福利天堂专注精品福利

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Novel Research

Undergraduates present their work at national English conference

Rising 福利天堂专注精品福利 seniors Anna Connor and Haiden Powers traveled to Philadelphia last semester to present their undergraduate research at the College English Association Conference. According to Ann Brunjes, professor of English and department chairperson, this was sort of a unique situation. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 unusual for undergrads to present at professional conferences in our field,鈥 Brunjes said. 

Encouraged by English Professor Benjamin Carson, Anna and Haiden decided to participate and found it to be less intimidating than they initially worried. 

鈥淭his was my first time presenting at a conference. I thought it was going to be terrifying鈥 didn鈥檛 have fears that people would be mean, but was worried about our depth,鈥 Haiden said. 鈥淏ut what we found were people were unpretentious; everyone was normal and nice.鈥

Anna appreciated the experience and the knowledge gained from the conference panels. 

鈥淚 think I asked a question at every single one, I was more comfortable asking questions than I thought I would be. It was a really great environment,鈥 she said. 

For Anna鈥檚 presentation, her love of Edith Wharton led her to discover the author鈥檚 The Glimpses of the Moon. 

鈥淚 read it on a whim over winter break and fell in love with it and started doing my own research,鈥 she said. 

That led to Anna鈥檚 paper, 鈥淭he Possibility of Happiness,鈥 that explores the contradictions, difficulties, and imperfections of happiness and romance.

For his presentation, Haiden chose to do a detailed analysis of a passage of Season of Migration to the North written by Tayeb Salih. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 a novel about post-colonialism in Africa,鈥 Haiden said. 鈥淔or the most part it criticizes white modern liberals. While advocating for the right thing, it鈥檚 rooted in bad logic and comes across as condescending, like a pat on the head.鈥

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Both agree that having these opportunities through BSU, especially as English majors, is important. 

鈥淪o many times I have friends ask, what are you doing your research on? What does that mean? They think it鈥檚 about reading books, and don鈥檛 realize it鈥檚 important work,鈥 Anna said.

Haiden often experiences similar curiosities, peers questioning the value of a humanities degree. 

Reading is one thing, he said, 鈥淏ut you have to be able to think critically about what they are looking at and how it鈥檚 being presented.鈥

鈥淚 think people underestimate how much an English degree builds empathy,鈥 Anna added. 鈥淭here are so many lessons I鈥檝e learned from reading novels, like how to interact in a relationship and how different actions affect other people.鈥

Anna admits she initially came to BSU because it was affordable, but is now grateful for the many opportunities the university offers. 

鈥淎t Bridgewater, everybody (who wants to) can do important work and contribute to their field鈥 Anna said. 鈥淚鈥檝e done so much more at Bridgewater than I thought I could do when I first chose to come here. I get to explore something I鈥檓 passionate about.鈥

Do you have a BSU story you'd like to share? Email stories@bridgew.edu