Hours
The English Advising Office is open Monday through Friday from 9:00 am - 5:00 pm.
Appointments
Please go to Canvas (under Account--> Settings--> MyPlan--> My Success Network--> Kathleen Lacey). The schedule tab will allow you to see what times are available for individual appointments. You can also search for Kathleen Lacey in the MyPLAN Directory. You are also welcome to call 402-472-3871 to schedule an appointment.
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
Wed, Nov 23 thru Fri, Nov 25: NO CLASS. THANKSGIVING BREAK.
Mon, Dec 5-Fri, Dec 9: Last week of classes.
Mon, Dec 12-Fri, Dec 16: Finals week.
Sat, Dec 17: GRADUATION!
Table of Contents
- 'The Bell Affair' named creative work of the year
- New initiative will make Cather’s manuscripts available online
University Announcements and Events
- Fall Blood Drive
- Indigenous Time Management
- Book talk with Jane Olson
- Day With(out) Art 2022: “BEING & BELONGING”
- tenThing Brass Ensemble
- First Friday at Sheldon Museum of Art
- Karaoke Night in The Crib
Stay Woke: Readings in Social Justice
- A Brief History of the Attempts to Unionize Walmart
- Disability Pride: Representation is Only the First Step
- A Brief History of Shipwrecks in Literature
- Meet the 2022 National Book Award Finalists
- Moral Panics Never Go Out of Style: On the Corrosive Effects of the Culture Wars
- Life Advice for Book Lovers: Dealing with Financial Anxiety in Friendships
- How medieval poets wrote about sex (organs)
- Films at the Ross
- Timothée Chalamet and Taylor Russell Will Eat You Alive: How ‘Bones and All’ Became the Year’s Sexiest Cannibal Love Story
- Is J.K. Rowling’s ‘Fantastic Beasts’ Franchise Dead at Warner Bros?
- In Sebastián Leilo’s Adaptation of The Wonder, Stories Can Kill
- Finding a Hero in Wednesday Addams as a Closeted and Neurodivergent Tween
- The Making of ‘She Said’: “We All Felt We Didn’t Want to Give Harvey Any More Airtime”
Faculty in the News
'The Bell Affair' named creative work of the year
By CAS MarComm | November 16, 2022
https://www.unl.edu/english/news/bell-affair-named-creative-work-year
New initiative will make Cather’s manuscripts available online
By Deann Gayman | November 18, 2022
University Announcements and Events
Fall Blood Drive
Date: Nov. 29-30, 2022
Time: 10:00 am–4:00 pm
Harper Dining Center, Conference Room
Due to increased natural disasters, blood donations are in great need. All blood types are needed.
Faculty, staff, students from UNL can schedule their donation time at http://redcrossblood.org. Type the zip code “68588” into the search function to locate this drive.
People 17 years of age (16 with parental permission in some states), who weigh at least 110 pounds and are in generally good health may be eligible to donate blood. People who donated during the Homecoming Blood Drive should be eligible to donate.
A blood donor card or driver’s license, or two other forms of identification are required at check-in.
The Red Cross also has a blood donation app that allows you to fill out your Rapid Pass Questions before arrival to help speed up the donation process.
Indigenous Time Management
Date: Nov. 29, 2022
Time: 1:00 pm–2:00 pm
Virtual
You are warmly invited to join Yakama scholar Dr. Michelle M. Jacob as she brings her kind, fierce, and creative approach to academic time management in this webinar! Michelle lovingly engages her Indigenous cultural teachings to lead you through a fun process inviting your deep engagement with three learning outcomes:
1. Comparing different models and philosophies of time management;
2. Inquiring which time management models best nurture and support you in diverse activities and seasons of your life;
3. Considering which communities, beings, places, and activities help you clarify and advance your vision.
To accomplish these fabulous outcomes, Dr. Jacob shares lessons from Yakama storytelling traditions, including:
a) Learning how to be “Smart as a Log”;
b) Engaging the distinction between being “in time” vs. “on time”;
c) Celebrating failure as a generous teacher.
Your participation in this webinar will be a fabulous opportunity to consider and learn from Indigenous teaching and learning methods. Everyone who lives, works, and studies in Indigenous homelands will carry a lesson they can use in their wonderful lives. Centering Indigenous teachings is an important part of justice-based education practice.
This event is offered through the National Center for Faculty Development and Diversity and is open to all UNL graduate assistants, faculty, and staff. Please use your unl.edu email address when registering.
https://www.facultydiversity.org/webinars/indigenoustimemanagement
Book talk with Jane Olson
Date: Nov. 29, 2022
Time: 5:30 pm
International Quilt Study Center & Museum
Jane Olson is a 1964 graduate of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln College of Journalism and Mass Communications and former chair of the Human Rights Watch Board of Directors. She will discuss her new book, “World Citizen: Journeys of a Humanitarian,” from 5:30-6:30 p.m. on Nov. 29, at the International Quilt Museum. Refreshments will follow the discussion. To register to attend please visit https://go.unl.edu/worldcitizen.
https://journalism.unl.edu/book-talk-jane-olson
Day With(out) Art 2022: “BEING & BELONGING”
Sheldon Museum of Art is proud to partner with Visual AIDS (www.visualaids.org) for Day With(out) Art 2022 by presenting “Being & Belonging,” a program of seven short videos highlighting under-told stories of HIV and AIDS from the perspective of artists living with HIV across the world.
The program features newly commissioned work by Camila Arce (Argentina), Davina “Dee” Conner and Karin Hayes (USA), Jaewon Kim (South Korea), Clifford Prince King (USA), Santiago Lemus and Camilo Acosta Huntertexas (Colombia), Mikiki (Canada), and Jhoel Zempoalteca and La Jerry (México).
From navigating sex and intimacy to confronting stigma and isolation, “Being & Belonging” centers the emotional realities of living with HIV today. How does living with HIV shift the ways that a person experiences, asks for, or provides love, support, and belonging? The seven videos are a call for belonging from those that have been stigmatized within their communities or left out of mainstream HIV/AIDS narratives.
The free, hour-long, looped program will be presented in Sheldon’s Ethel S. Abbott Auditorium during open hours December 1 (10 am-4 pm) and December 2 (10 am-7 pm). Information and resources from the Nebraska AIDS Project, University Health Center, and the LGBTQA+ Center will also be available.
Visual AIDS is a New York-based non-profit that utilizes art to fight AIDS by provoking dialogue, supporting HIV+ artists, and preserving a legacy, because AIDS is not over.
tenThing Brass Ensemble
Date: Dec. 1, 2022
Time: 7:30 pm
Lied Center for Performing Arts
Celebrating the holiday season, Norwegian brass ensemble tenThing presents a Christmas musical journey through Europe and America from the beautiful fjords of Norway through 18thcentury Germany, warm Italian Christmas, evergreen England, and the sounds of Ukrainian folk and Czech fairy tales. The program celebrates musical traditions of the Christmas season with fantastic new arrangements featuring 10 female virtuoso musicians.
First Friday at Sheldon Museum of Art
Date: Dec. 2, 2022
Time: 4:00 pm–7:00 pm
Sheldon Museum of Art
Start your weekend off with First Friday at Sheldon. This month we’re doing printmaking! Get creative and make your own print inspired by the landscape paintings on view in “Sheldon Treasures.” The museum is open until 7 p.m.
Admission is free.
Karaoke Night in The Crib
Date: Dec. 2, 2022
Time: 7:00 pm
Nebraska Union, The Crib
Back by popular demand…a free karaoke for UNL students, presented by SLICE. Take the stage and show off your vocal talents for other Huskers with a rendition of a favorite song. Even if you don’t sing, you can join the audience to enjoy the beautiful musical styling of your friends and classmates.
Every previous CNL Karaoke Night has uncovered remarkable voices and sounds hiding-in-plain-sight on our campus.
FREE for UNL students with Event Pass.
Snacks/refreshments will be served (while supply lasts).
Stay Woke: Readings in Social Justice
A Brief History of the Attempts to Unionize Walmart
Rick Wartzman on the Behemoth’s Antipathy Toward Organized Labor
By Rick Wartzman | November 16, 2022
https://lithub.com/a-brief-history-of-the-attempts-to-unionize-walmart/
Disability Pride: Representation is Only the First Step
Ben Mattlin on Disability Rights Activists’ Ongoing Fight for Dignity
By Ben Mattlin | November 18, 2022
https://lithub.com/disability-pride-representation-is-only-the-first-step/
Literary News
A Brief History of Shipwrecks in Literature
Alan G. Jamieson on Why Lost Ships Are So Compelling to Writers
By Alan G. Jamieson | November 11, 2022
https://lithub.com/a-brief-history-of-shipwrecks-in-literature/
Meet the 2022 National Book Award Finalists
Rapid-Fire Interviews with Some of Our Best Writers and Translators
By Emily Temple | November 9, 2022
https://lithub.com/meet-the-2022-national-book-award-finalists
Moral Panics Never Go Out of Style: On the Corrosive Effects of the Culture Wars
Arlene Stein Considers the Racism and Homophobia at the Heart of Conservative Activism
By Arlene Stein | November 16, 2022
https://lithub.com/moral-panics-never-go-out-of-style-on-the-corrosive-effects-of-the-culture-wars/
Life Advice for Book Lovers: Dealing with Financial Anxiety in Friendships
Book Recommendations for the Troubled Soul
By Dorothea | November 17, 2022
https://lithub.com/life-advice-for-book-lovers-dealing-with-financial-anxiety-in-friendships/
How medieval poets wrote about sex (organs)
A tourney for a penis and... unappreciated vulvas
By Katherine Harvey | November 17, 2022
https://lithub.com/a-plethora-of-penises-how-people-wrote-about-sex-in-the-middle-ages/
Film News
Showing This Week at the Ross
Timothée Chalamet and Taylor Russell Will Eat You Alive: How ‘Bones and All’ Became the Year’s Sexiest Cannibal Love Story
By Nick Vivarelli | November 16, 2022
Editor's note: Contrary to the headline's implication, unfortunately, Bones and All is the only "Sex[y] Cannibal Love Story" from this year that will be on the big screen.
Is J.K. Rowling’s ‘Fantastic Beasts’ Franchise Dead at Warner Bros?
By Rebecca Rubin | November 16, 2022
In Sebastián Leilo’s Adaptation of The Wonder, Stories Can Kill
Florence Pugh Carries the New Film Based on Emma Donoghue’s Novel
By Michelle Nijhuis | November 18, 2022
https://lithub.com/in-sebastian-leilos-adaptation-of-the-wonder-stories-can-kill/
Finding a Hero in Wednesday Addams as a Closeted and Neurodivergent Tween
Aisling Walsh Celebrates the Return of the Iconic Outcast
By Aisling Walsh | November 18, 2022
https://lithub.com/finding-a-hero-in-wednesday-addams-as-a-closeted-and-neurodivergent-tween/
The Making of ‘She Said’: “We All Felt We Didn’t Want to Give Harvey Any More Airtime”
By Seija Rankin | November 18, 2022