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WCD Web Page Starts Here Hello My name is William C Dowling I’m a Professor of English at Rutgers University This page tells a little about my work and interests and about the courses I’ve taught As most of my students know I will be retiring at the end of June 2016 During my 28 years as a Rutgers professor a course I taught every semester was English 219 an introductory course for English majors that focused on the close reading of poetry For much longer than 28 years it was the signature course of the English Department founded by Rutgers faculty — Richard Poirier Thomas Edwards and others — who had taught in Reuben Brower’s famous Hum 6 course at Harvard when rigorous formal analysis was being perfected as the necessary basis of higher-level literary study A video of one of my English 219 classes was made several years ago by Robert Andersen director of the films Asbury Park and Ashore It is now available for viewing on the Web English 219 at Rutgers My Last Duchess Here is my personal history I grew up in Warner New Hampshire a little town in the middle of the state I graduated from Simonds High School Warner had three white churches and two covered bridges and looked like a Currier amp Ives print When I was away at college all the elms on Main Street died Eheu! I was an undergraduate at Dartmouth College in Hanover NH It was a great place to be an English major because there was always snow on the ground and one wanted to stay inside in Sanborn House library and read by the fire and because afternoon Sanborn tea was an occasion for students and faculty to get together in a pleasantly informal setting At Rutgers Thursday Club teas at what was formerly Toad Hall on Union Street provided a similar occasion for over twenty years Students in my 2002 course on Tolkien and Oxford Christianity have asked that I restore the link to The Temptation of Galadriel a selection from one of my lectures giving a sample of the course and its perspective The selection may be heard by clicking on the link above In addition for those who have asked why I never felt able to offer the course a second time here’s an exchange from my interview in The Tolkien Review about the film that appeared several years afterwards English majors in my generation took a three-day Comprehensive Examination in the spring of our senior year When we signed up for the major as first-semester sophomores we were given a list of works and authors for which we’d be responsible on that exam Most of the material was covered in our core English courses but we all realized at the end that the list had an independent value: it gave us an immediate overview of the total body of knowledge — literary periods authors works intellectual background — that constituted the English major It shaped our reading our thinking and our discussions with each other about literature during three entire years of college At the request of some of my Rutgers students I several years ago reconstructed the list for their personal use If you’d like a copy in PDFformat to print down click here on Senior Comp Reading List Classroom teaching in English courses was based on close reading of major works in English and American literature At Rutgers this was the approach used in English 219 which for many years served as the foundation of literary study at the upper levels of the major I went to Harvard for my PhD concentrating on 18th-century English literature early American literature and literary theory My dissertation was on three works by James Boswell — the Tour to Corsica Tour to the Hebrides and Life of Johnson — and the idea of the hero in the later eighteenth century This became my first book The Boswellian Hero My latest work on American literature is Oliver Wendell Holmes in Paris: Medicine Theology and the Autocrat of the Breakfast Table a book about the way the revolution in French clinical teaching shaped Oliver Wendell Holmes’s later career as author of The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table and other works In February 2015 I gave a talk Boston in the Time of Cholera based on my more recent research in History of Medicine Students who took my seminar on Holmes and Literary Boston have asked about the church of St Etienne du Mont mentioned in The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table A picture of the interior may be found at St Etienne du Mont My account of Holmes and literary Boston takes as its center the classical republican ideal of civic virtue as it shaped New England thought and writing through the end of the nineteenth century A work that strongly influenced my own understanding of Boston literary culture is Charles Eliot Norton: The Art of Reform in Nineteenth-Century America Ricoeur on Time and Narrative my introduction to Paul Ricoeur’s three-volume philosophical work Temps et Recit has recently been published by Notre Dame University Press A version of one chapter previously appeared in Raritan Quarterly as Paul Ricoeur’s Poetics of History Ricoeur on Time and Narrative An Introduction to Temps et récit William C Dowling The scholarship in William C Dowling’s Ricoeur on Time and Narrative is impeccable Dowling knows Ricoeur inside out He highlights Ricoeur’s most important arguments presents them in a limpid concise language and links them to the relevant nineteenth- and twentieth-century philosophical developments Dowling’s book provides us with a lucid intelligible version of Ricoeur’s major work — Thomas Pavel Gordon J Laing Professor of French Literature and the Committee on Social Thought University of Chicago William C Dowling’s Ricoeur on Time and Narrative is a subtle and remarkably well-sustained piece of work It provides a detailed introduction to a major work of philosophy and narrative theory—a considerable achievement given the difficulty of Ricoeur’s text — Michael Wood Charles Barnwell Straut Class of 1923 Professor of English and Comparative Literature Princeton University A very good introduction Readable yet profound — Leen Verheyen This is a great book that encapsulates in 140 pages what Ricoeur does in three volumes Accessible and clear! — Michael Deckard Dowling is especially good at describing Ricoeur’s dialectical encounters In a short review I cannot do justice to the many new insights Dowling’s work introduces In addition to his own careful reading he also deftly examines Ricoeur’s divergences from a number of philosophers including Kant Aristotle Augustine Husserl and Heidegger The main strength of the book is Dowling’s analyses of the way Ricoeur at once incorporates yet moves beyond the thinkers he discusses –Morny Joy Religion amp Literature Dowling is at his best as he unfolds the significance of a third time — a ‘narrated time’–which describes a temporality specific to plot Here time exists simultaneously on two levels It includes the time of the characters whose actions and choices unfold one by one with unknown results but as recounted by a narrator who already knows the results those actions and choices will have What Dowling delivers is an accessible and very useful introduction to a long difficult and complicated text From this starting point he makes it possible for students of Ricoeur’s work to take up the task of interpretation and creative appropriation on their own–Scott Davidson Philosophy in Review Here thing why that Ricoeur on Time and Narrative: An Introduction to Temps et recit are different and reputable to be yours First of all reading a book is good nonetheless it depends in the content than it which is the content is as yummy as food or not Ricoeur on Time and Narrative: An Introduction ot Temps et recit giving you information deeper since different ways you can find any guide out there but there is no book that similar with Ricoeur on Time and Narrative: An Introduction to Temps et recit It gives you thrill reading through journey its open up your own personal eyes about the thing that happened in the world which is maybe can be happened around you – David Stephenson Hari Selasa What do you concerning book It is not important along Or just adding material when you need something to explain what the one you have problem How about your extra time Or are you busy individual If you don’t have spare time to perform others business it is gives the sense of being bored faster And you have time What did you do Every individual has many questions above They have to answer that question mainly because just their can do that It said that about book Book is familiar on every person Yes it is proper Because start on jardin de infancia until university need this Ricoeur on Time and Narrative: An Introduction to Temps et récit to read– Leticia Nielson Bahasa Inggris William C Dowling is University Distinguished Professor of English emeritus at Rutgers University In literary theory he is the author of Jameson Althusser Marx: An Introduction to the Political Unconscious and The Senses of the Text: Intensional Semantics and Literary Theory AVAILABLE NOW FROM AMAZON My most recent work in film studies is an essay on my favorite director John Ford: John Ford’s Festive Comedy: Ireland Imagined in The Quiet Man In Sé Merry Doyle’s prizewinning documentary Dreaming the Quiet Man I can be heard developing several points made in the essay Doyle’s documentary also features appearances by Maureen O’Hara Martin Scorsese and others who share my own view ofThe Quiet Man as a timeless masterpiece I try to read as much as possible in areas I didn’t have a chance to study in college or graduate school Recently I was reading Jacques Soustelle’s The Aztecs on the Eve of Spanish Conquest I stopped reading the book when I reached a section describing what the Aztecs in their ignorant and backward civilization thought of as basic decency I found it deeply depressing Primitive Culture of the Aztecs No vainglorious presumptuous or noisy man has ever been chosen as a dignitary no impolite ill-bred man vulgar in his speaking impudent in his speech and inclined to say whatever comes into his head has ever sat upon the petltal or upon the icpalli And if it should happen that a dignitary makes unsuitable jokes or speaks with levity then he is called a tecucuecuehtli which means a buffoon No important office of state has ever been entrusted to a vain man overfree in his speaking nor to a man that plays the fool — Codex Florentia translation from the Aztec by J O Anderson In fall semester 2013 I taught English 491 a senior seminar on the problem of internal audience in art and literature In relation to the authors we read — Marvell Browning Shakespeare Jane Austen David Foster Wallace — this was a course in the ontology of literary works But we also treated the concept of an audience posited by the work itself in relation to film Branagh’s version of Henry the Fifth Hitchcock’s Strangers On a Train art Van Eyck Holbein Hobbema Canaletto JMW Turner Monet Picasso and the music of social protest from Woody Guthie to Bob Dylan and Arlo Guthrie The theory of audience we examined was one based on my own work on internal audience in The Epistolary Moment and on Paul Ricoeur’s theory of narrative inTemps et récit in which a consciousness emptied of the contingent particularies of time place and cultural identity is posited as the sole medium in which any narrative is allowed to come alive as a self-contained world This was an extraordinary group one of the very best I’ve taught in my 25 years at Rutgers The inset picture is a thumbnail Click on it to see the group in its vibrant entirety In fall semester 2010 I co-taught with my colleague Myra Jehlen English 491 a small undergraduate seminar entitled Narratology: Style and Structure which had its roots in Professor Jehlen’s extraordinary Five Fictions in Search of Truth published in 2008 by Princeton University Press — more particularly in the notion of style as epistemology that sustains her argument in that book — and my own work on Ricoeur’s theory of narrative temporality The seminar met in Bishop House on Wednesday afternoon It was one of the most exciting teaching experiences of my time at Rutgers We were all of us I think sorry when it had to come to an end The Annotated Autocrat For a set of annotations to the Riverside edition of Oliver Wendell Holmes’s The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table a collaborative project of English 442 — Oliver Wendell Holmes and Literary Boston Spring 2013 — click here on The Annotated Autocrat In my spare time I’m also working on Professor’s Song: A Life in Teaching a memoir of my career in literary studies An early chapter entitled Blossomberry Farm will give account of the folk-blues scene at Dartmouth in the 1960s I’m also intermittently at work on an essay on the turn-of-the-century school stories of Arthur Stanwood Pier about whom I’ve put up a Web page for other people who might be interested in Pier’s writings Every year Rutgers English majors ask me about going on for a PhD in English literature To help answer their questions I composed a booklet on graduate study in English for my students at Rutgers explaining why I think the traditional English major may be doomed to extinction in the reasonably near future giving newly-minted English PhDs no place to find work Formerly I advised students interested in teaching English and American literature to consider going on for the MAT But recent developments in MAT training have made that too an untenable option You can read a revised version of my original booklet by clicking here on Graduate Study in English At Rutgers I served for some years as faculty advisor to the Peithessophian Society an undergraduate literary and debate society whose history goes back to the early the nineteenth century The majority of the students I met through Peitho went on to top law schools medical schools or graduate programs in such areas as classics philosophy history physics and mathematics It was a great privilege to oversee their progress through a Rutgers essentially different from the one that exists today Peithessophian Society Induction Address Kirkpatrick Chapel May 7 2014 A lot of my students figure out sort of late in the day that you can’t undertake the serious study of English and American literature unless you know Latin which they didn’t take in high school For those who want to learn Latin on their own I’ve composed a short booklet entitled Learning Latin by the Dowling Method It tells you how to become a really competent Latinist in a reasonably short period of time Several generations of my students have used the method with spectacular success On another website WCD recently ran across an excellent guide for faculty seeking to understand what their students are trying to say He is posting it here for the benefit of colleagues across the country who seek help with this difficult problem Click here on A Faculty Guide to Lykespeak Those with an interest in the sociolinguistic implications of their own speech habits might also be interested at the checklist reproduced here at Upscale amp Downscale Those who grew up with The New Yorker as edited by Mr William Shawn and who are trying to adjust to the editorial practices of David Remnick and his staff may be interested in samples we’ve taken from the proofsheets of the revised New Yorker Anthology of Literature which will be published early next year They nicely illustrate the difference in editorial styles Up to a few years ago when the program was still in existence I directed one or two Henry Rutgers theses per academic year The last of these was Ben Remsen’s brilliant treatment of the problem of solipsism in the anti-confluential fiction of David Foster Wallace A number of the students whose theses I directed pointed out that the Rutgers Dean who supervised the program was a principal member of the Academic Oversight Committee that attacked me for criticizing commercialized Div IA sports at Rutgers After several faculty members wrote letters protesting that his subservience to the Athletics Department was grossly incompatible with the academic and intellectual values the program had always represented the program was abruptly abolished It is a great loss to the university A Reader’s Companion to Infinite Jest In collaboration with Robert H Bell of Williams College I’ve written a reader’s companion to Infinite Jest the extraordinary but superficially difficult David Foster Wallace novel that has been acclaimed as the Ulysses of the 21st century The object of the Companion is to provide a clear overview of the story as a whole allowing first-time readers to follow Wallace’s anti-confluential narrative without getting lost or betwildered among its twists and turns and dreams and displacements As we also try to show the difficulty of Infinite Jest is crucially important to its brilliant portrayal of lonely or isolated human consciousness in the post-modern age There are lots of resources to assist the serious IJ reader Mainly I was seeking a source that would let me keep the characters straight provide a dictionary of acronyms there are about 450 sort-of-recognized slash known and totally-fabricated acronyms underlying the narration like a grid upon which a foundation is poured and a plot outline With Bell and Dowling at my side I set sail upon the deep waters of Infinite Jest I should mention too Bell and Dowling were indispensable at the beginning of the effort As the themes developed the characters fleshed out and the style absorbed their guide made it possible to go on alone –Doug Bruns Mostly Fiction Book Reviews This is the first book I’d recommend to a first-time reader of Wallace’s masterpiece The first half consists of mini-essays on the novel’s structure time scheme characters settings etc followed by a 50-page plot summary broken down by scene a 60-page census of all the people real and fictitious mentioned in the book and glossaries of the novel’s acronyms and slang terms — Steven Moore Amazon A wonderfully clear helpful well written companion guide to reading David Foster Wallace’s epic Infinite Jest It helps with keeping track of his fiendishly complicated plot themes acronyms which abound and characters — Marcia LaVive Amazon Om du kommenterar och länkar den här artikeln så kommer det inlägget att länkas till härifrån! –Twingly bloggsök We’re happy to report that the Reader’s Companion is now once again available from Amazon: Reader’s Companion to Infinite Jest In the meantime those who would like a brief look inside may click on the link: Reader’s Companion: Introduction At Rutgers I try to teach regularly in all the areas in which I do research In English literature I have taught courses in 18th-century poetry and seminars on Samuel Johnson and Boswell amp Johnson In American literature I teach both the first half of the American survey — American Literature from the Puritans to the Civil War — and English 352:315: American Literature to 1800 In literary theory I have taught senior seminars in Theory of Audience and the New Historicism I also used to English 220 every other term For one of my 220 classes I put up on the web a short note entitled Who’s the Narrator of Pale Fire I’m leaving it up now for those interested in Nabokov Another page I wrote for one of my classes is The Gradesavers’ Prufrock which comments on a bit of work done by an online termpaper service professedly staffed by Harvard-educated individuals I teach English 219 every semester For my English 219 students I produced a handout on how to use the Oxford English Dictionary when reading literary works written in earlier periods I’ve been asked to leave the handout How to Use the OED up on my site for people who want to print copies It is herewith left up For my 219 students I’ve also posted on my site a short excurus on Wordsworth’s Upon Westminster Bridge to illustrate a point about the biographical fallacy that very often comes up with that poem In spring 1999 the intellectual intrepidity of Rutgers English majors was memorably demonstrated when over 120 students signed up for 18th-Century Poetry a course that covered not only standard authors like Dryden and Pope and Johnson but difficult poems like Dyer’s The Ruins of Rome and Cowper’s The Task They were a heroic and wonderful group This is only part of the class We had planned to have our picture taken by the memorial marking the spot where when Rutgers was still Queen’s College Alexander Hamilton’s artillery company covered Washington’s retreat to Trenton but there were too many cars in the huge parking lot that the Rutgers administration has installed around the Hamilton memorial so we moved locations and some students got left out The class in the picture was also the latest to hear the never-ending saga of WCD his friend Robert H Bell and Stephen Duck the Thresher Poet If you would like to meet RHB click here on The Steven Duck Legacy Another old friend about whom my students have heard me tell stories is John Gordon the great James Joyce scholar who has recently and unexpectedly altered course and written the most original study of Charles Dickens published in the last 30 years For my students’ sake I’ve often wished that he was on our English faculty here at Rutgers To hear the inimitable Gordon voice click here on his Conn College Convocation address To read Professor Gordon’s memorable statement on the behavior of Connecticut College faculty during the lamentable Pessin affair click on Vox Clamantis: l’affaire Pessin at Connecticut College In connection with the Pessin affair and with the episodes like it that one hears about every week these days I also wanted to put up my own response to a similar episode at another institution It’s entitled Where Did Free Speech Go to Die Another of the courses I’ve most enjoyed teaching at Rutgers was a New Historicism seminar taught in the Fall semester of 1995 Here is a picture of me with the members of the seminar We are all looking serious because we had spent two weeks on the concept of structural causality in Althusserian Marxism and didn’t seem to be getting anywhere Right after this picture was taken we had a breakthrough so if the photographer had shown up three days later we would all be smiling Another wonderful course was the Mirror of Enlightenment jointly offered in Fall 1996 by the English department and the Comparative Literature program This was a seminar in which we studied the relations between French and English thought and politics in the 18th century and in which every assignment had readings in English and French Here I am with members of the seminar We are standing in front of the statue of William the Silent in the old quad You can see a larger picture of the seminar with their bronze friend by clicking here on William the Silent This group is a great example of why so many faculty consider it a privilege to teach at Rutgers Look carefully at the picture It appears does it not to be a group of normal happy delightful American university students And it is partly Happy they were most days Delightful they were tous les jours Normal they were not Every student in the picture was able to go home at night and read an hour of Locke in English then two hours of Montesquieu in French an hour of Swift or Gibbon in English then an hour or two of Voltaire or Rousseau or Diderot in French And this they did night after night week after week until we had covered the Enlightenment from Locke and Newton to the French Revolution It was in its way heroic If you look carefully at the New Historicism seminar and the Mirror of Enlightenment picture you will see that two students Rob Young and John Davies are present in both Old men forget and all shall be forgot but they’ll remember with advantages what deeds we did those days I hope eventually to teach several other seminars in two languages English and Latin English and German so I am leaving the original Mirror of Enlightenment course description in place as a sort of prototype If you have friends who are Classics majors or German majors who might want to take such a seminar — or who are English majors able to read Latin or German at an advanced level of competence — tell them to come to this page and click here on Mirror of Enlightenment They should get in touch with me if they would be interested in a similar course in their language In spring semester 2002 I taught a Rutgers General Honors seminar entitled The Face of Battle focusing on the way individuals and cultures try to come to terms with combat as an unrepresentable experience — pain death screams confusion agony — through the imposition of narrative structure: stories about heroism and suffering and honor and national purpose The course took as its center the work of the great military historian John Keegan — author of The Face of Battle The Mask of Command The Price of Admiralty and other works — and we also read Stephen Ambrose’s Band of Brothers Alvin Kernan’s Crossing the Line Shakespeare’s Henry the Fifth as well as viewing Kenneth Branaugh’s film version of Henry the Fifth and Stephen Spielberg’s Saving Private Ryan A high point was the session we spent with Commander Charles Standard a Helldiver — dive bomber — pilot who won the Navy Cross for extraordinary bravery in the Battle of the Philippine Sea His visit came immediately after we had read Kernan’s Crossing the Line with its first-hand account of the carrier war in the Pacific We found it a rare and moving experience to have the chance to talk for three hours with a carrier pilot who had actually lived through the events we had been discussing It was as one member of the seminar said like having someone walk into the seminar room straight out of the pages of history The picture above shows the class with Commander Standard on the day of his visit I taught the same course in Spring 2004 as my farewell to the Honors Program having notified the director that I would not be available to teach seminars again until Rutgers began to devote the same amount of resources to its best and brightest students that it has been devoting over the last 10 years to a handful of hired athletes on the basketball and football teams The splendid group with whom I spent my farewell semester is pictured at right My last work devoted entirely to eighteenth-century literature was on the English verse epistle This is the subject of my book The Epistolary Moment which is also about the concept of internal audience in literature In early American literature I subsequently concentrated on literary Federalism Poetry and Ideology in Revolutionary Connecticut is about the Connecticut Wits a group of poets who thought of their poetry as a form of symbolic action that could change the course of history It was followed by Literary Federalism in the Age of Jefferson which is about the literary opposition to Thomas Jefferson and American jacobinism has just been published In literary theory my best-known book is Jameson Althusser Marx an introduction to Althusserian Marxism and the work of the American theorist Fredric Jameson It has been translated into a number of languages including Chinese and Korean I keep a copy of the Korean translation in my office so that Sean Yoon and Alicia Kim and my other Korean students can read it and tell me what I said I am a member of the Twin Oaks Theory Seminar at which I deliverd The Gender Fallacy In published form it appears in Theory’s Empire: An Anthology of Dissent edited by Daphe Pata and Will H Corral Columbia University Press 2005 My next work in literary theory The Senses of the Text concerned the relations between semantic theory and the problem of determinate meaning in literature It concentrates on Chomskyan linguistics and the work of Jerrold J Katz The Metaphysics of Meaning in philosophy of language Some of my influences in literary theory may be found on my Saints amp Heroes page Since I’ve received many requests for offprints of my article Scholarly Publishing in the Age of Oprah I asked permission from The Journal of Scholarly Publishing to post a copy here on my Web site I have also posted Manfred Mickleson Applies for an 18th-century Job a letter that I found in my files from an 18th-century search run by my department some years ago Another letter I’ve found in my files concerned hiring in the Rutgers English Department over a decade ago If you’d like to read it click here on Rutgers English Then and Now More recently after reading about the controversy at surrounding Cornel West’s departure from Harvard I did a bit of research on earlier members of the Harvard faculty who combined a career in popular music with eminence as teachers and scholars By way of providing context for the West episode I’m making available to the general public an excerpt from Doo Wop Days: the Inside Story of 50s Rock ‘n’ Roll a little-known book I was lucky enough to run across in the used bin at Micawber’s Several years ago in PMLA Professor Wendell Harris predicted that over the next 10-20 years most English departments will either become departments of Cultural Studies or divide into separate Departments of Cultural Studies and Departments of English Since this seems to me a prediction with important implications for Rutgers I’ve put up a page on Literature amp Cultural Studies that tries to visualize its possible consequences On a related note Chip Szalkorski recently sent me a copy of Ideology in the Classroom which addresses some of the same issues In recent years I have done a good bit of research on standardized testing and college admissions in preparation for an essay about American democracy and the consumer model of education My most recent substantial article on educational policy was Why America Needs the SAT published in Academic Questions in Winter 1999 I am proud of my membership in the Drake Group which was founded at the Drake Conference on College Sports Corruption a historic national meeting on ways to save universities from being swallowed up by the TV-revenue-driven behemoth of professionalized college sports n response to requests from Drake Group members I’ve put up a copy of my review-essay Big Time Sports as Academic Prostitution originally published in the journal Academic Questions and Sports and Ressentiment: Why the Boosters Run Ohio State which appeared in Social Science and Modern Society Another educational policy issue that concerns me is teaching evaluation forms which I regard as customer satisfaction surveys that encourage students to adopt a consumer model of education To understand why I see the commodity model as the single biggest danger to genuine education in America read my Targum op-ed column Why We Should Abolish Teaching Evaluations Another short guide I’ve composed on the consumer modelis posted on my web site Click here for 5 Ways to Tell If You Go to a Third-Rate University In response to vicious attacks on Dartmouth President James O Freedman — a great man whose untimely death in 2006 left everyone who cares about the school deeply saddened –for having attempted to raise the level ofintellectual seriousness on campus I wrote an op ed in The Dartmouth suggesting a number of changes They have not one is sorry to report yet been adopted O’Brian’s World back in print Thomas R Edwards’ great reader’s companion to the Aubrey-Maturin novels is now once again in print Order a copy online For a look inside click here on Look Inside Some of my students think it’s pretty funny that I detest the constant interjection of like into sentences uttered by undergraduates and that I annually give out a Likosaurus Award to those who make the greatest progress in their battle against Lykelyke Syndrome Michael Sun drew this caricature of me reacting to a bad like day in class He thought it was pretty funny He did not laugh so hard when he found out what he got for a course grade ho ho Another student Tim Steffens thought it was funny that I loathe and detest television and keep telling my students to smash their TV sets and fill their rooms with books I actually do think that the people in Hell watch TV Also that people who watch TV here on earth — instead of reading books and learning Greek and arguing with their friends about Aristotle or Milton or Tocqueville — are in Hell and simply haven’t realized it yet I’ve put Tim’s caricature of me exhorting a class to throw out their TV sets on a separate page so that you can see how funny he thought he was being Tim was taking 18th-century poetry He flunked the course Last of all some students think it’s funny that I keep telling them that students who misspell words and won’t learn the elementary rules of English punctuation are doomed to be total failures in life no matter how admirable they may be in other respects I’ve put the No Bull exhortation that I hand out to my classes up along with Michael and Tim’s caricatures Some personal notes My wife and I recently moved to Reading Pennsylvania For over twenty years my favorite pastime outside of reading and studying languages was training for marathons Until I got injured I ran the Marine Corps Marathon every fall and the Vermont City Marathon in Burlington Vermont every spring For a picture of me in marathon trim with my amazing mother Lillian Dowling and my younger brother John click here on Vermont City Marathon My favorite contemporary writers are Patrick O’Brian and Elmore Leonard My favorite personal writer is Parson Woodforde an 18th-century Norfolk clergyman who kept a five-volume diary covering most of his adult life I also play blues guitar — my heroes are Hubert Sumlin and Mance Lipscomb — and listen to jazz Miles Davis Bill Evans and classical music Vivaldi Corelli Handel Mozart Another of my musical enthusiasms is gospel and here at Rutgers I am a fan of the Liberated Gospel Choir For the story of how my students have been expanding my musical and cultural horizons click here on Jerry Garcia Those who would like to read Ripple: A Minor Excursus may do so by clicking on the foregoing link With Mrs D I spend part of every year in Paris A few years ago I began doing restaurant reviews for the guide Bon Sejour For a review of my favorite Paris restaurant click here on Le Refuge du Passe During the Vietnam war I was one of the principal organizers of the New England Resistance whose role in breaking the will of the Johnson administration has until recently never been given its due by historians mainly because the story of the antiwar movement has relied on the accounts of those who spent the Vietnam period hiding out behind student deferments or Peace Corps exemptions or other Bill Clinton-type dodges for opposing the war while remaining perfectly safe Now the story has been told in Michael Foley’s book Confronting the War Machine It will make a lot of so-called tenured radicals unhappy but it is going to have a marked effect on the way future generations understand the anti-Vietnam War movement |
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The Hillary Clinton Bribery-amp-Blackmail amp Maria Butina Deep State Stings Finale |
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Bill Clinton on Jeffrey Epstein Island Victim Claims |
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Clinton Eric A |
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Public Enemy Share Official Visual for “GRID” ft Cypress Hill amp George Clinton |
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USA: Obama Bush et Clinton prêts à |
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Hillary Clinton Renews Call For Abolition Of US Electoral College |
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Un lujo: Clinton Fearon en Funky Kingston |
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The Clinton Emails And Apparent Link To The Muslim Brotherhood |
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Public Enemy Go from Desert to City in New Video for GRID Featuring Cypress Hill and George Clinton |
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Public Enemy – GRID ft Cypress Hill George Clinton |
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New Music Podcast: Chimera by Clinton Wayne |
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Hillary Clinton Says Christianity Must ‘Take a Har … |
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Mike Rowe Tears Democrats to Pieces Over Student Loan Forgiveness ‘The Fault Belongs to You and so Does the Debt’ Rashida Tlaib Touts ‘Opportunity’ That ‘Allah Has Given Us To Show the Power of Muslims in Georgia’ York woman faces 25 years in prison over felony weapons charges — after police find cache of fake guns in her home Clinton Steps in it Yet Again Accidentally Proves Our Point About Sketchy Mail-in Ballots Exam Reveals SERIOUS Problems 68 Error Rate Major Software Hack |
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Working together America has done well Our economy is breaking records with more than 22 million new jobs the lowest unemployment in 30 years the highest homeownership ever the longest expansion in history Our families and communities are stronger Thirty-five million Americans have used the family leave law 8 million have moved off welfare Crime is at a 25-year low Over 10 million Americans receive more college aid and more people than ever are going to college Our schools are better Which excerpt is Clinton’s claim in this paragraph Crime is at a 25-year low Thirty-five million Americans have used … |
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RETRO/ Dejtoni: kur Clinton kërkonte ndjesë për Bosnjen dhe citonte i Suedisë: Si nënvlerësuam vitalitetin e virusit |
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Vì sao người dân tập trung bên ngoài nhà bà Hillary Clinton yêu cầu bắt giam bà |
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Hillary Clinton’s Winning Job Plan For Millennials… Or Is It |
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Obama Bush e Clinton Querem Tomar Vacina Contra COVID-19 em Directo |
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Bill Clinton Interview |
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Freakin’ Fabulous Holidays by Clinton Kelly EPUB: 1476767432 |
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Clinton renews call for abolition of US Electoral College |
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2 Hillary Clinton |
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Lady Gaga Among Celebrities in Hillary Clinton Emails |
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Project Engineer – Water Resources – Cornerstone Engineering LLC – Clinton MS |
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Chelsea Clinton has an etiquette question |
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Hillary Clinton Casts Electoral Vote for Joe Biden Then Calls To ‘Abolish the Electoral College’ wwwwesternjournalcom |
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OpenMindstv in WikiLeaks: Reference by Clinton campaign for Bill Clinton’s UFO interests and remarks |
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Obama Bush i Clinton trebaju se cijepiti pred kamerama kako bi dokazali da je cjepivo sigurno |
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Hillary Clinton vyzvala k neuznání výsledků voleb pokud v listopadu vyhraje Donald Trump! |
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Bà Hillary Clinton muốn xóa ngay hệ thống đại cử tri Mỹ |
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Hillary Clinton casts electoral college vote for Biden: ‘It’s absolutely monumental’ |
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Exclusive: Emmy Award Winning Journalist Takes Critical Look at Bill Clinton’s Use of Pardons on the Price of Business |
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Grey Clinton Agụ |
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Hilary Clinton şi Michelle Obama condamnă un editorial care o vizează pe soţia lui Joe Biden |
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QampA with EquityMultiple CEO Charles Clinton on their Opportunity Zone investment program |
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180 West Main Street Clinton CT 06413 860-664-1855 |
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Industrial Building – Clinton MA |
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USA : Hillary Clinton et Michelle Obama volent au secours de Mme Biden |
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Remember When Hillary Clinton’s Campaign Endorsed Electors Choosing Her |
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PUBLIC ENEMY Share Official Video for “GRID” ft Cypress Hill amp George Clinton |
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DeForest Clinton Jarvis |
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Facebook’s independent fact checkers tied to Hillary Clinton Communist China and George Soros |
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Clinton Renews Call For Abolition Of US Electoral College |
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The WikiLeaks Emails Show How a Clinton White House Might Operate |
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LINDSAY CLINTON The New York Times Published: October 4 2009 |
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Hillary Clinton amp Donald Trump Models |
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Interview with Charles Clinton EquityMultiple co-founder and CEO |
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Kathryn is the Muse’s CEO and number one swashbuckler Kathryn has spoken at MIT and Harvard appeared on The TODAY Show and CNN and contributes on career and entrepreneurship to the Wall Street Journal and Harvard Business Review She was named to Forbes’ 30 Under 30 in Media and Inc’s 15 Women to Watch in Tech Before founding The Muse Kathryn worked on vaccines in Rwanda and Malawi with the Clinton Health Access Initiative and was previously at McKinsey Say hi on Twitter KMin |
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Bỏ phiếu cho ông Biden xong bà Hillary Clinton kêu gọi bỏ thể lệ đại cử tri |
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Clinton M |
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BARACK OBAMA BILL CLINTON AND GEORGE W BUSH OFFER TO GET CORONAVIRUS VACCINE ON CAMERA TO PROVE IT’S SAFE |
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Hillary Clinton Wants to Be CEO of Facebook |
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The 12 Funniest Pictures Of Hillary Clinton |
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Barack Obama Bill Clinton and GEORGE W Bush Offer to Get CORONAVIRUS VACCINE ON Camera to Prove It’s Safe |
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C19 Closes Clinton City Hall |
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Buhari donated about N150Billion to Clinton’s campaign US Group Reveals |
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Appel à candidature au Programme 2021 de la Fondation Clinton : CGI U 2021 |
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Clinton Hill Apartment Tour |
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Former US presidents Barack Obama George W Bush and Bill Clinton pledge to receive COVID-19 vaccine on TV to show its safety |
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5 Memes Summing up how the Internet Reacted to Bernie Sanders Endorsing Hillary Clinton |
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Obama Bush y Clinton se ofrecen voluntarios para vacunarse públicamente contra la COVID-19 |
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Andrey Lebrov Spring CG Challenge – TOP 5 Tesla Experience the future48 Hours Brno Title Sequence design – TOP 1 Extinguised Clinton Jones x PNY Parallel Dimensions challenge – TOP 20 |
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Những Câu Nói Tiếp Nghị Lực Từ Tony Robbins – Huấn Luyện Viên Của Tống Thống Bill Clinton |
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Clinton MA |
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Bush Clinton and Obama volunteer to take Covid-19 vaccination on camera |
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Hillary Clinton – The role of women should not be limited to home |
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Dominion Voting System’s Patents Linked to Communist China and Jewish Billionaire Banker Bill Browder’s HSBC Who Employed FBI Boss James Comey Linked To Clinton Foundation and Jewish Billionaire George Soros |
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Katy Perry Gives Hillary Clinton ‘POTUS’ Necklace for Her Birthday |
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Clinton Savings Bank Bolton MA |
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Trump Should Keep Beating The Snot Out Of Bush Obama amp Clinton |
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Facebook ‘Independent Fact Checkers’ Linked To Clinton China George Soros |
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Why I am with Hillary Clinton |
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CLINTON D’ANDRE PATT |
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When The Fruits of Graft – Great Depressions Then and Now was published in 2011 Barack Obama occupied the White House and Hillary Clinton was his nominated and confirmed Secretary of State Hope was alive for many Americans but they and others were betrayed by intentionally hurtful public policies and by graft and corruption only now becoming known to the public |
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