Department: Writing, Rhetoric and American Culture

Name and Title Department Research Topics
Roger J.J. Bresnahan
Professor
-
Writing, Rhetoric, and American Cultures Racial and Ethnic History, History and Literature of the Philippines
Jeff Charnley
Associate Professor
-
Writing, Rhetoric, and American Cultures Oral History and Methodology
Sheila Contreras
Assistant Professor
-
Writing, Rhetoric, and American Cultures Chicana/o Studies, Comparative Ethnic Studies, Latina Feminism, Literary Primitivism, Travel Literature and Theory
David Cooper
Professor
-
Writing, Rhetoric, and American Cultures Public Culture Studies, Rhetoric in the Public Interests
Gary Hoppenstand
Professor
-
Writing, Rhetoric, and American Cultures Popular Cultural Studies, Media Studies
Ann Larabee
Professor
Acting Director, American Studies Program
Writing, Rhetoric, and American Cultures Disaster Studies; Cultural Impacts of Technology, Cultural Theory, Feminism and Technology, History of Terrorism
Michael Largey
Professor
Professor of Ethnomusicology and Area Chair of Musicology
Music Carribean Music, Ethnographic Fieldwork and Theory
Patrick LeBeau
Associate Professor
-
Writing, Rhetoric, and American Cultures Native American Studies
Kimberly Little
Associate Professor
-
Writing, Rhetoric, and American Cultures Social and Political History, Progressive-Era History, 20th Century Urban Studies
Douglas Noverr
Associate Professor
-
Writing, Rhetoric, and American Cultures American Painting and Poetry, Sports History, Film History, Popular Culture
Malea Powell
Associate Professor
-
Writing, Rhetoric, and American Cultures Native American Studies, American Indian Rhetoric
Dean Rehberger
Associate Professor
-
Writing, Rhetoric, and American Cultures Information Design and Archtecture, Public History
David Stowe
Professor
-
Writing, Rhetoric, and American Cultures 20th Century Cultural History, Music
Arthur Versluis
Associate Professor
-
Writing, Rhetoric, and American Cultures American Agratianism, Christian Esotericism
Edward Watts
Professor
-
Writing, Rhetoric, and American Cultures American Literature to 1900; Religion, Nation, and Empire