewed journal articles, book chapters, and a collection of her selected writings. https://ellul.org/ 

In December 2024, Stefania Heim published her translation of Metaphysical artist Giorgio de Chirico’s posthumous novel, Mr. Dudron. Following the 1929 publication of his novel Hebdomeros—declared by John Ashbery to be the finest piece of Surrealist literature —de Chirico began work on Mr. Dudron, the humorous (mis)adventures of his autobiographical hero: a painter who wanders, remembers, frets about art, polemicizes, and tells stories. The novel begins with Mr. Dudron in his studio having his siesta, and ends with him going to sleep, “because, as Arthur Schopenhauer used to say, a long sleep is indispensable to persons of genius.” In between, the novel whisks him on a series of adventures, both mundane and mythological. He attends dinner parties in the Italian countryside, and sneaks cans of sardines and tuna into his hotel. There is a centaur family, and three caged lions left alone in a suburban field. A requiem mass for a student, memories of the distant days of his childhood, and the strange world of dreams. De Chirico continued working on the novel steadily for four decades, printing excerpts of Dudron’s adventures in both Italian and French. The novel was finally published in Italian in 1998, the twentieth anniversary of the artist’s death. This publication is the first time the novel will be available in its entirety in English. For her translation of Mr. Dudron, Heim received an NEA Translation Fellowship and a fellowship to attend the ViceVersa Workshop at Villa Garbald, Switzerland.  

Caitlin Roach’s book Surveille was selected as winner of the 2024 Brittingham Prize in Poetry by award-winning poet and professor of English at Stanford University, Amaud Jamaul Johnson, Surveille interrogates the multiple violences inflicted on bodies in our current historical moment—from natural to self-inflicted to state-sponsored—and a simultaneous deep reverence for the body’s capacity to nevertheless bear life. The poems in Surveille are born from encounters with sites of surveillance and political violence, like the militarized zones of the US/Mexico border wall, Creech Air Force Base, the Sonoran Desert, inside a Las Vegas casino, or outside a courthouse in Albuquerque where ICE agents apprehended undocumented people on their way to their scheduled court appearances. At its heart, Surveille confronts the various ways we watch and are watched—by ourselves, by others, and the state—and tracks a speaker with a subjectivity within the American empire who becomes pregnant by someone outside it, and the new life that sits at that fraught nexus. In his judge’s citation for the book, Amaud Jamaul Johnson writes,“Born between the twin flames of Brigit Pegeen Kelly and Mary Oliver, this book is both intimate and political…urgent and heart-piercing. This debut challenges us to stand witness.”  Surveille was published by the University of Wisconsin Press in November 2024.  

Jamie Rogers presented a paper at the Society for Cinema and Media Studies 2025 Conference in Chicago called “Archiving Space, Placing Race in RaMell Ross’ Hale County This Morning, This Evening and Garrett Bradley’s America.” 

Kate Trueblood’s essay, “Blank Spaces, Black Frames,” was selected as the winner of the 2025 Rico Prize for Nonfiction from Reed Magazine and will be published in its 158th edition in May.  Excerpted from Trueblood’s memoir The Big Ask, Blank Spaces, Black Frames,” is about her mother’s decision to voluntarily stop eating and drinking rather than enter assisted living during Covid 19. Reed Magazine recently posted a podcast with Trueblood on their website that addresses some of the issues caused by death denial in our culture: In the Reeds Podcast.  Reed Magazine is the oldest journal west of the Mississippi, named after James Reed of the Donner Party.  Trueblood will appear at the Chuckanut Writers Conference in June 2025, where she will offer sessions on “Time Travel” and “Fear of Writing the Erotic.” 

For more info: https://kathryntrueblood.com/ 

Cori Winrock‘s new book-length essay, Alterations, will be published as part of Transit Book’s Undelivered Lecture Series in July. Threading together stories of textiles and texts, from the first space suits and the seamstresses who made them, to Emily Dickinson’s famous white dress, to the Steinian rhythms of Goodnight Moon, Winrock constructs and reconstructs an essay in order to accommodate devastating loss. A work of process and possibility, Alterations enacts the hidden labors of mourning.

Christopher Wise and students in the Senegal Program 2025 were guests of honor at a televised “poetry slam” in Podor, a fishing village on the border of Senegal and Mauritania in the Sahara Desert. The event can be viewed here.  Wise also appeared in a documentary on the Malian writer Yambo Ouologuem, the controversial author of The Duty of Violence and Sufi mystic.  Senegalese filmmaker Kalidou Sy filmed the documentary, which was nominated for the Thomas Sakara Prize at FESPACO in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso. The documentary on Ouologuem can be viewed here.  Wise also published a memoir entitled Conjurations about his experiences researching West African Sufism (Sahel Nomad). Here is an excerpt from Kirkus Reviews about his new book: “[Wise’s] book offers poignant insights into the intersection of religion, ethnicity, and racism, from Oklahoma and Nazi Germany to West Africa and the Levant. It also doubles as an accessible introduction to Islamic Africa.” 

Jane Wong’s memoir Meet Me Tonight in Atlantic City (now in paperback) won the 2024 Washington State Book Award and won the 2024 Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Award in Creative Nonfiction. She is also the recipient of writing residency fellowships from the Carolyn Moore House and the Vermont Studio Center (the James Merrill Poetry Fellowship), both in 2025. Her poems and essays this year have appeared in or are forthcoming in Literary Hub, Terrain, Creature Conserve: Writing at the Intersection of Arts and Sciences, and others. She continued her book tour and read at numerous events this year, including for the University of Michigan’s Helen Zell Writers Series, Ohio State University’s Visiting Writer Series, All Island Reads, the Poetry Palooza Festival, and others. Wong is working on two new manuscripts—a new book of poems and a collection of short stories. As a poet and ceramicist, she is also collaborating with chef Sean Arakaki at Itsumono for a special event at the Frye Art Museum this summer.