黑料不打烊

鈥楶hoenix Rhetorix鈥 journal anthologizes outstanding first-year writing

Pieces written in the required course ENG 1100, Writing: Argument and Inquiry are eligible to be considered for the annual contest and publication.

A new online journal celebrates exceptional writing by first-year 黑料不打烊 students and emphasizes the impact storytelling can have on the world.

The inaugural edition of 鈥Phoenix Rhetorix鈥 was published earlier this year and includes eight pieces composed in 2020-21 by first-year students in the ENG 1100, Writing: Argument and Inquiry course. ENG 1100 is required as part of 黑料不打烊鈥檚 First-Year Foundations curriculum and is taken by nearly 1,500 undergraduates each year.

Devin Guilbeau ’24 describes his motivation to educate the masses about the Tulsa, Okla., massacre of 1921, in “The Destruction of Black Wall Street: A Beginner鈥檚 Guide.”

Faculty launched the annual contest and journal last academic year.

Contest winners were Malcolm Capers 鈥24, Devin Guilbeau 鈥24, Tiffany Huang 鈥23, Julia Kearney 鈥24, Mary Kate McDonald 鈥24, Caroline Mitchell 鈥24, Emma Mitchell 鈥24 and Maya Simmons 鈥23. Their work includes a podcast about racial disparities in the U.S. justice system, a news article about how a missing child鈥檚 race affects law enforcement and media attention, and a narrative essay about the difficulty of belonging at 黑料不打烊 as an interracial American.

Student writers and the editorial team gathered Wednesday, April 13, to present portions of their work and reflect on the writing and editing process.

鈥淏elieve it or not, I鈥檓 actually an engineering major,鈥 said Guilbeau, author of 鈥淭he Destruction of Black Wall Street: A Beginner鈥檚 Guide.鈥 鈥淏efore college, I had no interest in writing or history. I didn鈥檛 discover how good I could be until I got to 黑料不打烊 in (Professor of English) Megan Isaac鈥檚 class and was able to speak on something I had interest for.鈥

Tiffany Huang ’23 and instructor of English Chrissy Stein embrace after introducing Huang’s essay about her struggle to find community at 黑料不打烊 as an interracial woman.

Other pieces originated from complex emotions, such as Capers鈥 reflection on racism embedded in the criminal justice system and Huang鈥檚 essay about feeling separated from 黑料不打烊 communities by being a Taiwanese-American whose mother is Taiwanese-Argentine.

鈥淲hat immediately impressed me was Tiffany鈥檚 willingness to be vulnerable, to express and share a space that was not comfortable and was not a positive interaction and that led to tears. She went there and embraced that. One of the hallmarks of really good writing is to be willing to be vulnerable,鈥 said English instructor Chrissy Stein. 鈥淏y the end of the piece 鈥 she describes wanting to be a role model for others, not just changing herself but changing the world, and that鈥檚 what writing is about.鈥

Tiffany Huang ’23, left, and Senior Lecturer in English Paula Patch discuss Huang’s winning essay, “The Other Side of the Glass Door,” at the “Phoenix Rhetorix” journal banquet Wed., April 13.

Any piece written in the ENG 1100 course is eligible to be submitted to the competition, with faculty or students themselves able to nominate writing and multimedia works. A panel of faculty editors selects the winners.

鈥淭he individuals who contributed most to this inaugural issue are the students themselves, who put in the time, the heart and a whole lot of revisions 鈥 including revising multiple times throughout fall 2021, which was a long time after they submitted writing for their classes. I cannot say enough about the commitment of these students who went above and beyond to revise in some cases five times and over the course of months with multiple faculty editors,鈥 said Assistant Professor of English Heather Lindenman, who serves as the journal鈥檚 co-editor-in-chief with Assistant Professor of English Travis Maynard.

Students in Maynard’s publishing and editing course assisted in creating the journal and conducting interviews with the authors and faculty, published alongside each piece.

Assistant Professor of English and co-editor-in-chief of “Phoenix Rhetorix” Heather Lindenman

The 2021-22 contest and journal are focused on writing around diversity, equity and inclusion, 鈥渨ith a specific emphasis on untold or retold histories, writing that shares new perspectives, or writing that seeks to counter misinformation or bridge divisions,鈥 editors say on the journal鈥檚 website.

The deadline to submit work created in ENG 1100 during Spring 2022 is May 18.