Faculty
*Paul Bauschatz,
Ph.D. (Columbia, 1972). Associate Professor. Literature
and linguistics, Critical Theory, Medieval Literature.
James Bishop,
M.A. (Florida State University, 1965). Lecturer. Franco-American
Literature, Ethnic Literature.
*Carla Billitteri,
Ph.D. (SUNY at Buffalo, 2001). Assistant Professor. Literary
Theory (semiotics, hermeneutics, phenomenology and deconstruction);
Feminist Theory; Poetry and Poetics; European and American
Literature (XIX-XX century); Drama.
*Robert A. Brinkley, Ph.D. (University of Massachusetts, Amherst, 1979). Associate
Chair; Associate Professor. Romanticism, Critical Theory,
Spenser, Milton.
Joseph E. Brogunier, Ph.D. (University of Minnesota, 1969). Associate Professor.
Twentieth-century American fiction and poetry.
*Richard T. Brucher,
Ph.D. (Rutgers, 1978). Associate Professor. British
and American drama, Technical Writing.
*A. Patricia Burnes,
Ph.D. (St. Louis University, 1977). Associate Professor,
Coordinator of College Composition. Composition
theory and practice, American literature.
Murray Callaway, M.A. (University of Maine, 1982). Lecturer. American
literature, Popular Culture and Technical Communication.
*Laura Cowan,
Ph.D. (Princeton, 1988). Associate Professor. Auden,
Eliot, Yeats, modern British poetry, nature and literature.
Terrell Hunter Crouch, M.A. (University of Maine, 1988). Lecturer. Creative
writing, technical writing, Beat Generation.
*Steven Evans,
Ph.D. (Brown University, 2000). Assistant Professor: Postmodern
American poetry, critical theory.
*T. Jeff Evans,
Ph.D. (University of California, Davis, 1974). Associate
Professor. American literature, popular culture, film.
*Welch D. Everman,
Ph.D. (SUNY-Buffalo, 1988). Professor. Creative writing,
critical theory, popular culture, horror literature and film.
*Elaine Ford, M.L.S.
(Simmons, 1979). Professor. Creative writing.
*Benjamin Friedlander,
Ph.D. (SUNY-Buffalo, 1999). Assistant Professor and Graduate
Coordinator: Poetry and Poetics, Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century
American Literature.
Judy Hakola, M.A. (University of Maine, 1965). Lecturer and Cooperating
Lecturer, Engineering. Technical writing, literature,
sports literature. On leave Fall 1998.
*Burton N. Hatlen, Ph.D. (University of California, Davis, 1971). Professor
and Director, National Poetry Foundation. Renaissance
literature, modern American poetry.
*Constance Hunting, B.A.
(Brown, 1947). Professor. Creative writing, the
Bloomsbury Group, modern British and American poetry.
Margery Irvine, M.A. (University of Kansas, 1968). Lecturer. Maine
literature, nonfiction prose, composition.
*Naomi Jacobs,
Ph.D. (University of Missouri, 1982). Professor. British
and American fiction, women's literature, utopian literature.
*Harvey Kail, Ph.D.
(Northern Illinois, 1977). Associate Professor and
Coordinator,Writing Center. Composition theory and practice.
*Margaret A. Lukens,
Ph.D. (University of Colorado, 1991). Associate Professor
and Department Chair. Nineteenth-century American literature,
Native American literature, multicultural studies.
Alan Marks,
M.A. (University of Maine, 1999). Lecturer.
*Linne R. Mooney,
Ph.D. (University of Toronto, 1981). Professor (on leave
Fall and Spring semesters, 2003-2004). Medieval literature.
Jane
Morse, M.A.
(University of Maine, 1947). Adjunct Lecturer.
Writers' Workshop.
*Jennifer Moxley, M.F.A. (Brown, 1994). Assistant
Professor. Creative Writing.
*Kenneth W. Norris,
Ph.D. (McGill, 1980). Professor. Canadian literature,
creative writing.
Scott
Peterson,
M.A. (Texas A&M University, 1988). Lecturer.
Creative writing, technical writing, Post-Modern literature.
Sylvester Pollet,
M.A. (University of Maine, 1985). Lecturer and Associate
Editor, National Poetry Foundation Press. Creative writing.
*Deborah Rogers,
Ph.D. (Columbia, 1982). Professor. Restoration and
eighteenth-century British literature.
Robert Whelan, M.A. (University of Massachusetts, Amherst, 1971). Associate
Chair; Lecturer. Literature of the Vietnam War.
*John R. Wilson,
Ph.D. (University of Kansas, 1969). Associate Professor.
Victorian literature, advanced composition.