William Patrick Wend () is a lecturer in the liberal arts department at
Burlington County College. You can contact him by .
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In Progress
“Virtual Macbeth: An Interview With Dr. Angela Thomas.” Transformative Works & Cultures (Forthcoming Spring 2010) (Draft upload soon)
War Prayers: Hypertext Novella. 2004.
Publications
Shelley Jackson: The Writer Whose Medium Is Reality. Feature article for The Quarterly Conversation. March 2010.
. MA Thesis, Monmouth University, West Long Branch, NJ. May 2009.
Intro To E-Lit: How Electronic Literature Makes Printed Literature Richer. Feature article for The Quarterly Conversation. March 2009.
Scholarly/Conference Presentations
(March 2011, Ocean County College)
(May 2009, Monmouth University)
(December 2008, Monmouth University)
(April 2008, Monmouth University)
(November 2007, Monmouth University)
Contributor
Blogging Woolf: Writer for scholarly Virginia Woolf weblog, 2010.
Digital Humanities Now: Real time, crowd sourced, online publication which aggregates the pulse of the digital humanities community over a number of Internet tools, 2009.
New Media Projects
Hardcore Show Flyers: An archive of hardcore punk gig flyers from 1978-2008. 2007-Present
Quick Fix Magazine: Monthly column and photographs focusing on independent music and culture. 2007.
Signifying Nothing: Podcast covering independent music & online webzine focusing on independent music, culture and a final resting place for my self published fanzines from 1995-2002. 2005-2007, 2010.
Scholarly Guest Blogging
: Academics and Social Media: #mla09 and Twitter, 2010.
Hey Bill!
I just picked up Calvino’s “The Watcher” this morning while on a snow walk across the river. I am enjoying the first story so far. After reading a good chunk of his diary, I can appreciate him more than I was able to do before.
Also, I know you are not a fan, but I’m thinking of getting involved in the Kucinich campaign in Indiana. That is unless someone else better comes along. At this point, I almost hope Giuliani wins and shifts the polarizing of right-left social issues.
I’m planning on fully enrolling in the environmental engineering program and simultaneously study environmental policy.
I’m curious about that Michael Honey book.
Take care
I also appreciate Calvino more after reading his diaries. Have you read the biography of Borges yet?
That Michael Honey book looks good. The NPR piece is long and goes into a of a detail. FAIR’s podcast, Counterspin, also had some coverage recently too.