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Faculty Publications

Chris Lamb ( Journalism and Public Relations)


Stolen Dreams:
The 1955 Cannon Street
All-Stars and Little League Baseball’s
Civil War Das Abenteuer des

University of Nebraska Press | April 2022

Marilee Brooks-Gillies (English and University Writing Center)


Emotions and Affect in Writing Centers

Parlor Press | April 2022

Highlights from around the School

The Indiana University Alumni Association (IUAA) gathered last Thursday evening, November 20, for their annual IU Indianapolis Alumni Leaders Dinner to share their appreciation for alumni and volunteer leaders for their contributions in support of the Indianapolis campus and its alumni programs. At the event, the IU School of Liberal Arts also recognized two alumni, Casey Harrison and Tom Hanley, who have distinguished themselves professionally and exhibited extraordinary service to the school, the IU Indianapolis campus, and Indiana University.

IU Indianapolis has honored School of Liberal Arts faculty members, Laura Holzman, Elizabeth Kryder-Reid and Audrey Ricke, with the 2025 Open Education Award for Teaching Toxic Heritage. Their openly licensed resource brings together interdisciplinary readings, discussions and activities designed to foster critical engagement with pressing issues of environmental harm and community memory. The award celebrates their commitment to expanding access to knowledge, empowering students and advancing the values of open education at IU Indianapolis and beyond.

The Charles F. Kettering Foundation has awarded IU School of Liberal Arts associate professor in sociology, Andrew Whitehead, one of three distinguished research fellows to help it advance inclusive democracy by equipping the public, policymakers, and civic leaders with essential knowledge needed to understand the forces destabilizing democracy. The research fellows will support the foundation’s efforts to combat the complex forces undermining democracy today. The work of the fellows will help illuminate the erosion of democratic norms, the rise of authoritarianism, and the roles that religion and social movements play in shaping democratic futures.

Congratulations to Holly Cusack-McVeigh, associate professor in the IU School of Liberal Arts Department of Anthropology and Laura Holzman, professor in the IU School of Liberal Arts Museum Studies Program and art history professor in the Herron School of Art and Design at IU Indianapolis for their selection as part of the upcoming fourth cohort of the Presidential Arts and Humanities Fellows Program at Indiana University. The annual program is supported by the IU Office of the President and IU Research to amplify and accelerate the fellows’ research and creative projects and support their future scholarly success.

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