Brent Johnson
Assistant Professor of English
Director, First Year Seminar Program
Director, Writing Resource Center
Email: john0857@pacificu.edu Education: M.F.A. University of Idaho B.A. DePauw University
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| Why I Write and Teach... | |
In fourth grade, I won an essay writing contest on what my town would look in the far off future, and hometown girl and country music star, Dolly Parton, presented me the award along with a kiss on the cheek (I didn't wash my face for a week). From that day on, I was sure writing promised accolades and famous, adoring women. Of course, I've realized since that writing promises nothing of the sort, particularly such winnings of vanity, and that my prize now is working with the slow tools of language and image in hopes of making something useful through story and poem. The first time I knew I wanted to be a teacher was in my senior year as an undergraduate watching my professors standing outside their offices in the hallway, discussing something "intellectual." With the looming end of my own studies one month away, I already feared a life absent of learning--I knew at that moment I always wanted to be involved with academia and thinking and writing. This is my fourth year at Pacific and I teach because it, and my students, help keep that finger on the pulse of what seems to really matter: using our minds to enrich and improve our lives. Special Interests of study: I've recently been extremely interested in surburban design and how it affects our culture and environment. The more I see a disconnect and disharmony in our outer landscapes, the more I believe their impact on our inner landscapes is real. More concretely, I'm currently working on a chapbook of poetry on flyfishing.
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| Recent Publications & Professional Works | |
2006 "The Peridodical Cicada," The Appalachian Review 2004 "Tying Flies Drunk," Gray's Sporting Journal 2003 "The Pink Body of Pigs," Midwestern Review 2002 "Grounds," Ascent 2002 "Flinging Dreams," RiverTeeth 2001 "Descutes River Confessional," Yale Anglers' Journal A Short Poem Everyone Must Read before they die by Carl Sandburg: HAPPINESSI asked the professors who teach the meaning of life to tell
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| When I'm not being "Professorial"... | |
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My time off campus is spent with my wife and four year old son. Every now and then, I sneak away for a long bike ride, or a weekend casting my fly line for trout. Currently, I'm very excited about taking twenty-eight students to Spain in summer for a study abroad course. We'll be tracking down Ernest Hemingway's old haunts and Don Quixote's imaginary windmills in the sunbaked landscape outside of Madrid. |
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Here I am with my bike, Geseppe |
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