Senior portfolios may be hung by participating students and will be judged for eligible scholarships. All eligible entries will be displayed and participating students will receive certificates. The Texas Panhandle Student Art Show, which runs through Friday, May 12 at the Amarillo Museum of Art (AMoA), is an opportunity for students to exhibit and compete in the area of visual art. To register for the May discussion, email Bloom at AMoA to host Texas Panhandle Student Art Show The series began in 2011 and is traditionally held on the second Tuesday of the month. WT professors and guest lecturers lead the monthly Great Books discussions. His novel “Lincoln in the Bardo” won the Booker Prize in 2017, and his short stories have frequently appeared in the New Yorker. Saunders, who was born in Amarillo, teaches creative writing at Syracuse University. “Saunders is subtle in reaching readers.” “‘Ghoul’ starts out with a simple characterization of the main character, and, through details, starting with the description of the provided lunch as a thin soup with a Kit Kat floating in it, that takes a reader into a bizarre world without simply screaming on the page that no soup should ever have a candy bar floating in it as its prime source of nutrition,” Rohloff said. “Ghoul,” published as part of Saunders’ “Liberation Day” collection and can be read online at the New Yorker, is ultimately about the dissolution of the American workplace and the devaluation of work, Rohloff said, though it’s told through the framework of a haunted-house employee whose work-life balance are thoroughly out of whack. Daniel Bloom, Great Books organizer and associate professor of philosophy. Harrington College of Fine Arts and Humanities - is open to those who either have or haven’t read the book, said Dr. The discussion series - sponsored by the Department of English, Philosophy and Modern Languages in the Sybil B.
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