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English department faculty
Olivia
Archibald
Professor, English
Room #211
360-438-4357
oarchibald@stmartin.edu |
| B.A. and M.A., Marshall
University; Ph.D., University of Iowa Archibald's academic
interests include creative nonfiction, essay theory, composition
theory, early medieval literature, and literary criticism.
Prior to coming to Saint Martin's University, she taught
creative and expository writing, literature and literary theory,
and several interdisciplinary programs at The Evergreen State
College and Clarke College, Dubuque, Iowa. |
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Leslie G.
Bailey
Professor, English
Room #347
360-438-4341
lbailey@stmartin.edu |
| B.A., Saint Martin's College;
M.A., Baylor University; Ph.D., Indiana University The
scholarly interests of Bailey, who chairs the University's
English department, include Alfred, Lord Tennyson and 19th
century British poetry and fiction. During his doctoral studies
at Indiana University, he was review editor for "Victorian
Studies," a scholarly journal. |
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Jeff Birkenstein
Assistant professor, English
Room #367
360-486-8846
jbirkenstein@stmartin.edu |
| B.A., U.C.L.A.; M.A., English,
Cal State Long Beach; M.A. Teaching English as a Second
Language, University of Kentucky; Ph.D., English, ibid. Birkenstein
teaches and writes on a wide range of topics concerning American
Literature and Culture, as well as the international short
story, short story sequence, and food and fiction. |
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Father Kilian J. Malvey, O.S.B.
Professor, religious studies/English
Room #361
360-438-4342
fr_kilian@stmartin.edu |
| B.A., Saint Martin's College;
Heythrop College, University of London; M.A., Marquette
University; D.Min., University of California, Berkeley; M.T.S.,
Boston Theological Institute Father Kilian chairs the
University's religious studies department and he is the founder
of the Spiritual Life Institute, a summer program that has
played host to renowned theologians, religious scholars, and
advocates for social justice for the last twenty-five years. His
scholarly interests include the Hebrew Scriptures,
transcendentalist writers of mid-19th century America and
American Southern writers of short fiction. He has studied at a
number of Jesuit universities in this country and in England. |
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Nathalie
Kuroiwa-Lewis
Assistant professor, English
Room #364
360-438-4351
NKuroiwaLewis@stmartin.edu |
| B.A., College of
St. Scholastica; M.A., SUNY at Albany; M.A., St. Cloud State
University; Ph.D., University of Arizona Nathalie
Kuroiwa-Lewis enjoys teaching composition, journalism, ESL, and
literature. Her research interests include Burkean studies,
dramatism, classical and contemporary rhetoric, rhetoric of
fiction, rhetoric of the media, journalism, political rhetoric,
literary theory and American, British, and world literature. She
has taught in Japan, the Czech Republic and the United States.
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Gloria Martin
Professor, English
Room #214
360-438-4533
gmartin@stmartin.edu |
| B.S., Edinboro State College;
M.A., Purdue University; Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, Madison
Before coming to Saint Martin's, Martin taught composition and
literature at Purdue University, Iowa State University, the
University of Wisconsin and Pacific Lutheran University, where
she also directed the writing center. At Saint Martin's, she
directs the writing center and advises the University's Letters
and Arts Club. Her academic interests include composition, 19th
century American poetry and fiction, modern American poetry and
fiction and modern American literature, particularly
contemporary work by ethnic writers such as Leslie Siko, Toni
Morrison and Sandra Cisneros. |
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Stephen
X. Mead
Professor, English
Room #369
360-438-4336
smead@stmartin.edu |
| B.A., S.U.N.Y., Purchase;
M.A., English, Indiana University; M.A., creative writing,
ibid.; Ph.D., ibid. Mead has presented and published several
papers on Shakespeare and Renaissance drama. His other interests
include anthropology and drama, epic, film and poetry. |
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Jamie Olson
Assistant professor, English
Room #352
360-438-4302
jolson@stmartin.edu |
| B.A., The College of Saint
Scholastica, 2002; M.A., University of Michigan, 2004; Ph.D,
ibid., 2008. Jamie Olson’s teaching and research interests
include international modernism, 20th- and 21st-century poetry,
textual studies, Irish literature, Caribbean literature, and
Russian literature – especially poetry and fiction written by
Russian émigré authors who lived (or still live) in the U.S. He
also translates contemporary Russian poetry into English. |
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