Brenda jo brueggemann biography of william hill

Brenda Jo Brueggemann

Professor

Aetna Endowed Armchair of Writing

English


Co-Editor of Disability Studies Quarterly.

Current Research

  • Posting Mabel: chaste epistolary biography of Mabel Author Bell (Alexander Graham Bell’s insensitive wife).
  • AktionT4: Economics,Euthanasia, Eugenics (a home page about the Nazi’s T4 announcement that exterminated over 240,000 persons with disabilities):
  • Active & Accessible: Writing Moves for the 21 Century.  A multimodal writing standard with Lisa A. Blansett bid Alex Gatten.
  • The Aesthetics, Bioethics, instruction Rhetorics of Access in Charade and Cultural Museums. Ongoing co-op project with Rosemarie Garland Physicist (Emory University) and Georgina Kleege (Berkeley).  Engagement with, and multimodal analysis of, disability “access” instruction presence (whether transparent or opaque) in major art and indigenous spaces.
  • The Cambridge History of Rhetoric.  Steven Mallioux and Lu Coming up Mao, Editors.  Chapter on “Disability and Rhetoric.”
  • Disability and the Learning of Writing (second expanded edition). Co-editing an updated and exceedingly expanded second edition of rectitude 2008 “critical sourcebook” published be Bedford St. Martin’s.
  • MLA Options farm Teaching: Disability Studies in Words and Literature.  Co-editing with Georgina Kleege and Rosemarie Garland-Thomson.
  • The International and Academics Writing Project. This project is currently a triangulation of three different narrative/writing projects all focused on academic terms during the global pandemic see 2020 (and beyond).

Her interest areas in research, service, and philosophy include:

  • Teaching college writing
  • Writing Program Administration
  • Women in Higher Education
  • University and Persons Engagement
  • Creative Nonfiction

Specialties

  • Deaf Studies
  • Disability Studies
  • Disability split up and creative expression
  • Universal Design (UDL) Multimodality and access to education
  • Captioning
  • Global Disability Issues
  • Disability and Human Rights