Hours
The English Advising Office is open Monday through Friday from 9:00 am - 5:00 pm.
Appointments
Please use this link to make an appointment with Dr. Lacey: https://unlincoln.force.com/SSH/0058W00000BUU9I.
Walk-in Hours
No appointment necessary
Zoom drop-in hours are Wednesdays from 1:00 pm - 3:00 pm and Fridays from 10:00 am - 12:00 pm.
To join, follow this link or copy & paste into your browser: https://unl.zoom.us/my/casadvising
Connect with us
Reminders
Thru Fri, Apr 21: All course withdrawals noted with grade of “W” on academic record.
Table of Contents
Happy Trans Day of Visibility!!!
Department of English Announcements and Events
- Robert E. Knoll Lecture: Jaime Lynn Harker
- Poetry Reading with Jamaica Baldwin, Jessica Poli, and Kimberly Reyes
- Jasmin Attia, author of ‘The Oud Player of Cairo’
- Poetry Reading with Kate Gaskin, Katie Henson, and Katie Marya
University Announcements and Events
- Just-In-Time Fair
- Women’s Center Poetry Café
- First Friday with Linda Rivera García
- Papel Picado Workshops with Linda Rivera García
- BARRED: Why the Innocent Can’t Get Out of Prison
- Trivia Night, sponsored by the LGBTQA+ and Women's Centers
- In Praise of Sophie Hatter, the Grumpy, Imperfect Childhood Heroine I Needed
- If Doctors Make the Worst Patients, Do Editors Make the Worst Authors?
- 9 Must-Reads for Lovers (and Haters) of The Last of Us
- Little House of Propaganda: Homesteading Myths and the Sentimentality of Self-Reliance
- 13 Adaptations Better Than the Books They’re Based On
- Films at the Ross
- Questlove to Direct Live-Action ‘Aristocats’ for Disney
- Kit Connor, Kate Winslet Among Winners of Royal Television Society Program Awards
- GLAAD Media Awards: ‘Bros,’ ‘A League of Their Own’ Take Top Prizes
- Box Office: ‘Dungeons and Dragons’ Rolls $5.6 Million in Previews
- Michaela Jaé Rodriguez Revolutionized Trans Visibility in Hollywood. Now She Wants to Kick Ass in an Action Movie
- Here’s What’s New on Netflix in April 2023
Happy Trans Day of Visibility!!!
Times have been tough for us trans folks (your lovely newsletter curator / editor is trans themself) and I think we should acknowledge that. However, I also think we should be able to celebrate!! Trans people are AWESOME!!! Here are some ways you can support trans people today:
1. Read more books by trans folks! Here are some authors I love:
- H. E. Edgmon
- Aiden Thomas
- Akwaeke Emezi
- Susan Stryker
2. Watch documentaries about trans people!
- Disclosure (2020) is my favorite!
- Also, you can also check out Daniel Radcliffe’s new web video about trans youth with The Trevor Project!
3. Add some new podcasts to your queue!
4. Learn more about the history of trans people across the world!
Transgender people have always existed. Across cultures, generations, traditions, and faiths, people have always challenged the gender binary — even though the term “transgender” wasn’t coined until the 1960s.
Take advantage of TDOV to better research the history of transgender people — from ancient times, to the Stonewall Riots, to the current changemakers paving the way for trans rights.
5. Donate to organizations in your community that support trans folks!
- OutNebraska is doing so much work at the capitol right now, fighting against all the anti-trans bills!! They also host community events and provide tons of resources!!
- The River City Gender Alliance provides peer support, friendship and understanding for transgender, gender non-conforming individuals and their families!
- Support the LGBTQA+ Center here on campus!! You can donate money to their scholarship funds, donate to the Lavender Closet that seeks to provide gender affirming clothing to all UNL students, and/or sign up as a volunteer!!
- (Or if you want to send some direct support, Venmo your trans friends some money so they can get themselves a lil treat to celebrate the day!)
Source: https://www.goodgoodgood.co/articles/how-to-celebrate-transgender-day-of-visibility
Alumni in the News
Creative Writing Program marks successes of faculty, students and alumni
By Deann Gayman | March 22, 2023
Faculty in the News
Homestead receives Women of Courage Award
March 6, 2023
https://www.unl.edu/english/news/homestead-receives-women-courage-award
Department of English Announcements and Events
Robert E. Knoll Lecture: Jaime Lynn Harker
Date: Mar. 31, 2023
Time: 3:00 pm–4:30 pm
Andrews Hall, Bailey Library
“Queer Contact Zones and the Creation of Queer Rural Space”
Jaime Harker is professor of English and the director of the Sarah Isom Center for Women and Gender Studies at the University of Mississippi, where she teaches American literature, LGBTQ literature, and gender studies. She has published essays on Japanese translation, popular women writers of the interwar period, Oprah’s book club, William Faulkner, Cold War gay literature, and women’s liberation and gay liberation literature. She is the author of America the Middlebrow: Women’s Novels, Progressivism, and Middlebrow Authorship Between the Wars and Middlebrow Queer: Christopher Isherwood in America, and the co-editor of The Oprah Affect: Critical Essays on Oprah’s Book Club, 1960s Gay Pulp Fiction: The Misplaced Heritage, This Book Is an Action: Feminist Print Culture and Activist Aesthetics, and Faulkner and Print Culture. Her third monograph, The Lesbian South: Southern Feminists, the Women in Print Movement, and the Queer Literary Canon, was released in the fall of 2018 by the University of North Carolina Press.
Poetry Reading with Jamaica Baldwin, Jessica Poli, and Kimberly Reyes
Date: Apr. 8, 2023
Time: 3:00 pm–5:00 pm
Larksong Writers Place
1600 N Cotner Blvd
Lincoln NE 68505
UNL English Ph.D. students Jamaica Baldwin, Jessica Poli, and Kimberly Reyes will read from their poetry.
https://www.unl.edu/english/creative-writing
Jasmin Attia, author of ‘The Oud Player of Cairo’
Date: Apr. 13, 2023
Time: 3:30 pm
Francie & Finch Bookshop
130 S. 13th St
Lincoln NE 68508
Author Jasmin Attia will be in conversation about her new novel, THE OUD PLAYER OF CAIRO, with UNL’s Joy Castro. THE OUD PLAYER OF CAIRO is the compelling story of a young Egyptian woman, Laila, who defies the restrictive traditional roles set for women in the mid-20th century. She follows the path inspired by her musician father, a much-beloved oud player, to become a singer and performer in her own right. Winner of the Nicholas Schaffner Award for Music in Literature, THE OUD PLAYER OF CAIRO is vibrantly descriptive and evocative of the waning colonial world in Egypt.
Jasmin Attia is a graduate of the MFA program at Bennington College. Her writing on Arab Feminist Writers appears in AWP’s The Writer’s Chronicle. She also holds a bachelor’s degree in Finance from the University of Florida and an MBA from the University of Rochester. Jasmin lives with her family in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, and came to writing as a second career. THE OUD PLAYER OF CAIRO is her debut novel.
Poetry Reading with Kate Gaskin, Katie Henson, and Katie Marya
Date: Apr. 15, 2023
Time: 3:00 pm–5:00 pm
Larksong Writers Place
1600 N Cotner Blvd
Lincoln NE 68505
UNL English alum Katie Henson and Ph.D. students Kate Gaskin and Katie Marya will read from their poetry.
https://www.unl.edu/english/creative-writing
University Announcements and Events
Just-In-Time Fair
Date: Apr. 3, 2023
Time: 2:00 pm–4:00 pm
Nebraska Union, Centennial Room
The Just-in-Time Fair is a new event that provides students an opportunity to find those last-minute summer internship and experiential opportunities. This event, open to students of all majors and degree levels, will allow them to connect with a variety of employers with open positions who want to connect in a casual, relaxed environment.
Women’s Center Poetry Café
Date: Apr. 6, 2023
Time: 5:30 pm–8:00 pm
Nebraska Union, The Crib
Live poetry performed by UNL students and community members with a concentration around gender equity, empowerment, or social justice.
All our welcome to perform original works or poetry by other artist with credit to the individual.
** Free event with no sign up RSVP and free refreshments **

First Friday with Linda Rivera García
Date: Apr. 7, 2023
Time: 5:00 pm–7:00 pm
Great Plains Art Museum
1155 Q St.
Lincoln NE 68508
The Great Plains Art Museum will hold a public celebration for the opening of the exhibition “Chicanisma” by 2023 Elizabeth Rubendall Artist in Residence Linda Rivera García.
Join the artist for the opening reception during Lincoln’s First Friday Artwalk on April 7, 5-7 p.m., with food and music.
Omaha-based artist Linda Rivera García is a Mexican-American Chicana artist, teacher, and storyteller who has been sharing her culture throughout Nebraska for decades. A graduate of Omaha’s College of Saint Mary and a retired children’s librarian, she is a multifaceted artist who works in painting, sculpture, printmaking, and with traditional Mexican art forms such as papel picado (cut paper) and repujado (metal embossing), among many others. A solo exhibition of Rivera García’s artwork will be on view at the museum from March 24 to September 22, 2023.
During her residency, Rivera García will create an artwork that will become part of the museum’s permanent collection. Visitors are encouraged to see the artist in action in the lower-level Elizabeth Rubendall Artist-in-Residence Studio & Education Lab from April-15 during the museum’s public hours. More information at: https://www.unl.edu/plains/gallery/artistinresidence.shtml
Also on view: “Water in a Dry Land” - January 24–July 8, 2023.
Papel Picado Workshops with Linda Rivera García
Date: Apr. 8, 2023
Time: 11:00 am–3:00 pm
Great Plains Art Museum
1155 Q St.
Lincoln NE 68508
Learn the art of papel picado (Mexican paper cutting) with artist Linda Rivera García! These in-person workshops are free and open to the public, but registration is required and limited to 20 participants per workshop.
11 a.m.–12 p.m.: Beginner’s workshop, intended for children ages 5 and up and families
2–3 p.m.: Advanced workshop, intended for ages 13 and up
To register, please fill out the form at https://www.unl.edu/plains/gallery/artistinresidence.shtml

BARRED: Why the Innocent Can’t Get Out of Prison
Date: Apr. 10, 2023
Time: 12:00 pm–1:00 pm
McCollum Hall, Room 109
Daniel Medwed, University Distinguished Professor of Law and Criminal Justice at Case Northeastern University, has spent more than twenty years in the field of criminal justice, serving as a public defender, as cofounder of a law school clinic that investigated post-conviction innocence claims, and now as a professor advocating for justice reform. He’s seen firsthand the deep-seated issues that plague the criminal process, namely how the system is complicit in putting innocent people behind bars. There are convictions that rest on dubious eyewitnesses. Possible police misconduct that goes uninvestigated. Subpar performance from overworked, even if well-meaning, defense attorneys. One would expect that wrongful convictions could be easily overturned by the courts, as long as evidence to prove a defendant’s innocence existed.
But in BARRED: Why the Innocent Can’t Get Out of Prison (Basic Books/Hachette Book Group; on-sale September 20, 2022), Medwed reveals how convoluted legal procedures—essentially technicalities—make exonerations nearly impossible. The rules surrounding litigation after conviction are extremely complex, with narrow guidelines on how much time a defendant has to submit notice of an appeal, which court to file in, and whether they will be allowed to present new evidence or to raise errors that occurred at the initial trial. Because of deferential attitudes toward lower courts, higher courts also tend to uphold convictions, even when there is compelling evidence of a miscarriage of justice.
One example in BARRED is the tragic story of Bobby Fennell, who spent sixteen years behind bars for a murder he didn’t commit. When Medwed and his team at Brooklyn Law School’s Second Look Program re-investigated the case, they were fully convinced of Bobby’s innocence. The prosecution’s argument had rested on a single unreliable eyewitness who admitted to receiving a deal in exchange for his testimony. Even more shocking—another man ultimately confessed to being the sole perpetrator. Yet because of the stringent rules around the appeals process and introducing new evidence, Medwed’s team had no legal recourse for getting another trial. Bobby’s plight is unfortunately far from unique.
This program has been approved for 1.0 continuing legal education credit in Nebraska.
https://go.unl.edu/innocencebarred
Trivia Night, sponsored by the LGBTQA+ and Women's Centers
Date: Apr. 11, 2023
Time: 6:30 pm–8:00 pm
Massengale Residential Center, Multipurpose Room
Join the LGBTQA+ Center and Women’s Center for a FREE trivia night! Test your knowledge on a wide variety of topics, grab some snacks, and enjoy connecting with others in an affirming environment.
Literary News
In Praise of Sophie Hatter, the Grumpy, Imperfect Childhood Heroine I Needed
Joelle Kidd on the Delightfully Subversive Howl's Moving Castle
By Joelle Kidd | March 27, 2023
https://lithub.com/in-praise-of-sophie-hatter-the-grumpy-imperfect-childhood-heroine-i-needed/
If Doctors Make the Worst Patients, Do Editors Make the Worst Authors?
Jenny Jackson, Editor-Turned-Debut-Author of Pineapple Street, Fears So
By Jenny Jackson | March 8, 2023
https://lithub.com/if-doctors-make-the-worst-patients-do-editors-make-the-worst-authors/
9 Must-Reads for Lovers (and Haters) of The Last of Us
From the Science of Fungi to the Collapse of Civilization, a Book For Everyone!
By Jonny Diamond | March 10, 2023
https://lithub.com/9-must-reads-for-lovers-and-haters-of-the-last-of-us/
Little House of Propaganda: Homesteading Myths and the Sentimentality of Self-Reliance
Alissa Quart on the Bootstrap Narratives of Laura Ingalls Wilder
By Alissa Quart | March 20, 2023
13 Adaptations Better Than the Books They’re Based On
By Emily Temple | March 23, 2023
https://lithub.com/13-adaptations-better-than-the-books-theyre-based-on/
Film News
Showing This Week at the Ross
PINBALL: THE MAN WHO SAVED THE GAME
Questlove to Direct Live-Action ‘Aristocats’ for Disney
By Mia Galuppo | March 27, 2023
Kit Connor, Kate Winslet Among Winners of Royal Television Society Program Awards
By Alex Ritman | March 29, 2023
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-news/rts-awards-2023-kate-winslet-kit-connor-1235362954/
GLAAD Media Awards: ‘Bros,’ ‘A League of Their Own’ Take Top Prizes
By Kirsten Chuba | March 30, 2023
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/general-news/glaad-media-awards-2023-winners-list-1235363453/
Box Office: ‘Dungeons and Dragons’ Rolls $5.6 Million in Previews
By Jordan Moreau | March 31, 2023
https://variety.com/2023/film/news/dungeons-and-dragons-box-office-previews-1235569148/
Michaela Jaé Rodriguez Revolutionized Trans Visibility in Hollywood. Now She Wants to Kick Ass in an Action Movie
By Angelique Jackson | March 31, 2023
https://variety.com/2023/tv/features/michaela-jae-rodriguez-pose-action-star-1235566009/
Here’s What’s New on Netflix in April 2023
Penny Marshall’s ”A League of Their Own,“ ”Firefly Lane“ and A24’s “Beef” are up to bat this month
By Dessi Gomez | March 31, 2023
https://www.thewrap.com/new-on-netflix-april-2023-movies-shows/
*Newsletter Editor Recommendations: “Matilda” (1996), “Smokey and the Bandit”, “Hatfields & McCoys: Season 1”, “How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days”