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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
April
U. of I. English scholar
to lead organization of 45,000 professors
Andrea
Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
4/28/06
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| University
of Illinois photo
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| English
professor Cary Nelson begins his two-year term as
president of the American Association of University
Professors on June 12. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— Cary Nelson, a professor of English
and Jubilee Professor of Liberal Arts
and Sciences at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
has been elected president of the American Association of University
Professors.
His two-year appointment, which is renewable, begins June 12. It is
a non-salaried office in what he describes as the country’s major
multidisciplinary nonprofit professional organization for faculty.
The AAUP, which has about 45,000 members, promotes academic freedom
by supporting tenure, academic due process and standards of quality
in higher education.
Nelson has served on AAUP’s National Council for 10 years, the
last six as second vice president. He co-wrote the association’s
statements on graduate students and on academic professionals. Nelson
also has been an active member of the Modern Language Association.
A professor at Illinois since 1970, and a prolific writer – the
author or editor of 25 books and the author of 150 articles –
Nelson has split his professional efforts between literary scholarship
and academic activism.
His literary research has focused on modern American poetry and on preserving
the cultural heritage of the American political left. Most recently,
he edited the first comprehensive anthology of modern American poetry
for Oxford University Press. Other works he wrote or edited include
“Revolutionary Memory: Recovering the Poetry of the American Left”
(2001) and “The Wound and the Dream: Sixty Years of American Poems
About the Spanish Civil War” (2002).
His academic activism has centered on reform in various areas of higher
education, including academic freedom, collective bargaining, the exploitation
of part-time
employees – adjuncts and graduate students – and corporatization.
His publications on the academy include “Academic Keywords: A
Devil’s Dictionary for Higher Education” (1999) and “Office
Hours: Activism and Change in the Academy” (2004).
Nelson also regularly lectures in the United States and abroad, and
is frequently interviewed by national media outlets for his opinions
regarding higher education.
Reviewers have called him “a doer and a risk-taker” (The
Nation, 1997), and “a frank and witty commentator on the politics
of higher education” (AAUP news release, April 19, 2006). Inside
Higher Ed, an online publication, recently described Nelson as a man
who “has never been at a loss for words. He’ll now have
a new forum to express his views about academe. …”
Inside Higher Ed said that among Nelson’s priorities will be to
increase awareness of the AAUP by widely distributing copies of selected
AAUP investigations on academic freedom; to expand membership; to improve
communications with current members; and to become involved with academic
freedom cases involving contingent labor earlier in the process, so
as to “influence events before someone becomes a victim.”
Nelson grew up in Pennsylvania. His family was active in the anti-nuclear
movement, and he was active in the anti-war movement in the 1960s and
served as a draft counselor during the Vietnam War. He earned degrees
at Antioch College in Ohio and at the University of Rochester in New
York.
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