Welcome to the blog for the Villanova English department! Visit often for updates on department events, guest speakers, faculty and student accomplishments, and reviews and musings from professors and undergraduates alike.

Saturday, February 17, 2018

Research Rookies Working With English Professor Jean Lutes

Thanks to the support of VURF and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences’ Dean’s Fund for Strategic Initiatives, Gia Beaton ’21 CLAS, Lucy Mileto ’21 CLAS and Jackie Solomon ’21 CLAS are enjoying their chance to assist Dr. Jean Lutes, associate professor of English, with what literary historians call a “recovery project.”

Dr. Lutes and her students are unearthing information about the life and work of Alice Dunbar-Nelson, an African American journalist, essayist and fiction writer whose work in the late 19th and early 20th century has been unjustly neglected by scholars.

“I’m introducing Gia, Lucy and Jackie to a fascinating writer whose work has received minimal attention—and as they learn about her, they are helping me introduce her work to others,” Dr. Lutes says. “They’re creating new knowledge along with me because we’re documenting unknown parts of Dunbar-Nelson’s literary career.”

In addition to conducting undergraduate research, students in the match program may participate in professional development seminars or present their research. For example, while Dr. Lutes will present at a conference in April 2018, Gia, Lucy and Jackie will be making a presentation of their own on Alice Dunbar-Nelson at Villanova University’s Undergraduate Research Symposium in September 2018. The first-year match program is a principal example of Villanova’s teacher-scholar model at work. When faculty welcome students as partners in their research, they engage in deep discovery that is truly collaborative.

“Working with first-year students gives me a chance to share my passion for my research as well as some of the of the nitty-gritty parts of the work I do—painstakingly comparing manuscript versions of a text to published versions, building a deep and nuanced understanding of what a literary text means and tracking down biographical details of an author's life to understand more about their vision and artistic choices,” says Dr. Lutes.

Lucy Mileto ’21 CLAS, Jackie Solomon ’21 CLAS and Gia Beaton ’21 CLAS