29.06.2013 Views

Curriculum Vitae - Find Faculty Experts : College of Liberal Arts ...

Curriculum Vitae - Find Faculty Experts : College of Liberal Arts ...

Curriculum Vitae - Find Faculty Experts : College of Liberal Arts ...

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

3344 Harriet Ave<br />

Minneapolis, MN 55408<br />

Phone: (612) 827-7245<br />

BIOGRAPHY<br />

Education<br />

<strong>Curriculum</strong> <strong>Vitae</strong><br />

Thomas Edward Augst<br />

207 Lind Hall, 207 Church St.<br />

Minneapolis, MN 55455<br />

Email: augst002@umn.edu<br />

1996 Ph.D. Harvard University, History <strong>of</strong> American Civilization<br />

Dissertation: "Making Society Out <strong>of</strong> Books: Character, Self-Fashioning, and<br />

the Rhetoric <strong>of</strong> Market Culture in Nineteenth-Century America."<br />

1992 A.M. Harvard University, History<br />

1987 B.A. Yale <strong>College</strong>, Double Major in Literature and History, summa cum laude<br />

Teaching Appointments<br />

2004- present Associate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor, Department <strong>of</strong> English, University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota<br />

1998-2004 Assistant Pr<strong>of</strong>essor, Department <strong>of</strong> English, University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota.<br />

Associated <strong>Faculty</strong>, Department <strong>of</strong> American Studies<br />

1996-1998 Lecturer, Department <strong>of</strong> English and American Literature, Harvard University<br />

Lecturer, Program in History and Literature, Harvard University.<br />

SELECTED AWARDS<br />

Fellowship for University Teachers, National Endowment for the Humanities, 2004-2005.<br />

Finalist, Prize for a First Book, Modern Language Association, 2004.<br />

Arthur “Red” Motley Exemplary Teacher Award, <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Liberal</strong> <strong>Arts</strong>, University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota, 2004.<br />

Outstanding Community Service Award (team award, with Patricia Crain and Eric Daigre),<br />

for “The Literacy Lab,” University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota, 2003.<br />

McKnight Landgrant Pr<strong>of</strong>essor, 2000-2002.<br />

"Honorable Mention," Ralph Gabriel Dissertation Prize, American Studies Association, 1997.<br />

Helen Choate Bell Dissertation Prize, for best doctoral thesis in American Literature, Harvard<br />

University, 1997.<br />

Charlotte Newcombe Dissertation Fellowship, Woodrow Wilson Center, 1995-96.<br />

Jacob K. Javits Fellowship, United States Department <strong>of</strong> Education, 1991-1996.<br />

Stephen Botein Prize for Teaching, Program in History and Literature, Harvard 1997.<br />

Thomas Temple Hoopes Prize for Undergraduate Teaching, 1996 and 1997.<br />

Helen Choate Bell Essay Prize, Harvard University, 1996.<br />

William and Gertrude Arnold Prize, Harvard University, 1995<br />

Annette Baxter Award, American Studies Association, 1994, 1995.<br />

Phi Beta Kappa, Yale <strong>College</strong>, 1987.<br />

Marshall-Allison Prize for promise in arts and letters, Yale <strong>College</strong>, 1986.<br />

PUBLICATIONS<br />

Book<br />

The Clerk’s Tale: Young Men and Moral Life in Nineteenth-Century America (Chicago: University <strong>of</strong><br />

Chicago Press, 2003). 321 pages.<br />

Edited Collections<br />

Augst - 1


Thomas Augst and Ken Carpenter, editors, Institutions <strong>of</strong> Reading: the Social Life <strong>of</strong> Libraries in the<br />

United States (advance contract, University <strong>of</strong> Massachusetts Press).<br />

Thomas Augst and Wayne Wiegand, editors, Libraries as Agencies <strong>of</strong> Culture (Madison: University <strong>of</strong><br />

Wisconsin Press, 2002). 210 pages. (*A reprint <strong>of</strong> the special issue below, with revised title).<br />

— “The Library as an Agency <strong>of</strong> Culture,” special issue <strong>of</strong> American Studies 42.3 (Fall, 2001). 210<br />

pages.<br />

Articles<br />

"The Commerce <strong>of</strong> Thought: Pr<strong>of</strong>essional Authority and Business Ethics in Nineteenth-Century<br />

America," Prospects: An Annual <strong>of</strong> American Cultural Studies 27 (2002): 49-76.<br />

“American Libraries and Agencies <strong>of</strong> Culture," introduction to “The Library as Agency <strong>of</strong> Culture,”<br />

special issue <strong>of</strong> American Studies 42:3 (Fall, 2001): 5-22.<br />

(* Reprinted in Libraries as Agencies <strong>of</strong> Culture (Madison: University <strong>of</strong> Wisconsin Press, 2002).<br />

“The Costs <strong>of</strong> Character,” ISSUE 6 (Fall, 2001): 36-41.<br />

"Frederick Douglass, Between Speech and Print." Chapter in Pr<strong>of</strong>essing Rhetoric: Selected Papers from<br />

the 2000 Rhetoric Society <strong>of</strong> America Conference, ed. Frederick Antczak, Cinda Coggins, and Ge<strong>of</strong>frey<br />

Klinger (Mahwah, N.J.: Lawrence Erlbaum, 2002), 53-62.<br />

"Composing the Moral Senses: Emerson and the Politics <strong>of</strong> Character in Nineteenth-Century America."<br />

Political Theory 27.1 (February, 1999): 85-120.<br />

"The Business <strong>of</strong> Reading in Nineteenth-Century America: The New York Mercantile Library."<br />

American Quarterly 50.2 (June, 1998): 267-305.<br />

“The <strong>Arts</strong> and Literature,” Chapter One in American Eras. Volume 3: The Revolutionary Era (1754-<br />

1783), ed. Robert Allison (New York: Gale Publishing, 1998), 13-44. (*This series <strong>of</strong> Volumes in<br />

American Eras won awards for Outstanding Reference Source for 1998 from Reference USA and Best<br />

Reference for 1997 from Reference Books Bulletin/Booklist Editors' Choice).<br />

Reviews<br />

“Antebellum Authorship and the Common Property <strong>of</strong> American Literature.” Review <strong>of</strong> American<br />

Literature and the Culture <strong>of</strong> Reprinting, by Meredith McGill. Reviews in American History 32:3<br />

(September, 2004) 358-364.<br />

With Ken Carpenter, “A History <strong>of</strong> Libraries in the United States: A Conference Report,” Libraries &<br />

Culture 38.1 (Winter, 2003): 61-66.<br />

(Untitled) Review <strong>of</strong> Selling the True Time, by Ian Bartky. KronoScope 2.2 (2002): 249-251.<br />

(Untitled) Review <strong>of</strong> Literature and Humanitarian Reform in the Civil War Era, by Gregory Eiselein.<br />

American Studies 43.1 (Spring, 2002): 184-186.<br />

(Untitled) Review <strong>of</strong> American Libraries Before 1876, by Haynes McMullen. Papers <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Bibliographic Society <strong>of</strong> America 96.1 (March 2002): 126-128.<br />

(Untitled) Review <strong>of</strong> Eloquence is Power: Oratory and Performance in Early America, by Sandra<br />

Gustafson. William and Mary Quarterly 58.3 (July, 2001): 699-703.<br />

(Untitled) Review <strong>of</strong> A History <strong>of</strong> the Book in America, by David Hall and Hugh Amory. SHARP<br />

(Society for the History <strong>of</strong> Authorship, Reading, and Publishing) Newsletter (Fall, 2000): 12-13.<br />

"Salons and Coteries." Review <strong>of</strong> Intimate Companions: A Triography <strong>of</strong> George Platt Lynes, Paul<br />

Cadmus, Lincoln Kirstein, and their Circle, by David Leddick. Boston Book Review 7.4 (May 2000): 17.<br />

Augst - 2


“Zippers Fell Away Like Rose-Petals.” Review <strong>of</strong> The Century <strong>of</strong> Sex: Playboy’s History <strong>of</strong> the Sexual<br />

Revolution, by James R. Petersen. Boston Book Review 6.10 (December 1999): 20.<br />

“Salvation Wonderland.” Review <strong>of</strong> Red Hot and Righteous: The Urban Religion <strong>of</strong> the Salvation Army,<br />

by Diane Winston. Boston Book Review 6.4 (May 1999): 14-15.<br />

“Jeez, Has Everyone Gone Crazy?” Review <strong>of</strong> Prepare for Saints: Gertrude Stein, Virgil Thompson,<br />

and the Mainstreaming <strong>of</strong> American Modernism, by Steven Watson. Boston Book Review 6.2 (March<br />

1999): 30-31.<br />

“Drooled, Dribbled, Scrawled and Scooped.” Review <strong>of</strong> The Culture <strong>of</strong> Spontaneity: Improvisation and<br />

the <strong>Arts</strong> in Postwar America, by Daniel Belgrad. Boston Book Review 5.4 (May 1998): 34-35.<br />

(Untitled) Review <strong>of</strong> The Tuesday Club <strong>of</strong> Annapolis (1745-1756) as Cultural Performance, by Wilson<br />

Sommerville. The Journal <strong>of</strong> American History 84.2 (September, 1997): 630-631.<br />

"The Family Bible, Deluxe Edition." Review <strong>of</strong> Material Christianity: Religion and Popular Culture in<br />

America, by Colleen McDannell. Boston Book Review 3.4 (May 1996): 24.<br />

"The Philosopher in the Chrysler." Review <strong>of</strong> Trickster in the Land <strong>of</strong> Dreams, by Zeese Papanikolas.<br />

Boston Book Review 2.10 (December 1995): 38.<br />

"Mockery, Raillery, and Boisterous Hilarity." Review <strong>of</strong> Acting Naturally: Mark Twain in the Culture <strong>of</strong><br />

Performance, by Randall Knoper. Boston Book Review 2.6 (June/July 1995): 20.<br />

Work in Progress<br />

The Sobriety Test: Temperance and the Melodramas <strong>of</strong> Modern Citizenship<br />

Life as an Object: Diaries and the Invention <strong>of</strong> Solitude<br />

FELLOWSHIPS<br />

National<br />

Universtiy Teachers Fellowship, National Endowment for the Humanities, 2004-2005 ($40,000)<br />

Mary C. Mooney Fellowship, The Boston Athenaeum, 2004. ($1500)<br />

Kate B. and Hall J. Peterson Fellowship, American Antiquarian Society, 2004. ($1500)<br />

W.M. Keck Foundation and Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Fellowship, Huntington Library,<br />

Pasadena, 2001. ($6200)<br />

Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Fellowship, Library Company <strong>of</strong> Philadelphia, 2001. ($1500)<br />

Winterthur Fellowship, Winterthur Library and Museum, 1999. ($2000)<br />

Reese Fellowship, American Antiquarian Society, 1999. ($1500)<br />

Charlotte Newcombe Dissertation Fellowship, Woodrow Wilson Center, 1995-96. ($12,000)<br />

Jacob K. Javits Fellowship, United States Department <strong>of</strong> Education, 1991-1995. ($10,000/yr)<br />

University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota<br />

National Fellowship Supplement, June – December, 2004.<br />

Sabbatical Supplement, January – December, 2005.<br />

Graduate Research Partnership Fellowship, with David Gray, for “Visual Education, Work, and<br />

Civic Life.” ($5,200).<br />

University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota <strong>Faculty</strong> Summer Research Fellowship, 2003. ($6,000)<br />

McKnight Summer Fellowship, 2003. ($6,000)<br />

Graduate Research Partnership, with Laura Davis, for “Literacy and Citizenship in the<br />

Somali Community,” 2003. ($6,000)<br />

Graduate Research Partnership Fellowship, with Eric Daigre, for "Civil Literacies: Service<br />

Learning and Community Engagement in Literary Studies," 2001. ($6,000)<br />

With Patricia Crain, Minnesota Campus Compact, for The Literacy Lab, 2002-2003. ($18,000)<br />

Technology Enhanced Instructional Improvement Grant, Digital Media Center, for The<br />

Literacy Lab, 2001-2002. ($2500)<br />

Augst - 3


McKnight-Landgrant Pr<strong>of</strong>essorship, 2000-2002. ($25,000 for two years)<br />

With Patricia Crain, Bush Grant for Diversity in Teaching, The Literacy Lab, 2001-2002. ($3000)<br />

Single Semester Leave, 2000-2001, declined.<br />

University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota <strong>Faculty</strong> Summer Research Fellowship, 2000. ($5000)<br />

McKnight Summer Fellow, 2000. ($5000)<br />

Grant-in-Aid <strong>of</strong> Research, <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Liberal</strong> <strong>Arts</strong>, 1999-2000. ($18,000)<br />

Course Development Grant, Center for Democracy & Citizenship, 1999. ($4000)<br />

Harvard University<br />

John Eliot Dissertation Fellowship, 1995-96. ($3000)<br />

Mazur Fellowship in the <strong>Arts</strong> and Sciences, 1992. (Honorary)<br />

Harvard Grant, 1990-1991. ($10,000)<br />

CONFERENCES AND PRESENTATIONS<br />

Invited Lectures<br />

“Life as an Object: Diaries and the Moral Economy <strong>of</strong> Print Culture.” Graduate Colloquium,<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> English, University <strong>of</strong> California, Los Angeles, February 26, 2004.<br />

“Patriotism and the Martial Ideal,” Interdisciplinary Symposium Society Studies District-Wide Staff<br />

Development, Minneapolis Public Schools, March 6, 2003<br />

“Libraries and American Culture.” Center for Print Culture & The School <strong>of</strong> Library and Information<br />

Science, University <strong>of</strong> Wisconsin, Madison, November 13, 2002.<br />

“The Business <strong>of</strong> Living: Literary Practices and Moral Authority in Nineteenth-Century America.” Early<br />

American Research Group, University <strong>of</strong> California, Santa Barbara, April 30, 2002.<br />

"Libraries and the History <strong>of</strong> Reading." Spring Symposium, Minnesota Library Association, Open Book,<br />

April 6, 2001.<br />

"The Business <strong>of</strong> Living: Character, Masculinity, and Moral Life in Nineteenth-Century America."<br />

Clements Department <strong>of</strong> History, Southern Methodist University, Houston, Feb 22, 2001.<br />

Discussant, "National Libraries <strong>of</strong> the World: Interpreting the Past, Shaping the Future," Library <strong>of</strong><br />

Congress Bicentennial Symposium, Washington D.C., October 23-26, 2000.<br />

“The Diaries <strong>of</strong> Young Men in Nineteenth-Century America.” Department <strong>of</strong> English, University <strong>of</strong><br />

Delaware, Newark, May 11, 2000.<br />

“The Literary History <strong>of</strong> Antebellum New England.” University Vacations, Harvard University,<br />

Cambridge, June 12-16, 1998.<br />

Conferences Organized<br />

Co-organizer, with Ken Carpenter, <strong>of</strong> "The History <strong>of</strong> Libraries in the United States," hosted by the<br />

Library Company <strong>of</strong> Philadelphia, sponsored by the Library <strong>of</strong> Congress, Princeton University, and the<br />

Delmas Foundation. Philadelphia, April 11-13, 2002.<br />

Conference Sessions Organized<br />

“Print Culture and Cosmopolitanism: Material Histories <strong>of</strong> Modern Nationalism.” Modern Language<br />

Association, Philadelphia, 2004.<br />

“Print Culture and Cosmopolitanism: Material Histories <strong>of</strong> Modern Nationalism.” Society for the History<br />

<strong>of</strong> Authorship, Reading and Publishing, Lyon, France. July 20-24, 2004.<br />

With Rita Raley, "Cultures <strong>of</strong> Literacy." Modern Language Association, Washington D.C., December<br />

2000.<br />

Augst - 4


"The Politics <strong>of</strong> Voice: Elocution and Civic Space in Nineteenth-Century America." American Studies<br />

Association, Detroit, October 2000.<br />

"Conduct Becoming Citizens: The Political Life <strong>of</strong> Masculinity in Nineteenth-Century America."<br />

American Studies Association, Seattle, November 1998.<br />

"Making Knowledge Public: The <strong>Arts</strong> and Sciences <strong>of</strong> Human Nature." American Studies Association,<br />

Washington D.C., October 1997.<br />

"Strategies <strong>of</strong> Democratic Citizenship in America." American Studies Association, Kansas City, October<br />

1996.<br />

"The Social Spaces <strong>of</strong> Reading." American Studies Association, Nashville, October 1994.<br />

Conference Papers and Comments<br />

“Scripting the Inner Voice: Diaries and the Performance <strong>of</strong> Individuality,” for special conference,<br />

“Histories <strong>of</strong> Print, Manuscript and Performance in America,” American Antiquarian Society, June 10-<br />

12, 2005.<br />

“Aesthetic Taste and the Politics <strong>of</strong> Virtue in Eighteenth-Century America.” Modern Language<br />

Association, Philadelphia, 2004.<br />

“Becoming the Drunk: Moral Discourse, Mass Culture, and the Reform <strong>of</strong> Character,” American Studies<br />

Association, Atlanta, Nov. 11-14, 2004.<br />

“Aesthetic Taste and the Politics <strong>of</strong> Virtue in Eighteenth-Century America.” Society for the History <strong>of</strong><br />

Authorship, Reading and Publishing, Lyon, France. July 20-24, 2004.<br />

“Stories <strong>of</strong> Citizens: Oral History and the Imagination <strong>of</strong> Public Life,” McKnight Summer Fellow<br />

Presentations, Graduate School, University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota, February 12, 2003.<br />

“Life as an Object: Diaries and the Moral Economy <strong>of</strong> Print Culture.” American Studies Association,<br />

Hartford, October 2003.<br />

Session Comment, “Ethics and the Mastery <strong>of</strong> Language,” by Ge<strong>of</strong>frey Harpham. “Criticism and Ethics<br />

in American Studies and Literary Theory,” <strong>Faculty</strong> Workshop sponsored by Macalester <strong>College</strong>, St.<br />

Paul, June 2003.<br />

“The Design <strong>of</strong> Experience: <strong>Liberal</strong> Education for a Mass Society.” Conference on “Teaching and<br />

Learning in a Research University,” University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota, Minneapolis, April 2003.<br />

“Staging Rationality: Temperance and the Urban Melodrama <strong>of</strong> Masculinity.” Organization <strong>of</strong> American<br />

Historians, Memphis, April 2003.<br />

Session Comment, “Reading in Colonial America.” Midwest Modern Language Association,<br />

Minneapolis, November 2002.<br />

“Staging Rationality: Temperance and the Urban Melodrama <strong>of</strong> Masculinity.” Society for the History <strong>of</strong><br />

Early American Republic (SHEAR), Berkeley, July 2002.<br />

“Cultural Authority and Civil Religion.” Special International Conference, “The History <strong>of</strong> Libraries in<br />

the United States.” Library Company <strong>of</strong> Philadelphia, April 2002.<br />

Session Comment, "Passionate Readings: Romanticism and Antebellum American Readerships."<br />

American Studies Association, Washington D.C., November 2001.<br />

Augst - 5


"The Civic Spaces <strong>of</strong> Reading: Mercantile Libraries in Nineteenth-Century America." Special<br />

Conference, “Print Culture in the Age <strong>of</strong> the Circulating Library 1750-1850.” Sponsored by Groningen<br />

and Sheffield Hallam Universities, Sheffield, UK, July 2001.<br />

"Accounting for Experience: American Diaries and the Rituals <strong>of</strong> Literacy." Triennial Conference,<br />

International Society for the Study <strong>of</strong> Time, Castello di Gargonza, Italy, July 2001.<br />

Session Comment, "Different American Communities: Catholics and Schools, Disney, and the 1916 St.<br />

Paul Winter Carnival." Mid-America American Studies Conference, Madison, April 2001.<br />

"Habits and Values <strong>of</strong> Middle-Class Writing in Nineteenth-Century America." Conference on <strong>College</strong><br />

Composition and Communication, Denver, March 2001.<br />

“Literary Leisure: Institutions and Praxis." Modern Language Association, Washington D.C., December<br />

2000.<br />

"The Aesthetics <strong>of</strong> Quotation." Modern Language Association, Washington D.C., December 2000.<br />

"Becoming Visible, Being Heard: Frederick Douglass and the Bonds <strong>of</strong> Eloquence." American Studies<br />

Association, Detroit, October 2000.<br />

“Frederick Douglass, Between Speech and Print.” Rhetoric Association <strong>of</strong> America, May 2000.<br />

“The Fate <strong>of</strong> Eloquence.” Conference on Rhetoric and Composition, Pennsylvania State State<br />

University, University Park, July 1999.<br />

“Young Men’s Diaries and Literary Practices <strong>of</strong> Character in Nineteenth-Century America.” Fellows<br />

Colloquium, American Antiquarian Society, Worcester MA, June 1999.<br />

“Character is Color-Blind: Emerson and the Eloquence <strong>of</strong> Citizenship.” Modern Language Association,<br />

San Francisco, December 1998.<br />

"The Sobriety Test: Intoxication and the Poetics <strong>of</strong> Citizenship." American Studies Association, Seattle,<br />

November 1998.<br />

“The Body in Democratic Philosophy: The Erotics <strong>of</strong> Citizenship.” Special Conference, “Sex on the<br />

Edge: A Multidisciplinary Conference.” Concordia University, Montreal, October 1998.<br />

"The Modernist Test <strong>of</strong> Intelligence: Visual Abstraction and the New York School." Harvard Center for<br />

Literary and Cultural Studies, Cambridge, February 1998.<br />

"Popular Rhetoric in Nineteenth-Century America." American Association, Washington D.C., October<br />

1997.<br />

"The State <strong>of</strong> Our Attention: Emerson and the Politics <strong>of</strong> Character." American Political Science<br />

Association, Washington D.C., August 1997.<br />

"The Business <strong>of</strong> Libraries: Character and the Institutional Reader in Nineteenth-Century America."<br />

American Historical Association, New York, January 1997.<br />

"Composing the Senses: Emerson and the Civic Life <strong>of</strong> Enterprise." American Studies Association,<br />

Kansas City, October 1996.<br />

"The Eloquence <strong>of</strong> Print: Rhetoric and Literary Values in Nineteenth-Century America." Society for the<br />

History <strong>of</strong> Authorship, Reading, and Publishing (SHARP), Worcester, MA, July 1996.<br />

"Reading for Conviction: The Rhetoric <strong>of</strong> Literary Practice in Nineteenth-Century America." Center for<br />

Literary and Cultural Studies, Harvard University, Cambridge, November 1995.<br />

Augst - 6


"The Crisis <strong>of</strong> Luxury in Boston: Consumer Revolution and the Rhetorics <strong>of</strong> Virtue in the 1780s."<br />

American Studies Association, Pittsburgh, November 1995. Recipient <strong>of</strong> Annette Baxter Award.<br />

"Making Society Out <strong>of</strong> Books: Mercantile Libraries and the Reading <strong>of</strong> Market Culture." American<br />

Studies Association, Nashville, October 1994. Recipient <strong>of</strong> Annette Baxter Award.<br />

"Knowledge, Pr<strong>of</strong>ession, Community: Antebellum Mercantile Libraries and the Enterprise <strong>of</strong> Reading."<br />

Society for the History <strong>of</strong> Authorship, Reading, and Publishing (SHARP), Library <strong>of</strong> Congress,<br />

Washington D.C., July 1994.<br />

Augst - 7


TEACHING<br />

Courses Taught, University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota<br />

2003-2004<br />

English 3005: Survey <strong>of</strong> American Literature and Culture, I (Fall)<br />

English 8520: Seminar in Advanced Cultural Theory and Practice — “The Material Text:<br />

Comparative Studies in Print Culture” (Fall)<br />

English 8625: Dissertation Seminar (Spring)<br />

2002-2003<br />

English 3005: Survey <strong>of</strong> American Literature and Culture, Part I (Fall)<br />

English 3960-3: Senior Seminar — “American Renaissance: Culture and Consciousness in the 19 th<br />

Century” (Fall)<br />

American Studies 8401: Practicum — “The Life <strong>of</strong> the Modern University: Institutions,<br />

Values and Practices <strong>of</strong> Teaching” (Fall)<br />

English 1501: Literature <strong>of</strong> Public Life (Spring)<br />

English 8200: Seminar in American Literature — “ <strong>Liberal</strong> Virtues: Ethics, Aesthetics,<br />

and the Democratic Subject” (Spring)<br />

English 8625: Dissertation Seminar (Spring)<br />

2000-2001<br />

English 5120: Reading in American Literature — "Sentiment and Realism" (Fall)<br />

American Studies 8801: Dissertation Seminar (Fall)<br />

English 1501: Literature <strong>of</strong> Public Life (Fall)<br />

English 3870: Figures in North American Literature — "American Renaissance" (Spring)<br />

1999-2000<br />

English 3005w: Survey <strong>of</strong> American Literature and Culture, I (Fall)<br />

English 1202-2: Introduction to American Literature (Fall)<br />

English 3221: American Novel to 1900 (Spring)<br />

English 3070: Studies in Literary and Cultural Modes — “The Culture <strong>of</strong> Capitalism”<br />

(Spring)<br />

English 8290: Topics in American Literature — “Self-Help: History, Theory, and<br />

Practice <strong>of</strong> the Democratic Subject” (Spring)<br />

1998-1999<br />

English 8530: Studies in Nineteenth-Century American Literature — “Cultural History <strong>of</strong><br />

Reading in America” (Fall Quarter, 1998)<br />

English 3008: Techniques <strong>of</strong> Literary Study (Fall Quarter, 1998)<br />

English 1016: Introduction to American Literature — “American Individualism” (Winter<br />

Quarter, 1999)<br />

English 5471: American Drama — “Melodrama in America” (Winter Quarter, 1999)<br />

Courses Taught, Harvard University<br />

History and Literature 97: Sophomore Seminar required <strong>of</strong> majors (1994-1998)<br />

English 97. Sophomore Seminar required <strong>of</strong> majors (1996-1998)<br />

Freshman Seminar 04: “Reading in America” (Fall Semester, 1997)<br />

History and Literature 91: Seminar — “The Culture <strong>of</strong> Reading in America” (Spring Semester, 1996)<br />

Graduate Advising<br />

Ph.D. Dissertation Committees, English Department<br />

Joan Menefee, “Decoding Distraction: Attention in American Culture, 1871-1916.” (Dec 2004). Advisor<br />

Julia Bleakney, “Revisiting Vietnam: Memorials, Museums, Memoirs.” (May 2004). Reader<br />

Marcela Kostihova, “Shakespeare, Ltd.: Political Bardolatry in the Post-Socialist Czech<br />

Republic,” October 2003. Reader<br />

Penelope Myrtle Kelsey, “Native American Auto-Ethnography, Sovereignty, and Self:<br />

Tribal Knowledges in New Genres.” Final oral examination, June 2002. Reader<br />

Augst - 8


Eric Daigre, “Teaching Revolutions: Literature, Literacy, and Education in the English<br />

Civil War Period, 1640-1660." Final oral examination, September 2001. Reader<br />

Melissa Blum, "Sanctioning Education: Writing the Lives <strong>of</strong> Student Parents after Welfare<br />

Reform." Final oral examination, September 2001. Reader<br />

Ph.D. Dissertation Committees, Other Departments<br />

Felicity Schaeffer (American Studies). “Cyber-Brides between the United States and Mexico.” January<br />

2004. Reader<br />

Andrrew Knighton (Cultural Studies), “Idle Threats: The Limits <strong>of</strong> Productivity in 19 th Century<br />

America.” (May 2004). Reader<br />

Karla Erickson (American Studies), “Paid to Care: Selling Service Smiles and Community in Amerian<br />

Restaurants.” (May 2004). Reader<br />

Ph.D. Dissertation Committees (Dissertations in Progress), English<br />

Joan Menefee. Reader/ Co-advisor with John Mowitt<br />

David Wehner Reader/Co-advisor with Josephine Lee<br />

Christina Schmid. Reader<br />

David Slater. Reader<br />

Curtis Leitz. Reader<br />

Dorthe Troeften. Reader<br />

Melanie Brown. Reader<br />

Julia Bleakney. Member<br />

Ph.D. Dissertation Committees, Other Departments<br />

Laura Davis (Anthropology). Reader<br />

Karla Erickson (American Studies). Reader<br />

David Gray (American Studies). Reader<br />

Mary Rizzo (American Studies). Reader<br />

Karen Connolly Lane (American Studies). Reader<br />

Jacqueline Spicer (Comparative Studies in Discourse and Society). Reader<br />

Andrew Knighton (Comparative Studies in Discourse and Society). Reader<br />

Completed Preliminary Examinations<br />

Robert Bolin, Melanie Brown, Devin Corbin, Jennifer Kelsey, Marcela Kostihova, David<br />

Slater, Dorthe Troeften, Allison Wee, David Wehner (Department <strong>of</strong> English).<br />

Committee Member<br />

David Gray, Karla Erickson, Mary Rizzo, Felicity Schaeffer, Amy Tyson (American<br />

Studies). Committee Member<br />

Laura Davis (Anthropology). Committee Member<br />

Daniel Carden (Political Science). Committee Member<br />

Master’s Thesis Committee, Anthropology<br />

Laura Davis. "The Road to Reform: Community Code Enforcement and the<br />

Genealogy <strong>of</strong> Domestic Sanitation" Completed September 2001. Committee Member<br />

MFA Committees, English Department<br />

Tom Haley, "Colorado, <strong>of</strong> Which I Know Nothing." Completed May 2001. Co-Advisor<br />

with Patricia Hampl<br />

Undergraduate Advising<br />

Summa and Senior Honors Essays<br />

Kristin Gregory, “An American Dream Torn Apart: Success Seekers in the Short Fiction <strong>of</strong> John<br />

Cheever.” May 2004. Summa Honors Thesis Advisor<br />

Erin Severson, “Education as a Two-Way Street: Influences <strong>of</strong> Jane Addams and Twenty<br />

Years at Hull House on the Jane Addams School for Democracy.” May 2003. Summa<br />

Honors Thesis Advisor<br />

Sonja Thomas, “Gender, Race, and Literary Practices: The Diary <strong>of</strong> Charlotte Forten.”<br />

May 2001. Magna cum laud honor. Senior Essay Advisor<br />

Augst - 9


SERVICE<br />

Kelly Hulander, “Reading and Meeting Between Centuries: Women’s Study Clubs in<br />

Minnesota, 1869-1942 and Minnesota Women’s Book Clubs.” December 2000.<br />

Reader, Summa Honors Thesis<br />

Chad Greene, “Guttenberg’s Press: An Original Screenplay.” April 2000. Summa<br />

Honors Thesis Advisor<br />

James Gray, “Queer Bachelors in Melville’s Moby Dick.” May 2001. Senior<br />

Essay Advisor<br />

Kyle Feldman, “The Feminization <strong>of</strong> Democratic Discourse: Whitman, Empathy, and the<br />

Sentimental Male.” May 2001. Senior Essay Advisor<br />

Lori Johnson, “The Brilliant Awakening.” May 2001. Senior Advisor<br />

Marion Blomgren, Claiming Middle Ground: Convention and Reform in Ruth Hall.”<br />

December 2000. Senior Essay Advisor<br />

Brian Katz, “Jew.” December 2000. Senior Essay Advisor<br />

Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program [UROP]<br />

Sonja Thomas, “Nineteenth-Century Women’s Diaries.” Spring 2000.<br />

Gene Totten, ”Native American Literacy.” Fall Semester 1999.<br />

David Manning, “Nineteenth-Century Temperance Melodrama.” Winter Quarter 1999.<br />

Kelly Hulander, “The Literature <strong>of</strong> Social Science: Temperance Reform in Minnesota<br />

1880-1920.” Winter Quarter 1999.<br />

National<br />

Editorial Board and Referee, American Studies, 2001–present.<br />

Manuscript Referee for Business History Review, 2004.<br />

Manuscript Referee for Cultural Critique, 2004, 2000.<br />

Fellowship Review Panel, American Literature, National Endowment for the Humanities,<br />

July 2002.<br />

Co-organized with Ken Carpenter, Special International Conference, “The History <strong>of</strong><br />

Libraries in the United States,” sponsored by Princeton University, the Library <strong>of</strong><br />

Congress Center for the Book, and the Delmas Foundation, and hosted by the Library Company<br />

<strong>of</strong> Philadelphia, April 2002.<br />

Manuscript Referee for Larry Haeg, “The Man in the Deck Chair: The Private Journey <strong>of</strong><br />

Charles Macomb Flandrau, America’s Forgotten Man <strong>of</strong> Letters. “ Indiana University<br />

Press, 2002.<br />

Manuscript Referee for Ronald and Mary Zboray, “Literary Dollars and Social Sense:<br />

Ordinary American Encounter the Antebellum Marketplace <strong>of</strong> Print.” Ashgate<br />

Publishing, 2002.<br />

Manuscript Referee for <strong>College</strong> English, 2000.<br />

Contributor/Staff Writer, Boston Book Review, 1995–2000.<br />

University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota<br />

Elected <strong>Faculty</strong> Representative, University Senate, 2002-present.<br />

Graduate School <strong>of</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> and Sciences<br />

Endowed Graduate Fellowships Committee, 2002-2003.<br />

<strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Liberal</strong> <strong>Arts</strong><br />

Keynote Speaker, CLA Alumni Mentor Program Kick<strong>of</strong>f Dinner, Oct 21, 2003<br />

Committee on <strong>Curriculum</strong>, Instruction, and Advising, 2003-present.<br />

Elected <strong>Faculty</strong> Representative, CLA Assembly, 2002-present.<br />

Committee on <strong>Curriculum</strong>, Instruction, and Advising, 2000-2001.<br />

Elected <strong>Faculty</strong> Representative, CLA Assembly, 2000-2002.<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> English<br />

Director <strong>of</strong> Composition, 2003–2004.<br />

Executive Committee, 2003–present.<br />

Undergraduate Studies Committee, 1998 – 2001, 2003-2006.<br />

Augst - 10


Guest presentation on Lecturing, Teaching Practicum for Composition and Literature Teaching<br />

Assistants, November 11, 2003<br />

Esther Freier Endowed Lecture Committee, 2002-present; delivered introduction to Michael<br />

Chabon’s Freier Lecture, February 2003.<br />

Co-chair, Job Placement Committee, 2002-present.<br />

With Patricia Crain and Eric Daigre, created The Literacy Lab, 2001 to present.<br />

<strong>Faculty</strong> Affairs Committee, 2001 – 2003.<br />

Elections Committee, Spring 2000.<br />

Participant, Engaged Department Institute on Service Learning and Civic Engagement,<br />

Campus Compact, Minneapolis, June 2002.<br />

Graduate Exam Implementation Committee, 2000-2001.<br />

Chair, Subcommittee on <strong>Curriculum</strong>, 2001.<br />

<strong>Faculty</strong> Search Committee, 1999 – 2000.<br />

Department Representative, Technology Enhanced Learning Workshop, 1999-2000.<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> American Studies<br />

Graduate Admissions and Fellowships Committee, 2002-2003.<br />

Graduate Affairs Committee, 2000-2001.<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> French and Italian<br />

<strong>Faculty</strong> Search Committee, 2001-2002.<br />

Other<br />

“Patriotism and the Martial Ideal,” Interdisciplinary Symposium Society Studies District-Wide Staff<br />

Development, Minneapolis Public Schools, March 6, 2003<br />

<strong>Faculty</strong>, Graduate Minor in Composition, Literacy, and Rhetorical Studies, 1999–present.<br />

Co-organizer, “Cultures <strong>of</strong> Literacy,” Focused Research Seminar, Humanities Center,<br />

1999-present.<br />

Member, Advisory Board, Schocket Center for Gay, Lesbian and Transgender Studies,<br />

2000-2003.<br />

Member, Advisory Board, Center for Interdisciplinary Studies <strong>of</strong> Writing, 1999-2003.<br />

Augst - 11

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!