ENGLISH AND THEATRE COUNCIL

Faculty

SETS-Mark-Fortier

English
Theatre
Creative Writing
Mark
Fortier
CV: 
Position / Title: 

Professor

Phone: 
x 53246
Fax: 
519-766-0844
Building: 
MacKinnon
Room: 
410

    I am the author of Theory/Theatre: an Introduction (Routledge 1997, 2002) and The Culture of Equity in Early Modern England (Ashgate 2005); I am the co-editor of The True Law of

Education: 

B.A. (Honours) Windsor

M.A. Toronto

PhD York

LLB Toronto

Research: 

My two ongoing research projects are Equity in the Long Eighteenth Century and Narratives of the Lost and Found.

Publications: 
theorytheory EMEM
Viva!Viva!

 

SETS-Catherine-Bush

Creative Writing
Catherine
Bush
Position / Title: 

Associate Coordinator, Creative Writing MFA, University of Guelph at Guelph-Humber

Phone: 
please use email

SETS-Pablo -Ramirez

English
Pablo
Ramirez
Position / Title: 

Associate Professor

Phone: 
x 53262
Fax: 
519-766-0844
Building: 
MacKinnon
Room: 
434

 

SETS-Gregor- Campbell

English
Gregor
Campbell
Position / Title: 

Assistant Professor

Phone: 
x 53255
Fax: 
519-766-0844
Building: 
MacKinnon
Room: 
431

Profile

SETS-Judith-Thompson

Theatre
Creative Writing
Judith
Thompson
Position / Title: 

Professor

Phone: 
x 58750
Fax: 
519-766-0844
Building: 
Massey
Room: 
106

  Judith Thompson is a widely recognized playwright, director, screenwriter, actor and producer, with work that has been praised by critics throughout her career.

Publications: 

 

I am Yours

 

The Palace of the End

 

 

Awards: 

 

Judith Thompson and Her Excellency The Right Honourable Michaelle JeanJudith Thompson and Her Excellency The Right Honourable Michaelle Jean

 

SETS-Martha-Nandorfy

English
Martha
Nandorfy
Position / Title: 

Professor

Phone: 
x 52929
Fax: 
519-766-0844
Building: 
MacKinnon
Room: 
416

Martha Nandorfy is co-author (with Daniel Fischlin) of Eduardo Galeano: Through the Looking Glass, The Concise Guide to Global Human Rights

Publications: 

 

nandorfbook3nandorfbook3  martha2martha2

nandorf3nandorf3

 

 

 nandorfbook2nandorfbook2    

 

SETS-Sky-Gilbert

Theatre
Sky
Gilbert
Position / Title: 

Associate Professor, University Research Chair

Phone: 
x 53237
Email: 

sky@uoguelph.ca

Fax: 
519-824-0560
Building: 
Massey Hall
Room: 
108

Sky Gilbert is a teacher, writer, director, filmmaker, and he was co-founder and artistic director of Buddies in Bad Times Theatre (North America’s largest gay and lesbian theatre) f

Education: 

B.A. in Fine Arts York University

M.A. University of Toronto

Ph.D. University of Toronto

Research: 

20th century British Theatre

Shakespeare authorship

Male femininity and sexuality

Publications: 

PLAYS: (a very partial list....)

Dancing Queen, Hamilton Bus Stop, Crack, The Situationists,I Have AIDS!, Bad Acting Teachers
Rope Enough, The Emotionalists, Play Murder, Suzie Goo: Private Secretary, Lola Starr Builds her Dream Home, Drag Queens On TrialThe Dressing Gown

 

PLAY COLLECTIONS:
Avoidance Tactics
This Unknown Flesh
 

NOVELS:

Come Back
Brother Dumb
An English Gentleman
I am Kaspar Kotz
St. Stephens
Guilty

 

NOVELLA:
Wit in Love

 

POETRY:
The Mommiad, A Nice Place to Visit, Temptations of a Juvenile Delinquent, Digressions of a Naked Party Girl

 

MEMOIR
Ejaculations from the Charm Factory

 

BOOKS EDITED BY SKY GILBERT:
Perfectly Abnormal
Gay Monologues and Scenes

Awards: 

Pauline McGibbon Award

3 Dora Mavor Moore Awards: The Whore's Revenge, Suzie Goo: Private Secretary, The Situationists

The Margo Bindhardt Award

The Relit Award

The Silver Ticket Award

 

SETS-Dionne-Brand

English
Creative Writing
Dionne
Brand
Position / Title: 

Professor, University Research Chair

Phone: 
x 53263
Fax: 
519-766-0844
Building: 
MacKinnon
Room: 
435

    Dionne Brand is a renowned poet, novelist, and essayist.

Publications: 

 

 

Land to Light OnLand to Light On In Another Place, Not HereIn Another Place, Not Here  Map to the Door of No ReasonMap to the Door of No Reason  No Language is NeutralNo Language is Neutral
At the Full and Change of the MoonAt the Full and Change of the Moon What We All Long ForWhat We All Long For ThirstyThirsty InventoryInventory
       

 

SETS-Ajay-Heble

English
Ajay
Heble
Position / Title: 

Professor/Graduate Coordinator

Phone: 
x 53445
Fax: 
519-766-0844
Building: 
MacKinnon
Room: 
406

Ajay Heble is a Professor of English in the School of English and Theatre Studies at the University of Guelph.  He is the author or editor of several books including <

Research: 
Rebel MusicsRebel Musics The Other Side of NowhereThe Other Side of Nowhere Different WindowsDifferent Windows
Landing on the Wrong NoteLanding on the Wrong Note New Contexts for Canadian CriticismNew Contexts for Canadian Criticism The Tumble of ReasonThe Tumble of Reason

 

SETS-Daniel-Fischlin

English
Daniel
Fischlin
Position / Title: 
Phone: 
x 53267
Fax: 
519-766-0844
Building: 
MacKinnon
Room: 
439
Mailing Address: 

Daniel Fischlin

College of Arts / School of English and Theatre Studies

University of Guelph

Guelph, ONTARIO

N1G 2W1 CANADA


 

An early modern literary and music scholar, Dr. Fischlin has made impressive contributions to both fields, as well as having written a number of books on rights issues.

Research: 

Some comments on Professor Fischlin’s books and essays …

The Fierce Urgency of Now: Improvisation, Rights, and the Ethics of Co-Creation

Tricia Rose, Professor, Brown University, and author of The Hip Hop Wars: What We Talk About When We Talk About Hip Hop—and Why It Matters

"The Fierce Urgency of Now is a groundbreaking and, in many instances, breathtaking book. Its focus on the ways that musicians from many backgrounds and genres think about and enact improvisation as linked to issues of human rights, community, and freedom is innovative; and the argument that human rights are expanded and valuably reconceptualized by improvisational practices is even more inventive and generative. This book should be read by scholars and students working on social justice and the political, social, and visionary importance of expressive cultures all over the world." 

• The Community of Rights / The Rights of Community

Roger Clark (former Secretary General, Amnesty International)

“Those of us who have been engaged in human rights work for many years should pay close attention to this excellent book. It challenges the ways in which we have become accustomed to thinking about rights. It also provides a framework for a radically new approach to the concept of rights in the local & global environments of which we humans are but one element among many. The book is a major contribution to a new discourse on the notion of rights in relation to community. It describes the ecology of rights that are fundamental to the living, complex organisms of authentic community existence. It is also about survival in the world of today & tomorrow.”

Vandana Shiva (Author of Earth Democracy and Soil Not Oil, 1993 winner of the Right Livelihood Award)

“Divide and rule has been the strategy for domination. And humans have been divided and separated both from the earth community and our local, living communities that sustain us, in order to privatise and enclose the earth and her resources. Reclaiming our community identity is vital to reclaiming the commons. And reclaiming the commons is central to Earth Democracy. This important book on the recovery of community rights shows how we lost our collective freedoms and how we can reclaim them.”

Upendra Baxi (Author of The Future of Human Rights and Human Rights In A Posthuman World: Critical Essays and former Vice-Chancellor at the University of Delhi)

“Stunning.”

Jeremy Webber (Canada Research Chair in Law and Society and Author of Reimagining Canada: Language, Culture, Community, and the Canadian Constitution)

“If you are concerned with the limits that afflict discussions of rights, if you believe that rights are about the quality of our communities, and if you think that communities need to be tested and nurtured in order to foster encounter, openness to difference, and environmental sustainability, then this is the book for you. It is a book to be read, pondered, engaged with, and treasured.”


• Shakespeare in Canada: “a world elsewhere”

Ian Munro (Review / Comptes rendus in Renaissance and Reformation / Renaissance et Réforme)

“ … Section Four, “Reimagining Shakespeare,” […] features a series of articles that display a complex theorization of Canadian issues. The highlight here (perhaps of the whole volume) is Daniel Fischlin’s essay, which explores how Canadian theatrical adaptations of Shakespeare puncture the reductive idea of nation as imagined community.”


• The Work of Opera: Genre, Nationhood, and Sexual Difference

Terry Castle (Author of Noel Coward & Radclyffe Hall: Kindred Spirits)

“Taking as its focus the relation between opera and nationalism, art and the state, Richard Dellamora and Daniel Fischlin’s The Work of Opera manages to be state of the art: a scintillating collective exploration, by some of the premier opera writers of the day, of opera’s mercurial role in political life past and present. The essays are by turns elegant, entertaining, and intellectually bracing: ardent in both their commitment to and critique of the most seductive of art forms”

Philip Brett (Compiler of Benjamin Britten: Peter Grimes and co-editor of Queering the Pitch and Cruising the Performative)

“The commerce between ‘new musicology,’ literary criticism, and feminist and queer theory is producing a new kind of opera criticism. Ranging in topic from Jesuit manifesto ‘musicals’ of the seventeenth century to Jarman’s ‘operatic’ film of Britten’s War Requiem, this extensive collection offers as sumptuously queer a view of opera and its involvement with nationality and sexuality as could be imagined.”

Wendy Bashant (Dean of New Students at the New College of Florida; author of the essay, “Singing in Greek Drag: Gluck, Berlioz, and George Eliot”)

“These essays move swiftly, expanding our sense of the sexual (and the operatic) beyond gender, showing how the political and aesthetic are conjoined not just in body but in social communities and nationhood. This superb collection erases as many boundaries as it scrutinizes: it will please musicologists, literary and cultural critics, opera aficionados, gay, lesbian, and straight.”


• Royal Subjects: Essays on the Writings of James VI and I

Jenny Wormald (Honorary Fellow in Scottish History at the University of Edinburgh; author of Mary Queen of Scots: a Study in Failure and editor and contributor to The Oxford Illustrated History of Scotland; professor Oxford University)

“This is an absolutely splendid book. For far too long, the amazing literary output of James VI and I has been regarded, at best, as interesting for its political theory and views on kingship; at worst, as worth noting not for its intrinsic value but because a king put pen to paper. Fischlin and Fortier have put together a collection which at last does its subject justice, and are to be congratulated on doing so.”


• Rebel Musics: Human Rights, Resistant Sounds, and the Politics of Music Making

Howard Zinn (Author of A People’s History of the United States)

“A rich collection of ideas and information about music that inspires, delights, and educates at the same time. It is especially welcome at a time when people doing music are called upon by world events to walk out of the stage and do the unexpected.”

Ingrid Monson (Quincy Jones Professor of African American Music at Harvard University)

“A complex and thought-provoking set of essays, which address politics, human rights, and resistance in music of a global scale. Not content with naïve understandings of politics and activism, Rebel Musics encourages us to dig deeply and confront the contradictions, power imbalances, and ethical questions constantly circulating through sound and social practice. Read this!”

Chris Gibson (Professor at the University of New South Wales)

“An important new collection, Fischlin and Heble’s Rebel Musics for the first time brings together the fields of politics, popular music, and human rights. Diverse and challenging, celebratory but refreshingly realistic, I strongly recommend Rebel Musics to all those interested in music and its political possibilities.”


• The Concise Guide to Global Human Rights

Roger Clark (Former Secretary General, Amnesty International)

“In a world facing the growing challenges of globalized apartheid and pandemic poverty, human rights will determine the future of every one of us and our sustainability as a species. This book allows us to reclaim our hope in that future.”

Micheline Ishay (Author of The History of Human Rights; Professor and Director of the International Human Rights Program, University of Denver)

The Concise Guide to Global and Human Rights is an excellent road map for navigating the labryinthian challenges posed by globalization. It should be used by human rights activists and students alike.”

Upendra Baxi (Author of The Future of Human Rights and Human Rights In A Posthuman World: Critical Essays and former Vice-Chancellor at the University of Delhi)

“This concise guide to global human rights…reminds us, with Mahatma Ghandi, that only the power of emotional intelligence embodied in heroic…resistance may help transform the law from being the convenience of the powerful into a platform and portal for collective human action for global justice…This eloquent call for the future of human rights and a just world order is a must read.”


• The Other Side of Nowhere: Jazz, Improvisation, and Communities in Dialogue

Alan Rice (Review in Journal of American Studies)

"Academic theorizing about jazz has traditionally lagged far behind the inspired playing of it with the field of jazz writing dominated by magazine journalists and social commentators. This has often been a relief, making the literature of jazz unburdened by the obfusacatory language and petty point-scoring of the academic establishment. Since 1990 some excellent jazz academicians have emerged such as Krin Gabbard, Graham Lock, Ingrid Monson, Nathaniel Mackey, Paul Berliner, and George E. Lewis, who incorporate the best of the jazz writing tradition whilst riffing a new discourse using the resources of cultural theory. Some of them are represented here in this excellent comprehensive collection of writings about the politics and aesthetics of improvisation."

Graham Lock (Author of Blutopia and Forces in Motion)

“This is an impressively wide-ranging collection that is sure to engage and provoke. Fischlin and Heble have elicited valuable insights about improvisation and its complex relationship with the histories of race, gender, and class.”

David Borgo (Assistant Professor of Music at the University of California at San Diego)

“An important and wide-ranging contribution to the growing fields of improvisation studies and cultural theory, it provides a fascinating array of contributions from musicians, artists, scholars, critics, and promoters.”

Georgina Born (Editor of Western Music and Its Others)

“This innovative and exciting collection, addressing free jazz from a range of interdisciplinary perspectives, will consolidate the emerging field of improvisation studies.”


• Eduardo Galeano: Through the Looking Glass

Enrique Dussel (Author of The Invention of the Americas and Ethics and Community)

“Traces a magnificent path through the immense and difficult work of Galeano. Especially insightful is the exploration of how the great journalist is transformed into a poet, how the militant activist in search of justice transmutes into an artist.”

Elena Poniatowska (Author of Here’s to You, Jesua!, Massacre in Tlatelolco, and El Nino: Children of the Secrets)

“Thrown like darts at the brain and heart of the reader, Eduardo Galeano’s texts reveal one of the most important and ethically-challenging voices to come out of Latin America, here engaged by Fischlin and Nandorfy in a critical work of the first order.”

Ronald Wright (Author of Stolen Continents and Time Among the Maya)

“Skillfully guides us into the cultural world of one of the finest and most daring writers of our time, known equally for artistic brilliance, intellectual rigour, and a sharp wisdom forged in the fires of history.”

Barbara Harlow (Author of Resistance Literature and After Lives: Legacies of Revolutionary Writing; the Louann and Larry Temple Centennial Professor of English Literatures at the University of Texas, Austin)

“Neither straightforward biography nor ordinary literary criticism, Galeano’s monumental oeuvre is well-matched by the equally momentous analyses of Fischlin and Nandorfy in this provocative study of rights, story, and memory.”


• In Small Proportions: A Poetics of the English Ayre 1596-1622

John Hollander (Sterling Professor of English, Yale University)

“This most impressive book is the first systematic study of the English solo song in which musicological and rhetorical concerns are related through the more legitimate concerns of contemporary literary theory. Even more uniquely, concrete matters of performance and even iconography, as well as the most sophisticated readings of the song texts as constructed in their setting, exchange with these theoretical questions both intellectual energy and substantive support. Focused on a small body of verse and music, Professor Fischlin has made a splendid contribution to critical discourse generally, and particularly to a realm of theory which for some decades has slighted, if not suppressed, the matter of voice, whether speaking or singing.”

Lawrence Kramer (Professor of English and Music at Fordham University)

“Daniel Fischlin’s study of English ayre is a remarkable combination of old-fashioned depth of learning and up-to-date conceptual refinement. Fischlin rethinks both the literary genre and the social function of the ayre and shows how each bears on the other in complex ways. The results shed much new light on early modern constructions of subjectivity on the cusp between private and public identity. The book will be indispensable, not only to students of the English lyric, but also to anyone who wants to perform or hear the musical settings of the ayres with real understanding.”


• Adaptations of Shakespeare: A Critical Anthology of Plays from the Seventeenth Century to the Present

Peter Holland (Director-Designate of the Shakespeare Institute in Stratford-upon-Avon)

“This excellent anthology charts…refusals to accept that Shakespeare had the last word on his plots. With lively introductions and a broad scope, Adaptations of Shakespeare reminds us of so many playwrights’ demands that we look at Shakespeare afresh.”

Susan Bennet (Professor at the University of Calgary)

Adaptations of Shakespeare brings together a wonderfully rich collection of plays that demonstrate the plurality of cultural traditions and performance practices in which ‘Shakespeare’ has been put to use. An important new resource for students and scholars interested in Shakespeare’s drama and its afterlives.”

Nigel Wheale (Professor at Anglia Polytechnic University; Author of The Postmodern Arts: An Introductory Reader and Writing and Society: Literacy, Print and Politics in Britain1590-1660)

“An original, generous and extremely helpful anthology.” 


 

Publications: 
   
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