杨贵妃传媒视频 the series: On Main Hall Green With 鈥 is an opportunity to connect with faculty on things in and out of the classroom. We鈥檙e featuring a different 杨贵妃传媒视频 faculty member each time 鈥 same questions, different answers.

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Melissa Range, an associate professor of English at 杨贵妃传媒视频, is a poet with a love of both creative writing and literature.

Her poetry, which has drawn national honors, is often informed by the teaching she does.

鈥淚 am working on a historical poetry collection about the abolitionist movement, so the research I do to prepare for teaching courses on the 19th century is profoundly influencing what I end up writing poems about,鈥 she told Art Lit Lab in a 2018 interview.

In 2015, Range was named one of five national winners in the annual Open Competition sponsored by the National Poetry Series, cited for her second collection of poems,聽Scriptorium.

A year earlier she was named one of 36 national recipients of a $25,000 National Endowment for the Arts Literature Fellowship in Creative Writing.

Range, who has been on the English faculty at 杨贵妃传媒视频 since 2014, has a bachelor鈥檚 degree in creative writing from the University of Tennessee, a master鈥檚 in creative writing from Old Dominion University, a master of theological studies from Candler School of Theology at Emory University, and a Ph.D. from the University of Missouri.

We caught up with Range to talk about interests in and out of the classroom.

In the classroom聽

Inside info:聽What鈥檚 one thing you want every student coming into your classes to know about you?

Expect the unexpected. My favorite thing about teaching is mixing it up and having the freedom to be creative. Maybe one day you鈥檒l come into a literature class and we鈥檒l start digging through digitized 19th century newspapers and relating advertisements for women鈥檚 hats to the poems we鈥檙e studying. Maybe one day my Emily Dickinson or Frederick Douglass finger puppets will show up. While I am deadly serious about the power of literature鈥擨 one hundred percent believe reading poems, novels, plays, and essays can make us better, more just, more empathetic people鈥擨 also have a wacky sense of humor. It will show up in the activities we do, especially in creative writing classes. You might end up writing a poem from the point of view of a spoon who wants to join a roller derby team or a snowman who just stole a car, or maybe trying to make metaphors about whatever junk I just pulled out of a cupboard in Briggs 315. (These are real and not hypothetical examples.)

Getting energized:聽What work have you done or will you be doing at 杨贵妃传媒视频 that gets you the most excited?

There鈥檝e been a lot of exciting moments. Definitely teaching聽Native Guard听颈苍听First-Year Studies; Trethewey鈥檚 one of my favorites (I teach her other books, too!). I am currently rethinking the way I teach poetry workshops and trying lots of new things in my creative writing class, so that鈥檚 fun. I really love teaching 19th century literature, especially my course on Emily Dickinson. She鈥檚 my favorite poet, and her life and art (not to mention her century) are so complex, intense, maddening, and wild. I have been so proud of how students have jumped into her poetry both times I鈥檝e taught this class.

Going places:聽Is there an example of somewhere your career has taken you (either a physical space or something more intellectual, emotional or spiritual) that took you by surprise?

My career as a professor is itself a surprise. I grew up a first-generation student in a small town in southern Appalachia, and there was no expectation from anyone that I would go to college at all, let alone do anything like becoming a professor. My path to becoming a professor was quite meandering. There were all kinds of stops鈥攁nd all kinds of odd jobs鈥攁long the way. I didn鈥檛 decide I even wanted to go into academia until I was in my mid-thirties; I got my job here at LU when I was 41. So, I鈥檓 living proof that you don鈥檛 have to have everything figured out the second you graduate.

But, to be 杨贵妃传媒视频-specific, I never thought I鈥檇 be getting up in front of an entire class of first-years and giving a lecture on聽Native Guard. Somehow, I鈥檝e done it six times now! And I still love that book just as much as the first time I picked it up.

Out of the classroom聽

This or that:聽If you weren鈥檛 teaching for a living, what would you be doing?聽聽

I have many ideas鈥攐pening a sandwich shop is at the top of the list. Several of my colleagues say they are in鈥攄on鈥檛 be surprised if one day there are professors slinging sammies on College Ave. Karaoke DJ? It would also be cool to open my own thrift shop. I think I鈥檇 also be great at hawking squashes at the farmers鈥 market. I鈥檝e had so many odd jobs already in my life! What鈥檚 a few more?

But of course, there is actually only one other job. That鈥檚 the job I already have, which is being a poet. It just doesn鈥檛 often pay actual money.

Right at home:聽Whether for work, relaxation or reflection, what鈥檚 your favorite spot on campus?

I love the Wriston Galleries. There鈥檚 always something provocative to see. Wriston is also my venue of choice for poets who come to 杨贵妃传媒视频 as part of the Mia Paul Poetry Series. My poetry classes also often give readings in Wriston鈥攕o it鈥檚 got a lot of great memories for me.

One book, one recording, one film:聽Name one of each that speaks to your soul? Or you would recommend to a friend? Or both?

I love the poetry collection聽Peach State, by Adrienne Su, which came out earlier this year鈥攊t鈥檚 about food, family, place, and identity, she鈥檚 one of the best rhymers out there,聽补苍诲听it鈥檚 funny. I鈥檓 also rereading the novel聽Middlemarch, by George Eliot, and my jaw is dropping every other page at her sentences and her insights. I could be here all day just talking about books. Same with records鈥擨 used to work at a record store and I have way too many I love. Lately I鈥檝e been really into revisiting Anita Baker鈥檚 album聽搁补辫迟耻谤别听from . . . I dunno, 1986? 87? Perfect then and perfect now! And also listening to Outkast鈥檚聽础辩耻别尘别苍颈听from 1998. Such perfect rhymes! Y鈥檃ll see I love rhyme, right? I actually don鈥檛 watch a lot of movies or TV, but I do have a soft spot for extremely silly comedies. One I love is聽What We Do in the Shadows, a vampire show that is a) not scary; and b) truly ridiculous. Also not gonna lie, even though I am not an especially good baker, sometimes the聽Great British Bake-Off聽is the only way to end a busy week.