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TCU Presents: A Public Talk with Professor Martha J. Cutter – Visual Representations of Slavery in the Past and the Present

Monday Apr 2 | 4:00 pm - 5:00 pm

MARTHA J. CUTTER is a professor of English and Africana studies at the University of Connecticut.
She is the author of Lost and Found in Translation: Contemporary Ethnic American Writing and the Politics of Language Diversity and Unruly Tongue: Identity and Voice in American Women’s Writing, 1850-1930.

Palko Hall

Palko Hall
3000 Bellaire Drive North
Fort Worth, TX 76109

About English Department

TCU Presents: A Public Talk with Professor Martha J. Cutter – Visual Representations of Slavery in the Past and the Present
Since 1873, the English Department has remained at the heart of academics at TCU. As one of the largest departments on campus, we are proud to work with students at every level in their education, from first-year writing and literature courses to doctoral studies in English or Rhetoric and Composition. Today, the English Department approaches both venerable and popular subjects – from Jane Austin, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Kenneth Burke or missionary writers, radical journalists, and comic books – with traditional and cutting edge tools. We work in both dusty and digital archives to advance knowledge about the centrality of culture in our lives. Our faculty have garnered significant scholarly recognitions in a broad range of intellectual areas, with special focus on British, American, and postcolonial literatures, rhetoric and composition, and creative writing. The department offers two majors in English and Writing, a minor in these areas, as well as Creative Writing, and the Ph.D. in English or Rhetoric and Composition.

Questions about this event?

Regina Lewis

Email: r.lewis@tcu.edfu

Phone: 817-257-7240