Marquette Hall, 213
MilwaukeeWI53201United States of America(414) 288-1956ronald.bieganowski@marquette.eduCurriculum VitaeTeaching under糖心传媒 at Marquette has been my major work since 1976: it's been a wonderful experience. Regularly I've taught a two semester survey of American Literature along with sections of the First Year Writing course and upper divisions courses such as "American Literature from 1798 - 1865," "The Poetry of Robert Frost," "Catholic Imagination in Recent American Writing," and "Recent Midwest Writings." Specific research has been on Robert Frost, Edgar Allan Poe, and James Baldwin.
Over the past several years, I have given retreats at the Jesuit Retreat Houses on the shores of Lake Winnebago and Lake Demontreville, near St. Paul. In 2007, I began to serve as Chaplain to the College of Business. In addition to offering invocations and reflections on various occasions, I am also on call for special needs.
These many years have meant experiencing what the Frost poem describes as uniting "My avocation and my vocation/ As my two eyes make one in sight."
Teaching Interests
American Literature, Fiction, Poetry, Catholic Imagination in American Writings, Recent Midwest Writings.
Research Interests
Robert Frost; Edgar Allan Poe; James Baldwin.
"Faith Dimensions of a Jesuit, Catholic Education" Jesuit Journeys, Fall 2011
Robert Frost鈥檚 New Hampshire: Realm Not Region." Literature and Belief. 2 (1982): 83-92.
"Robert Frost鈥檚 Annotations to Henri Bergson鈥檚 Creative Evolution." Resources for American Literary Study. 13 (1983): 184-93.
"Robert Frost鈥檚 Sense of Choice in Mountain Interval." College Literature. 11 (1984): 258-68.
"James Baldwin鈥檚 Vision of Otherness in 'Sonny鈥檚 Blues' and Giovanni's Room." College Language Association Journal. 32 (1988): 69-80.
"The Self-Consuming Narrator in Poe鈥檚 'Ligeia' and 'Usher.'" American Literature. 60 (1988): 175-87.
"Robert Frost鈥檚 A Boy鈥檚 Will and Henri Bergson鈥檚 Creative Evolution." The South Carolina Review 21 (1988): 9-16. "The Retreat Stories." Jesuit Journeys. (Winter 2009): 20-24.
N.D.E.A. Grant, 1968
American Philosophical Society Grant, 1981.