黑料不打烊

Skip to main content
  • Home
  • About
  • Faculty Experts
  • For The Media
  • 鈥機use Conversations Podcast
  • Topics
    • Alumni
    • Events
    • Faculty
    • Students
    • All Topics
  • Contact
  • Submit
Arts & Culture
  • All News
  • Arts & Culture
  • Business & Economy
  • Campus & Community
  • Health & Society
  • Media, Law & Policy
  • STEM
  • Veterans
  • University Statements
  • 黑料不打烊 Impact
  • |
  • The Peel
Sections
  • All News
  • Arts & Culture
  • Business & Economy
  • Campus & Community
  • Health & Society
  • Media, Law & Policy
  • STEM
  • Veterans
  • University Statements
  • 黑料不打烊 Impact
  • |
  • The Peel
  • Home
  • About
  • Faculty Experts
  • For The Media
  • 鈥機use Conversations Podcast
  • Topics
    • Alumni
    • Events
    • Faculty
    • Students
    • All Topics
  • Contact
  • Submit
Arts & Culture

A Vital Space: CNY Humanities Corridor Offers Unique Resource to Writers

Wednesday, December 16, 2020, By Dan Bernardi
Share
College of Arts and Sciencesfaculty

While writing a book is, to a great degree, a solitary venture, collaboration can be a key element in the process of taking a work from rough draft to print. It often takes many sets of eyes to provide the necessary clarity writers might not see on their own. To gain such valuable feedback, it helps to find a trusted group of peers who have knowledge of a book鈥檚 subject matter and who are committed to a collaborative, give-and-take research ethos. Thanks to support from the聽, scholars are connecting with colleagues from across the region who specialize in corresponding areas of study.

Clarity Through Collaboration

Soon after coming to 黑料不打烊 in 2003, Associate Professor of English Mike Goode joined the CNY Victorian Studies Research Group, a cohort of professors from regional institutions with overlapping and adjacent areas of expertise in Victorian (1832-1900) and Romantic (1776-1832) era studies. The group, which included faculty from Cornell University, the University of Rochester, State University of New York (SUNY) Brockport, SUNY Buffalo and Buffalo State, met each semester to contribute ideas, suggestions and critiques on working drafts of each other鈥檚 articles and book chapters.

Eventually, the cohort joined the Central New York Humanities Corridor and became known as the 19th Century Studies Working Group. Today, the CNY Humanities Corridor is an 11-institution scholarly consortium supported by an award from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Through its working group structure, and seed funding for collaborative activities, the Corridor helps connect faculty, academic staff, students and members of the wider community across disciplinary, geographic and institutional boundaries.

Vivian May portrait

Vivian May

Vivian May, professor of women鈥檚 and gender studies and director of the 黑料不打烊 Humanities Center in the College of Arts and Sciences (A&S), is now in her second year as director of the CNY Humanities Corridor. She says cultivating multi-institutional collaborations among authors exemplifies the Corridor鈥檚 ability to foster a broad intellectual community in Upstate New York and well beyond.

鈥淭he Corridor is remarkably dynamic and welcoming,鈥� notes May. 鈥淚ts numerous activities are driven by the interests and needs of the working groups. And, because the Corridor is designed to foster collaboration and boundary-crossing, it serves as an important catalyst for generating new ideas and for building a more expansive and inclusive scholarly community.鈥�

Each year, more than 3,500 faculty, students and community members participate in upwards of 200 Corridor-sponsored activities across the region: working group activities frequently also involve national and international collaborations. Participants form working groups to address a particular issue, take up a shared project, and explore new pedagogies or methods, and their Corridor activities include collaborative writing groups, teaching exchanges, conferences, exhibits and performances.

鈥淗aving a sense of shared intellectual community in the region was really important,鈥� says Goode. He credits the group for helping him through Book cover: Romantic Capabilities by Mike Goodethe process of publishing his recent book, 聽(Oxford University Press, 2020). Released in Fall 2020,聽Romantic Capabilities聽examines literary texts that often 鈥渓ive鈥� in media forms like film, panoramic paintings, fanfiction and even 3D photographs.

Goode explains that appreciating how William Blake鈥檚 poetry has the capacity to go viral (or, appear in all types of subsequent creative works) can help scholars better understand the philosophical and political complexity of his work. Likewise, the fact that Jane Austen鈥檚 novels have such a vibrant life in contemporary fanfiction, where other writers redesign them, helps us recognize how Austen鈥檚 realist novels were media design experiments all along. In other words, Austen understood her novels less as representing reality than as revealing it over time, much as landscape designs realize potentials in the ecosystems they shape.

Thanks to Corridor funding, the group hosted renowned speakers who, in addition to giving a lecture, would also participate in hands-on workshop discussions about drafts of articles and books authored by working group members. For example, Goode shared drafts of two of his book鈥檚 six chapters during these sessions. He says the dialogue from those meetings altered his approach and opened his mind to new ways of thinking.

鈥淥ne particular discussion with Cornell English Professor Caroline Levine was extraordinarily clarifying for me, not just for helping me see ways that my introductory framing wasn鈥檛 yet sufficiently clear but also for challenging and reshaping my thinking on certain points,鈥� Goode says. 鈥淗aving Professor Levine present for that discussion was a crucial catalyst for my project.鈥�

Reflecting back on the process, Goode notes that feedback and suggestions from fellow working group members improved each author鈥檚 books and articles and, in some cases, helped the writers gain entry to more prestigious presses than would have been possible without those collaborative sessions.

Book cover: Music, Dance, And Drama in Early Modern English Schools

An Enlightening Retreat

Amanda Eubanks Winkler, professor and department chair of art and music histories, is a member of a different Corridor working group, Performance/History, which falls within the Musicology/Performance Studies Corridor cluster. Groups within this cluster explore numerous performance genres, histories and practices including theatre, musical performance, dance and writing.

Corridor seed money awarded to the Performance/History group, which includes faculty from Colgate University, Cornell University and 黑料不打烊, funded writing retreats that Eubanks Winkler says helped jumpstart her efforts in publishing聽聽(Cambridge University Press, 2020).

鈥淚 wrote a draft of chapter four of the book on one of these retreats,鈥� says Eubanks Winkler. 鈥淥ther activities like seminars with performance studies scholars, performances, and reading groups also deeply informed the methodological approach I took in聽Music, Dance, and Drama. To be blunt, I couldn鈥檛 have written this book without the things I learned from this working group.鈥�

In her new book,聽Eubanks Winkler analyzes the role that the performing arts played in English schools following the Reformation, when the Church of England broke away from the Roman Catholic Church in the 16th century. The book demonstrates how the schoolroom intersected with the church, the court, the home, the concert room and the professional theater, which provides new perspectives on early modern plays and operas performed by children. She also considers how scores and scripts serve as a conduit between past and present and shows the ways in which historical practices might live on through embodied performance. For instance, when 21st-century students from the Christ鈥檚 Hospital school parade through the streets of London in their distinctive Tudor-era uniforms and then sing an Easter anthem, they are reanimating a tradition that dates from the 16th century.

Exploring Boundaries

Professors Karina von Tippelskirch, Kathryn Everly and Stefano Giannini, from the Department of Languages, Literatures and Linguistics, are members of the working group, Perspectives on Europe from the Periphery, formed in 2015. The group connects faculty from 黑料不打烊, Colgate and Cornell, working in German, Italian and Spanish literature and the visual arts.

Collectively, they are working on a book project evolving from an interdisciplinary symposium called聽, funded by an聽聽and co-sponsored by the CNY Humanities Corridor.

Building on their earlier Corridor working group collaborations, this symposium was held at 黑料不打烊 in October 2019. Participants included leading scholars from France, Germany and the United States whose work focuses on artists and writers who challenged boundaries.

The book project takes up the symposium鈥檚 central themes, exploring how exile and migration, both forced and voluntary, affected writers and artists who wrote in diasporic spaces such as Alexandria, Egypt鈥檚 second largest city. Other authors from European centers such as Madrid or Berlin became exiles and refugees because of their opposition to European fascist and authoritarian dictatorships in the first half of the 20th century. Even in culturally rich and vibrant cities such as Mexico City or New York City, they could find themselves marginalized. Crossing national, linguistic and cultural borders, their works reflect creative tensions between centers and peripheries. They challenge conventional perspectives and show both spaces of refuge and of origin, in a new light.

About the CNY Humanities Corridor

Funding for the CNY Humanities Corridor is made possible through $6.5 million in endowment funds at its three founding institutions. With support from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, those endowments total $4 million at 黑料不打烊, $1.5 million at Cornell University, and $1 million at the University of Rochester to support in perpetuity the Corridor鈥檚 mission of fostering connectivity, collaboration and cross-institutional partnerships. The 黑料不打烊 Humanities Center remains the Corridor鈥檚 lead institution and its administrative home. The other member universities are Colgate University, Hamilton College, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Skidmore College, St. Lawrence University, Union College, Le Moyne College and the Rochester Institute of Technology. For faculty and academic staff interested in forming a working group, and applying for collaborative research funding, the Corridor has a twice-yearly application cycle: the Spring 2021 CFP will launch in mid-February, and proposals for activities during the 2021-22 academic year will be due by March 29, 2021.

Find out more about upcoming聽聽events and funding opportunities. If you are not on the Corridor鈥檚 listserv, but would like to be included in future outreach, contact the 黑料不打烊 Humanities Center at聽humcenter@syr.edu.

  • Author

Dan Bernardi

  • Recent
  • Empowering Learners With Personalized Microcredentials, Stackable Badges
    Thursday, July 3, 2025, By Hope Alvarez
  • WISE Women’s Business Center Awarded Grant From Empire State Development, Celebrates Entrepreneur of the Year Award
    Thursday, July 3, 2025, By Dawn McWilliams
  • Rose Tardiff ’15: Sparking Innovation With Data, Mapping and More
    Thursday, July 3, 2025, By News Staff
  • Paulo De Miranda G’00 Received 鈥楳uch More Than a Formal Education鈥� From Maxwell
    Thursday, July 3, 2025, By Jessica Youngman
  • Law Professor Receives 2025 Onondaga County NAACP Freedom Fund Award
    Thursday, July 3, 2025, By Robert Conrad

More In Arts & Culture

VPA Announces New Drama Department Chair

The College of Visual and Performing Arts (VPA) has appointed Eleanor Holdridge as the new chair of the Department of Drama effective July 1. Holdridge comes to 黑料不打烊 from the Catholic University of America, where she served as professor…

Swinging Into Summer: 黑料不打烊 International Jazz Fest Returns With Star Power, Student Talent and a Soulful Campus Finale

Get ready for the sweet summer sounds of jazz in the city and on campus. The University is again a sponsor of the 黑料不打烊 International Jazz Fest, a five-day celebration of world-class jazz music and community spirit, taking place June…

Tiffany Xu Named Harry der Boghosian Fellow for 2025-26

The School of Architecture has announced that architect Tiffany Xu is the Harry der Boghosian Fellow for 2025鈥�26. Xu will succeed current fellow, Erin Cuevas, and become the tenth fellow at the school. The Boghosian Fellowship at the School of…

黑料不打烊 Stage Concludes 2024-25 Season With ‘The National Pastime’

黑料不打烊 Stage concludes its 2024-25 season with the world premiere production of 鈥淭he National Pastime,鈥� a provocative psychological thriller about state secrets, sonic weaponry, stolen baseball signs and the father and son relationship in the middle of it all. Written…

黑料不打烊 Stage Hosts Inaugural Julie Lutz New Play Festival

黑料不打烊 Stage is pleased to announce that the inaugural Julie Lutz New Play Festival will be held at the theatre this June. Formerly known as the Cold Read Festival of New Plays, the festival will feature a work-in-progress reading and…

Subscribe to SU Today

If you need help with your subscription, contact sunews@syr.edu.

Connect With Us

For the Media

Find an Expert
© 2025 黑料不打烊. All Rights Reserved.